Advertise - Shopping Cart | Affiliate Software | Sell Online: " Turning all of those people into prospective customers for your business is as easy as taking out an ad on our login page. What better way to drive these visitors to your products, your company website, or your affiliate page than by advertising directly on our login page?
In fact, advertising on our login pages is so popular, you may have to wait several days, or even several weeks, for space to open up. So don’t delay. The sooner you request a login ad, the sooner it’ll be up and running, bringing you the chance to take your business to the next level!
"
'via Blog this'
Kansas City Techno
Saturday, July 7, 2012
Advertise - Shopping Cart | Affiliate Software | Sell Online
Fees - Shopping Cart | Affiliate Software | Sell Online
Fees - Shopping Cart | Affiliate Software | Sell Online: "0 - $5.00
FREE
YES
$5.01 - $20.00
$1.00
$0.67 with max pre pay discount
YES
$20.01 - $40.00
$1.50
$1.00 with max pre pay discount
YES"
'via Blog this'
FREE
YES
$5.01 - $20.00
$1.00
$0.67 with max pre pay discount
YES
$20.01 - $40.00
$1.50
$1.00 with max pre pay discount
YES"
'via Blog this'
Shopping Cart | Affiliate Software | Sell Online
Shopping Cart | Affiliate Software | Sell Online: "hopping Cart & Affiliate Network - We Do It Better!
PayGear provides more selling tools than any other e-commerce solution on the Net. From our dynamic instant affiliate commission system to our 1099 tax tracking, PayGear provides all the tools you need to sell digital or physical goods using credit card, PayPal, or Google Checkout.
At PayGear you get instant product approval, to set your own policies, the most features and the best pricing."
'via Blog this'
PayGear provides more selling tools than any other e-commerce solution on the Net. From our dynamic instant affiliate commission system to our 1099 tax tracking, PayGear provides all the tools you need to sell digital or physical goods using credit card, PayPal, or Google Checkout.
At PayGear you get instant product approval, to set your own policies, the most features and the best pricing."
'via Blog this'
Should We Use OpenCart? | Made of Everything You're Not | Eric Lamb
Should We Use OpenCart? | Made of Everything You're Not | Eric Lamb: "Then, not a week later, I see on that there’s another war going on between Daniel and a developer who found some pretty nasty CSRF issues. Again, Daniel showed his ass (along with a good helping of ignorance mixed with arrogance this time) with nothing being resolved.
This was truly the breaking point for me. Why in the world would I ever use software written by someone who, when confronted with the issues, acts like nothing’s wrong? Nope. I have people relying on me to make choices that won’t, you know, ruin their business and OpenCart, for all it’s bells and whistles and nice code and pretty administration panel, is a horrible platform because the developer refuses to do anything about issues when presented with them."
'via Blog this'
This was truly the breaking point for me. Why in the world would I ever use software written by someone who, when confronted with the issues, acts like nothing’s wrong? Nope. I have people relying on me to make choices that won’t, you know, ruin their business and OpenCart, for all it’s bells and whistles and nice code and pretty administration panel, is a horrible platform because the developer refuses to do anything about issues when presented with them."
'via Blog this'
Should We Use OpenCart? | Made of Everything You're Not | Eric Lamb
Should We Use OpenCart? | Made of Everything You're Not | Eric Lamb: "Anywho, OpenCart has lot of good features available out of the box with my favorites being the Backup Manager, User Groups, really nice localization (l18n) and internationalization (i18n) options, support for multiple stores and a slick reporting overview. OpenCart also has the one feature I personally love from any and all e-commerce packages; Guest Checkouts. Personally, when I’m buying something from an online store that’s not a 500 pound gorilla like Amazon or Best Buy I hate signing up for an account. Guest checkout is the shit.
The code is really well structured and thought out; it uses a nice implementation of the MVC pattern which made things ridiculously easy to walk through and find out what was going on under the hood. OpenCart appears to be using a home grown MVC framework, which, while, in my opinion a little unnecessary, isn’t at all a big deal. "
'via Blog this'
The code is really well structured and thought out; it uses a nice implementation of the MVC pattern which made things ridiculously easy to walk through and find out what was going on under the hood. OpenCart appears to be using a home grown MVC framework, which, while, in my opinion a little unnecessary, isn’t at all a big deal. "
'via Blog this'
OpenCart vs Zen Cart in E-Commerce Cart Software
OpenCart vs Zen Cart in E-Commerce Cart Software: "
DETAILS
Company OpenCart The Zen Cart Team
Software OpenCart Zen Cart
Version 1.5.2 1.5.0
Smart Rating
83
68
Website OpenCart (opencart.com) Zen Cart (zen-cart.com)"
'via Blog this'
DETAILS
Company OpenCart The Zen Cart Team
Software OpenCart Zen Cart
Version 1.5.2 1.5.0
Smart Rating
83
68
Website OpenCart (opencart.com) Zen Cart (zen-cart.com)"
'via Blog this'
Wednesday, June 27, 2012
(7) For a new startup, what would be the "acceptable" equity percentage given to VC (Series A financing)? - Quora
(7) For a new startup, what would be the "acceptable" equity percentage given to VC (Series A financing)? - Quora: "however, is that in most cases, for most early funding rounds, a startup should be prepared to give up 20%-40% of its equity in each round, with the amount of cash raised being enough to take the company to 'the next level' (that is, far enough along that it has reached important milestones and demonstrated success, so that it will be able to secure an additional round of financing at a higher valuation.)
Note that this doesn't include cases such as the new breed of early stage accelerators"
'via Blog this'
Note that this doesn't include cases such as the new breed of early stage accelerators"
'via Blog this'
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