Archive for the ‘Australia’ Category

Business Spectator launches online magazine

Thursday, July 11th, 2013

Business Spectator has launched an online family business magazine, appropriately titled Family Business Magazine.

The magazine will be available available online and through the Apple newsstand each month.

Produced in collaboration with Family Business Australia, the magazine will features family business profiles, which will take a close look at a particular family’s business journey, celebrate their success and allow other businesses to learn from their experiences.

To read more on this story, click here.

Happy Birthday to WooThemes!

Thursday, July 11th, 2013

OPMC wishes the team at WooThemes a Happy 5th Birthday!

The WooThemes team is just hitting their stride at the moment, having recently celebrated the milestone of 1 million downloads.

As WooTheme’s Mark Forrester said himself; “To be an online business and to make it to 5 years is an achievement in itself. To be 5 years old and to be experiencing our best growth month-on-month yet is testament to the team that powers our product offering.”

They are celebrating their fifth birthday with the release of the new ‘Memorable’ theme.

Again, Happy Birthday to WooThemes!

To read more about this story, click here and here.

Scoopon gets hit with accusations of cheating

Thursday, July 11th, 2013

The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) has levied accusations against online coupon website Scoopon in Federal Court. 

The ACCC has alleged that Scoopon engaged in misleading and deceptive conduct and made false and misleading representations to businesses and consumers.

The ACCC alleges that Scoopon:

  • misled consumers regarding their ability to redeem vouchers, their refund rights and the price of goods advertised in relation to some of its deals;
  • that Scoopon told businesses there was no cost or risk involved in running a deal with Scoopon, when a fee was in fact payable to the site, and;
  • that Scoopon misled businesses by claiming that between 20 and 30% of vouchers would not be redeemed, when there was no reasonable basis for this representation.

The ACCC is seeking declarations, injunctions, community service orders, pecuniary penalties and costs in the Scoopon case.

To read more on this story, click here.

Shipment tracker service now available for WooCommerce sites

Wednesday, July 10th, 2013

You can now track shipments purchased with WooCommerce sites with the WooCommerce Shipment Tracking v1.1.4 Plugin.

You can use the plugin to add shipment tracking information to your orders and provide customers with an easy way to track their shipments.

After adding details to an order, the tracking information will appear in emails, the order tracking page, and the order view page in their account section.

To read more on this story, click here.

Online business matures in Australia in 2013

Tuesday, July 9th, 2013

2013, although only half over, has been heralded as the year when online retailing in Australia grew up. Even people who were decrying online retailing just a few years ago have come to realize that it’s an essential part of a business plan now and businesses that started online are growing in leaps and bounds.

Telsyte senior research manager Sam Yip says, it’s been a “very big year of change”.

“There have been players early in the space that have dropped out, and a lot of bricks-and-mortar retailers are doing more.”

“We’re not hearing any more Gerry Harvey stories; everyone acknowledges that this is the channel to be operating in.”

Even Australia Post is acknowledging the change, altering its operations to accommodate the influx of parcel shipments it now has to deal with because of the online retail boom.

Now that Australia has embraced online retailing, Yip says, platforms like mobile are up next.

But first, the actual logistics of online selling have to be perfected.

“The other big challenge here is around delivery,” Yip says. “In the past year we’ve seen horror stories of where logistics have gone wrong, with people getting wrong orders all the time.”

“There’s a need to really refine that back-end logistics functionality.”

Considering traffic data from Experian, revenue, and noteworthy achievements (and excluding local divisions of global companies, such as Apple and Amazon, along with auction sites such as eBay and Gumtree), the top 20 online retailers of 2013, in no particular order, are:

  • Kogan
  • Milan Direct
  • Catch of the Day
  • Booktopia
  • JB Hi-Fi
  • Officeworks
  • Specialty Fashion
  • Big W
  • BrandsExclusive
  • The Iconic
  • Shoes of Prey
  • DealsDirect
  • Get Wines Direct
  • Groupon
  • Ozsale
  • StyleTread
  • Dick Smith
  • Appliances Online
  • EB Games
  • Westfield

To read more about this story, click here.

SEO out, social media in as ways to attract customers for online business

Monday, July 8th, 2013

SEO, the once all-powerful method of attracting online customers, has been demoted to co-star in the online marketing realm, as social media takes over the starring role.

According to Mark Gustowski, the global business development manager of Pyksis, SEO is just a small facet of online marketing now when trying to grow your customer base.

Much more effective is social media tools like Facebook, Twitter, Pintrest, Tumblr and LinkedIn because they offer the opportunity for customer engagement.

Using Twitter as an example, Gustowski says companies can now actively look for potential customers using these social media tools. An online retailer of virus protection software, for example, could use the hashtag (#) search function in Twitter for finding people who have been hit with a virus (#computervirus or #virus) and then further narrow the search to a certain geographical region and then talk one-on-one with those potential customers via Twitter by tweeting to them.

The important thing to remember, Gustowski says, is that social media is all about engagement rather than the ‘hard sell’ and customers should be approached in a conversational manner.

To read more on this story, click here.

Online store lets Aussies buy American without the huge markup (also rakes in money for mum)

Friday, July 5th, 2013

Started in 2007 by Dr Carolina Tillett in Bendigo, Price USA is a site that lets Australians purchase things from the USA helping them to save a lot of money and allowing them to purchase items only available in the USA.

Working with partners in the USA, Price USA simply asks customers to fill out an order form on the website indicating what they want and from where. The US-based agents then buy the goods, package them up and ship them straight to the customer’s door.

Tillett charges the buyer 5 per cent of the total order price to handle the transaction and is raking in close to six figures every year from the comfort of her own home with relatively few business costs.

For more on this story, click here or here.

Online discount party supply store brings in big bucks for stay at home mum

Thursday, July 4th, 2013

When stay at home mum Kristy decided to have friends purchase children’s party supplies and ship them to Australia so she could re-sell them in the country, she was only expecting to take in maybe an extra $50 per week.

Well, she’s getting a lot more than that, bringing in a tidy six-figure profit every year.

Starting out with an eBay story, she eventually switched to selling from her own website www.discountpartysupplies.com.au and started pulling in a quarter of a million dollars, all from her spare bedroom and all without borrowing a single cent.

To read more about this story, click here.

Australia is world leader in online startups

Wednesday, July 3rd, 2013

Australia is leading the way across the globe for new online businesses.

The amount of internet start-ups increased 200% from 2010 to 2012, outpacing both the United States and Britain by four times. However, that doesn’t mean that these new businesses are automatically booming. Many of them incur losses in the first few years of operating until they gain momentum and start making profit.

To read more about this story, click here.

 

 

Freelancer pushes competition out of the way to become best

Wednesday, July 3rd, 2013

With $50 million in revenue, Freelancer.com, started in 2009 by Matt Barrie and stationed in Sydney, has overtaken its competition to be the go-to place for businesses to find top notch freelance contractors and for those contractors to find work.

Recently, the website made headlines for expanding its innovative crowdsourcing contest feature beyond design categories to include projects in any category.

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