
Ecommerce Conversations
Ecommerce Conversations is the long-running weekly podcast from Practical Ecommerce, hosted by ecommerce entrepreneur Eric Bandholz. •• Listen in as Eric interviews in-the-trenches founders and executives who address the essentials of launching, growing, and sustaining an online business. Hear their successes, mistakes, and plans — addressing customer acquisition, web traffic, marketing tactics, on-site conversion, shipping, favorite tools, funding, obstacles, and much more. •• New episodes every Friday. Subscribe to the podcast here, and then read a condensed transcript at https://www.PracticalEcommerce.com/tag/podcasts.
Latest episodes

May 15, 2014 • 14min
Matthew MacDonald, Author Of Creating Websites (Part 1)
Listen in as Practical Ecommerce Contributing Editor Pat Callahan is joined by Matthew MacDonald, author of Creating Web Sites: The Missing Manual. The conversation includes a topical discussion about the future of both websites and ecommerce. Part 1 of 2.

May 15, 2014 • 15min
Using Bill Me Later At Ecommerce Sites
Vince Talbert, vice president of marketing for I4 Commerce, discusses the Bill Me Later function that ecommerce merchants can implement at their sites. Talbert outlines the benefits merchants have with using alternate payment options for their online endeavors.

May 15, 2014 • 13min
Motifmodcom: New Online Store Faces SEO, Marketing Challenges
MOTIF Modern Living operates a unique contemporary furniture outlet just 10 minutes south of downtown Austin, Texas, and it launched a website last year. Its president, Steven Lora, is facing the start-up challenges that most online operations face. He discusses the hurdles his ecommerce business has with marketing its online site and search engine optimization. He also talks about the special challenge he faces with shipping, given the cumbersome nature of handling furniture.

May 15, 2014 • 14min
Wsieworks.com’s Chuck Bankoff: Hiring A Web Developer
Chuck Bankoff, director of web services for web design firm Wsieworks.com, provides tips on what questions should be asked by merchants when they are hiring a website designer. Bankoff also outlines various things merchants should be aware of when working with designers and the importance of setting performance benchmarks. In addition, he issues a caution about any designer who tosses out a flat price for design services.

May 15, 2014 • 39min
Jonathan Hochman: Wikipedia and SEO
Stephan Spencer, senior contributor for Practical Ecommerce and author of the popular SEO Report Card for the magazine, talks with SEO specialist Jonathan Hochman about the value of Wikipedia, using the resource as a way to build knowledge about and traffic to your website, tips about avoiding "linkspam" and things you should definitely not do to anger the Wiki editors.

May 14, 2014 • 11min
Peapod.com's Thomas Parkinson (Part 2)
It takes a special type of visionary to create an entirely new marketplace. Thomas Parkinson and his brother Andrew launched online grocer Peapod in the late 1980s. As pioneers in online selling, they have weathered the storms of changes in technology and market whims. Peapod was a key player in the dot-com bust, and the company has survived to tell about it.Peapod serves about 260,000 customers from Boston to Milwaukee and from Washington, D.C., to Long Island, N.Y. Thomas Parkinson continues his discussion with Practical eCommerce’s Michael Cox in the second installment of a two-part podcast, and discusses the company’s history, its struggle to survive and what’s in store for the future of one of the Internet’s online pioneers.

May 14, 2014 • 15min
Peapod.com's Thomas Parkinson (Part 1)
It takes a special type of visionary to create an entirely new marketplace. Thomas Parkinson and his brother Andrew launched online grocer Peapod in the late 1980s. As pioneers in online selling, they have weathered the storms of changes in technology and market whims. Peapod was a key player in the dot-com bust, and the company has survived to tell about it.Peapod serves about 260,000 customers from Boston to Milwaukee and from Washington, D.C., to Long Island, N.Y. Thomas Parkinson talks with Practical Ecommerce’s Michael Cox in the first of a two-part podcast, and discusses the company’s history, its struggle to survive and what’s in store for the future of one of the Internet’s online pioneers.

May 14, 2014 • 11min
Organize.com's Kevin Watts
Organize.com began in 1998 in Riverside, Calif., as Organize Everything — one convenient place to shop for storage and organization solutions. For those who have a garage or closet in need of some serious organizational help, Organize.com features a full slate of organizational products, shelving, boxes, bins, hangers and storage systems.About a year after its beginning, the company launched a website. That channel propelled sales to about $10 million annually, 92.5 percent of which is generated through online channels.Kevin Watts is director of ecommerce for the company. He spoke with Practical Ecommerce’s Mitch Bettis about the company’s growth and the success it has had in a niche market.

May 14, 2014 • 16min
Sarabearbaskets.com's Melissa Bramlage
As with many great products in the marketplace, the diaper caddy was conceived out of necessity. Melissa Bramlage, a mother of two, needed a product that could hold all the essential baby care items in one convenient location. It seemed that every time she needed to change her child’s diaper, the new diaper was on the opposite end of the house from the place she left the ointment. Melissa visits with Practical Ecommerce’s Contributing Editor Mitch Bettis about the process of conceiving, creating, manufacturing and selling a unique product in the marketplace as well as her experiences running the company’s website, Sarabearbaskets.com.

May 14, 2014 • 15min
Appliancepartspros.com's Roman Kagan
Roman Kagan has built a successful niche business selling hard-to-find appliance parts to do-it-yourself types around the country. The site was launched in 1999 and has grown to about $5 million in annual sales with 150,000 unique visitors per month. Kagan’s custom-built site search functions help customers find appliance parts for which they are looking within a few clicks. What started as a site featuring about 300 products has grown to showcase more than 1 million parts for 170,000 appliance models.