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How Do You Shop Our Site? The easiest way to shop our site is to do some homework first. Try to visit local window treatment decorators or stores to get an idea of the Manufacturer, Product(cellular, mini-blind, wood blind, etc.) that you are interested in pricing. Next, you can search the product in our search engine on the site for a quick search. Lets use cellular blinds as an example. Now we are ready to go to quick search and click on the drop down for cellular blinds and put your size in.
Now decide which blind is right for you and click on the link. Lets take the cheapest blind>>>>>> Our Brand Quick Ship Budget Cordless Cellular Light filtering After clicking on the lick it will take you to the build a blind page.
You can see amny interesting tabs that will help you decide on whether this blind is for you or not. Once you have built your blind send it to your cart and you are on your way to reciving a well built blind from a quality on line store like www.blindsexpress.com. Below is interesting reading about general on line shopping. Shopping online doesn't have to be risky business if you use caution and common sense. This week we'll continue our series on consumer safety in the digital marketplace. One of the main concerns associated with online shopping is privacy. Before conducting business on the Web, read the seller's fine print for their terms of conditions and privacy statement. You'd be surprised how many businesses collect the names, phone numbers and e-mail addresses of their clients and sell them to other online information brokers. Where it goes from there is anyone's guess. Your information may be bought, sold and given away a hundred times more. You've officially become an online commodity, the consequences of which can be far reaching. You might notice, for example, that after buying a book or CD online, your number of junk e-mails dramatically increases. It might be a trickle, or it could be a flood. You might also notice an increase in direct-mail advertising or, worse, calls from telemarketers. Much depends on the scruples of those involved. To the best of my knowledge, there are no laws requiring online sellers to post privacy policies on their Web sites. Good sites don't try to hide anything from the buyer and voluntarily provide this information. The best sites, however, don't sell your information to anyone else and proudly say so, right up front. Even good sites that do share buyer information should give you the option of whether you'd like to participate, usually in the guise of other retailers selling similar products. Don't always assume, however, that because a site posts privacy policies it is on the up-and-up. A common practice is to blind you with such detailed - and boring, let's face it - fine print that no sane person would dare read it. They cover their bases and hope you don't have the desire to find hidden gotchas. If you don't see any mention about privacy policies at the Web site of an online seller, think twice before you hand over personal information. And if they tell you, in a direct or roundabout way, that they do share customer information, keep on surfing. That's the beauty of online shopping - competition is fierce, and bad news travels fast among potential buyers, so only the honest sites survive. Hopefully the laws and regulations will tighten on the growing concern of online consumer privacy. For some good reading on this and other topics, visit the Better Business Bureau Online, at www.bbbonline.org. A good way to avoid becoming an online commodity is to steer clear of cookies - small information files that many sites plant on your computer's hard drive. In a perfect world, cookies can be nice, because they retain personal preferences and other information used every time you visit a particular Web site. Personally, I don't allow cookies on my machine, because the probability for abuse is just too great. I don't like Web sites knowing what other sites I've visited, how often I visit them and so forth. Marketers claim that cookies are useful for tailoring advertising content based on your Web activity. That alone sends up a red flag in my book. From innocent cookies come adware, spyware, Web bugs and more. I'd rather take the time to retype information each time I visit a site than have that information broadcast about the Web in the form of cookie files. I'm not in so much of a rush that I'd voluntarily compromise my personal security. Do yourself a favor and put a halt to the cookie monster, via your Web browser's security options. You can also employ third-party software applications that block incoming cookies and clean your system of those already planted. Most full-featured anti-virus packages now offer cookie protection.
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