Website Legals

anthonytaylor

Free Member
Jun 26, 2010
18
0
Hi,

I am in the process of developing a new website and I would like to get all of my legals sorted in advance of the launch.

The purpose of the website is to offer a service - people post us a product which isn't working and we repair it and send it back to them.

We will taking payment via PayPal and as part of our marketing strategy we will be collecting email addresses, from customer and website visitors.

What can I expect to pay for the necessary legals for my website?

I am not comfortable using a template or writing them myself as there may be easy loopholes should we encounter any problems.

If anyone has any advice on the best way to approach this issue from previous experience i'd really appreciate it.

Kind regards,
Anthony
 
We provide packages for web site compliance starting from £295 ex VAT for B2B and B2C terms and web site policies including privacy/Data protection requirements. Happy to chat to you further about this. All of our bespoke work is insured and we write terms for a variety of small businesses as can be seen from our testimonial page. We also provide terms to IT businesses for sale as part of ecommerce shops.
 
Upvote 0
J

jules12345

We provide packages for web site compliance starting from £295 ex VAT for B2B and B2C terms and web site policies including privacy/Data protection requirements. Happy to chat to you further about this. All of our bespoke work is insured and we write terms for a variety of small businesses as can be seen from our testimonial page. We also provide terms to IT businesses for sale as part of ecommerce shops.

Is this an advert ? Because I cant even put my signature href url up - how come this company seems to be able to do what no one else can do in regards to offering NOT free advice but AN ADVERT ? Is it nepotism I ask ? Are the Brownies out in force as usual I ask ponderingly?

So very often these types of things occur.

regards
Jules
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Upvote 0

JElder

Free Member
Jul 2, 2008
1,142
192
Southampton, Hampshire
He's a full (paid) member, and has a lot of posts, hence he can posts URLs. LimeOne also does provide a lot of free advice on here, so can get away with a blatant advert!

I't not something you can get advice on over the web, as these sort of documents really do need to be tailored to your needs. Unfortunately they are the sort of thin people are unwilling to sell money on until they have major problems that a decent set of conditions could have mitigated.
 
Upvote 0

Latest Articles

Join UK Business Forums for free business advice