



FAQ
Q.1 : How do you work from remote for your overseas clients?
Ans : We are online on Yahoo ( sansri_69@yahoo.com ) and MSN messenger { sansri_69@hotmail.com ) most of the time. Right from the beginning we upload our work to server and client can review that and suggest changes from time to time. Client can discuss about his website using messenger or phone or mail whichever mode is suitable for him.Q.2 : What are your payment terms?
Ans : For projects above US$ 500 we charge 30% advance to start project , 30% halfway and rest after completion of project. For projects below US$ 500 we charge 40% advance and rest after completion of website.Q.3 : How do you accept payments from overseas clients?
Ans : There We can accept online payment using credit card , debit card , paypal etc. We are usinghttp://www.ikobo.com for accepting payment made thru Visa and MasterCard credit and debit cards. We are using http://www.cash2india.com for accepting paypal payments.Q.3 : How do you accept payments from overseas clients?
Ans : If client is sure about there requirements and have all the contents , images etc then there is no chance of any project going beyond deadline.Q.3 : How do you accept payments from overseas clients?
Ans : Company Web Sites can have anything from five to thirty or more pages. They might include pages on the company's products and services, history, special promotions, customer lists, personnel contacts, articles about the company, etc. Pictures and graphics about the products, facility, plant area, personnel, etc., would be appropriate. Navigation bars, reciprocal links to other complimentary
businesses, fax, forms registration and feedback help the visitor get around the Web Site successfully.
A Full Service Web Site could literally mean putting an entire company on the Web. Web Sites such as those of Netscape, AT&T, Microsoft, etc., have hundreds of pages with technical specifications, product conferences, FAQ's, downloaded products - both free and for sale with a secure server, and a host of other servicesQ.3 : How do you accept payments from overseas clients?
Ans : Our clients can track online whatever we are providing as we upload it at the end of the days work , then client can review that and can suggest changes in it. Now there is no chance of counting in numbers.Marketing The number one use of a Web Site for Business and Industry is marketing. Sales Some companies actually use the Web Site for taking orders on-line with a credit card or some other form of electronic cash to complete the transaction. Web users have been slow to accept on- line transactions because of the perceived threat of security problems. Most of these are consumer transactions and not business to business sales.
Customer Service Web Sites may tie into the client's data bases for specific operational information. FEDERAL EXPRESS will give you the status of your shipment with the input of an airbill number on-line. Other companies do an automatic stock check for product availability. Still others will give back on-line quotes for their products or services.
Any Web Site linking back to the Client's computer files, or requiring extensive on-line programming is obviously more expensive. Usually such Customer Service Web Sites are second stage Web Sites, designed and developed after the Client is satisfied with the results of an initial Web Site.
Point of Presence For many companies, their primary use of the Web is for a Point of Presence. A comparison is helpful. An electronic point of presence on the Web will be the "norm" within a couple of years for any company that relies on customers other than those driving or walking by the front door.
Today, we no longer ask if a company has a fax machine, we simply ask for the number. Within a few years, or sooner, we will no longer be asking if a company has an e-mail address and a Web Site address, we will simply ask for them. Communications
This area offers big potential for growth on the Web. E- mail is already used extensively by many companies to cut down on phone, fax, and other communications costs world wide. File transfer, audio, movies, on-line telephone conversations, and teleconferencing are already in use in limited applications and are growing quickly.