Ecommerce Information

Prompt Delivery Rules - Internet Product Sales


The Internet is the fastest growing source of mail order sales. The explosive growth in the goods and services sold online has in the past taken many online sellers by surprise: demand has outpaced supply, depleting inventories and disappointing customers. This can lead to serious problems with the FTC.

The FTC has issues directives spelling out the ground rules for making promises about shipments, notifying consumers about unexpected delays, and refunding consumers' money. Enforced by the FTC, the Mail or Telephone Order Rule applies to orders placed by phone, fax or the Internet.

Complying With The Rule

By law, you must have a reasonable basis for stating that a product can be shipped within a certain time. If your advertising doesn't clearly and prominently state the shipment period, you must have a reasonable basis for believing that you can ship within 30 days.

If you can't ship within the promised time (or within 30 days if you made no promise), you must notify the customer of the delay, provide a revised shipment date and explain their right to cancel and get a full and prompt refund.

For definite delays of up to 30 days, you may treat the customer's silence as agreeing to the delay. But for longer or indefinite delays - and second and subsequent delays - you must get the customer's written, electronic or verbal consent to the delay. If the customer doesn't give you approval, you must promptly refund all the money the customer paid without being asked by the customer.

Finally, you have the right to cancel orders that you can't fill in a timely manner. Your must, however, promptly notify the customer and make a prompt refund.

Running Late? Overwhelmed with Orders?

The Rule gives you several ways to deal with an unexpected demand.

You can change your shipment promises up to the point the consumer places the order, if you reasonably believe that you can ship by the new date. The updated information overrides previous promises and reduces your need to send delay notices. Be sure to tell your customer the new shipment date before you take the order.

You must provide a delay option notice if you can't ship within the originally promised time. The Rule lets you use a variety of ways to provide the notice, including e-mail, fax or phone. It's a good idea to keep a record of what your notice states, when you provide it, and the customer's response. If the FTC comes calling, the records will act as your saving grace.

In Closing

If you are selling products online, make sure you have sufficient inventory. The FTC has a history of aggressively fining companies that fail to deliver products. This is particularly true if you fall on your face during the Christmas season.

Richard Chapo is the lead attorney for the law firm http://www.SanDiegoBusinessLawFirm.com - a firm providing legal advice to California businesses. This article is for general education purposes and does not address every facet of the subject matter. Nothing in this article creates an attorney-client relationship.


MORE RESOURCES:

eCommerce sparkles: Blue Nile sales up, bling still the thing?
ZDNet - Aug 3, 2006
Oxygen cable network has declared that “tech is the new bling” for women. According to Oxygen: Oxygen’s newly released study ...


''Google Effect'' Examined, in eCommerce Digital Marketplace Study
Cheap Web Hosting Directory, CA - Aug 4, 2006
The study, The Google Effect: How Web 2.0, Long Tail Marketing, Buzz and eCommerce Accelerate the Digital Marketplace (IDC #202512), examines the factors that ...


eCommerce to Reach Approximately $170 Billion in 2006
Cheap Web Hosting Directory, CA - Aug 4, 2006
Reston, Virginia - (Cheap Web Hosting Directory) - August 4, 2006 - According to comScore Networks, e-commerce sales estimates for the first six months of 2006 ...


Marketworks Enhances Platform for eBay, Ecommerce Sellers
Auctionbytes - Jul 31, 2006
Marketworks has released an enhanced version of its ecommerce-management platform, which includes a streamlined checkout system as well as support for both ...


Yahoo! Investests in Korean eCommerce
Submit Express (press release), CA - Jul 26, 2006
Sunnyvale, California - (Cheap Web Hosting Directory) - June 7, 2006 - Korean eCommerce marketplace provider, Gmarket Inc., has entered into an agreement for ...


Techbytes: Committed to ecommerce
CityWire.co.uk, UK - Jul 27, 2006
According to the Focus Quotient Review of 2005, the industry’s progress in terms of adviser ecommerce adoption is now at its fastest pace on record. ...


Objectware Inc Launches New Business-to-Business eCommerce Website ...
PR Leap (press release), CA - Jul 27, 2006
... company based in Atlanta with an active branch in Northern Virginia, announced today that it has launched a new business-to-business ecommerce website for ...


Copywriting And Design Rules For Successful ECommerce
WebProNews, KY - Jul 24, 2006
What are the secrets of converting visitors into customers? Most ecommerce sites that struggle to convert suffer from the same half dozen minor problems. ...


Google Checkout, Deployed by eCOST.com, Improves eCommerce ...
WebSite Host Directory (press release), OR - Jul 25, 2006
Plano, Texas - (Website Hosting Directory) - July 25, 2006 - eCOST.com, a wholly owned subsidiary of PFSweb, Inc., became an early adopter of Google Inc.'s ...


ECommerce And The Reason Why
WebProNews, KY - Jul 24, 2006
The other night, I watched a rerun of the original Superman film from 1978. In it I noticed a considerable amount of time was spent ...

home | site map
© 2006 Indexadvertisements.com

Useful Links

   
Biometrics Solutions Ayurvedic Biometrics Products Job opportunities
Tech News Online Advertisement Software Development Investments Guru
Biometrics Integrated Chipsilicon Matrimonial Semiconductors