Your credit card processing agreement may specify how you must process credit card orders. You might, for example, be required to transmit credit card information using encryption. In this case, you can’t use e-mail messages to send order information. (continue reading…)
Archive for December, 2011
Setting Up a Simple Interactive Web Store Part (3)
6. As necessary, edit any of the other button or box descriptions so they better fit your Web store activities.
NOTE:
Much of the text already on the Web order form may not need to be edited, but note that at the very bottom of the Web order form, FrontPage includes some boilerplate text that’s supposed to name the author of the form and the organization publishing the form. You will need to edit this information. (continue reading…)
Setting Up a Simple Interactive Web Store Part (2)
2. Specify the categories of information you want to collect with the form.
The Form Page Wizard opens dialog boxes, which ask what kind of information you want to collect using the form. Indicate that you want to collect a category of information such as account information or ordering information using the dialog box. (continue reading…)
Setting Up a Simple Interactive Web Store
If you don’t require a shopping cart feature, an interactive Web store doesn’t have to be complicated. All you need to do is create a Web form that collects order information from customers and then have the Web store send this information to a person who will fill and process the orders. (continue reading…)
Setting Up a Non-Interactive Web Store
The easiest Web store to set up is a simple non-interactive site. This site needs only to describe the items you’ll be selling and tell customers how to contact you to place their orders. To describe the items you sell, set up a Web page for each item. (continue reading…)
