For many smaller businesses, e-commerce is like a recurring nightmare -- the one where you show up for a class to find that it is actually final exam day -- and everyone seems to have studied except you.
If you are in that nightmare now -- finding yourself suddenly competing with Web-based businesses, for example -- there is good news and bad.
First, the bad: we really are nearing final exam time. Soon, the "e" in e-commerce will be redundant and almost all businesses will conduct at least some of their business over the Internet, just as most conduct at least some of their business over the phone.
But the good news is that, if you already are in business, you know more than you think about e-commerce. E-commerce is just commerce. If you produce or acquire products, or take orders and fill them, you're 80 to 90 percent there.
E-commerce is not as mysterious and unattainable as it is sometimes made out to be by vendors and consultancies trying to justify high fees. What's more, even if you're light on technical expertise or have a low budget, there are products and services that can get your business online.