While you might be familiar with localization and translations when it comes to expanding your small business, what a lot of people get wrong is the fact that it’s far more than just this.
Like, if you want to grow your business online, sure, that means you ship to more places, which makes sense. Plus, that means you market to more places too, but that, at the same time, is where more work happens.
Well, specifically, compliance. While you might be totally compliant selling in the area that you’re living, be it that country, state, region, etc. But that doesn’t inherently mean you’re good to go everywhere, because there’s actually a lot you need to consider before you expand to each new place you want to see. But what exactly?
Understand what actually changes when you expand
Selling into a new place isn’t just “more customers.” It can mean new tax rules, different consumer protection expectations, and sometimes totally different product requirements.
Even inside the US, states don’t play by one shared rulebook on sales tax, and once international orders get involved, VAT or GST and customs steps can show up too. It can be pretty overwhelming, like you’re opening the floodgates, sure, there’s no doubt about that.
Tax rules just don’t care
It’s super mean to say here, but it really doesn’t matter how small your business is, you’re getting taxed. So, the US will be used in this example because a lot of e-commerce from other countries like to try and eventually reach the US market (and other times Americans love buying from abroad too).
In the US, a big compliance trigger is economic nexus, which is basically when sales into a state cross a threshold that requires registration and collection, even without a physical presence.
And of course you need to also keep in mind that fifferent states have different thresholds, and they can change, so it’s not something to guess on either. That means that California sales tax isn’t the same as the taxes in New York aren’t the same either.
When it comes to the EU, there’s taxes there as each country has its own taxing system as well. Sure, it’s all really overwhelming, and thankfully, thanks to AI and ecommerce software, these things are usually built in for business owners.
Shipping and returns need to match where customers live
Yeah, this one isn’t all that fun either, but expansion also affects what’s promised at checkout. And of course, this all includes delivery timeframes, duties and import fees, return windows, and refund rules allof which matter more once the customer isn’t local.
If the store is shipping internationally, it helps to be clear about who pays duties and taxes, because customers hate surprise fees, and then support tickets start piling up. And of course, each country, logistic company, and carrier is going to vary by price and rules, too.
Data privacy and email rules can shift
Which is really scary, because at any time, all of this can change. Anyways, selling in new regions can also mean different expectations around privacy, cookies, and marketing.
Like email marketing is a good example. What’s normal in one place can require different consent language in another, especially once international customers are in the mix.
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Source: www.myjoyonline.com


