By Mark W. Vigoroso E-Commerce Times
11/02/01 5:45 PM PT
When considering international opportunities, be sure to weigh the legal, technological,
logistical and cultural factors that could severely crimp your returns.
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A word of advice to small U.S. e-tailers: what works for EBay (Nasdaq: EBAY) might not
work for you.
In a characteristic trend-bucking move, EBay recently
added Singapore to its roster of international
trading sites.
Prop that up against the backdrop of analyst reports that more than half of all Internet
users reside outside the U.S., and you might ask yourself, "Why can't my company do
that?"
Here's why. Localizing your Web business to a non-English speaking region is costly and
risky. The likes of Amazon (Nasdaq: AMZN), Yahoo! (Nasdaq: YHOO), and EBay will continue
to tap international markets with measured success , but at costs too steep for most
smaller e-tailers' budgets.
If you spot a real opportunity overseas, by all means, explore it. But be careful not to
blindly hitch up your wagon and head for gold over them there seas.
Foreign Affairs
It may be true that only 45 percent of Internet users are native English speakers
while 85 percent of the Web's pages are in English. There may indeed be untapped revenue
opportunities overseas.
But I've witnessed first-hand an Internet startup burn valuable development cycles and
precious capital trying to bootstrap an Icelandic version of its site. Weeks into the
project, the effort was abandoned due to insufficient language support, spotty knowledge
of Icelandic customers and the complexity of changes
that had to be made to the software code to accomodate multiple languages.
As you consider if and how to invest in international opportunities, be sure to weigh
the legal, technological, logistical and cultural factors that could severely crimp your
returns.
Beyond Interpretation
First off, be diligent. You should expect to spend up to 10 months evaluating and
planning overseas Internet strategies, Jupiter Media Metrix estimates.
Translating your site into another language is just one component of effectively
localizing your site. It must be done in a programmatically scalable way that will
accommodate multiple languages over time.
This will cost you as much as US$100,000, perhaps more, depending on how many languages
are involved, according to the Aberdeen Group.
Perhaps an indication of the complexities connected with translation is that EBay's
Singapore site is in English, reflecting the company's strategy to enter international
markets more efficiently and with minimal technology investment.
Earthly Bodies
Effective site translation takes more than slick (i.e., costly) software solutions,
like those offered by Uniscape,
Idiom or
GlobalSight.
More often than not, it is not adequate for foreign language sites simply to be
translated versions of an English language site. The content, design and product
offerings may have to be entirely unique to appeal to a certain region or culture.
Your bottom line will feel this too, as full-time or contract language specialists will
have to oversee the content.
Look at international versions of Yahoo! and Amazon.
Yahoo!-Germany does not consist of translated
directory entries from the U.S. site. As with the original site, there are fluent
editors compiling the information.
Similarly, Amazon France contains entirely different
products and accompanying marketing campaigns to effectively target French customers.
The Law Won?
As Yahoo! knows all too well, setting up shop overseas can also trigger legal pitfalls.
The company is currently facing severe scrutiny for
selling Nazi paraphernalia to French customers. Even though the merchandise originated on
Yahoo's U.S. site, some have argued that Yahoo's
French site should bring the
company under the jurisdiction of French laws.
"The problem is that there are an infinite number of laws that might be
applicable to any given Web site, and most of them you don't even know about," said
Thomas Vartanian, chairman of the American Bar Association's Global Cyberspace
Jurisdictional Project.
Short Leash
Yahoo! will likely withstand the bruises from its days in court. But the same might
not be said of a smaller e-tailer.
Any combination of these international e-tailing snafus, including countless others
related to taxes, shipping, currency exchange and payment methods, might be enough to
drain the resources of a modest-sized e-tailer.
So, if the receding domestic economy has you looking for new veins of revenue overseas,
proceed with caution. Most e-tailers can no longer afford to sacrifice capital on
ill-planned experiments.
What do you think? Let's talk about it.
Note: The opinions expressed by our columnists are their own and do not necessarily reflect the views of the E-Commerce Times or its management.
This article makes some great points re: deciding if localization of a web site into foreign ...
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