Slashdot Mirror


Which US States are e-Commerce Friendly?

pHaze asks: "I am about to take a long drive across the USA with my girlfriend to try and find a state to live in. We are both professional geeks and plan to settle and start a business. We were wondering if slashdotters could offer some advice on which state is the best to start an e-commerce business in. Which has the most e-commerce friendly/unfriendly laws (taxation, copyright, spam, privacy), the highest availability of broadband (and bandwidth in general) and is the most cost effective for a business."

1 of 94 comments (clear)

  1. the one with the best weather by avi33 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    hm. There are so many factors to consider, and your question doesn't offer many details.

    1. A cheap one - If you're starting a business from scratch, you probably want to conserve cash. As such, you may need to look for a cheap place to live...many states have them, but you can do your own homework to see what the cost of living is. The cheaper the area, the cheaper your legal/incidental expenses may be. However, this may affect your access to:

    2. Broadband - I don't think it matters what state you're in, you need to either be withing range (3 miles) of a CO or a cable ISP. You could be in the 'most wired state' and still be outside of range. Unless you go with satellite access, in which case, I think you need an extra phone line for uploads. Then you could probably work anywhere, except on really cloudy days.

    3. What kind of business? Are you going to be pounding the pavement looking for clients? In which case, you'd better be near lots of them, possibly offsetting point 1.

    4. I hear maryland is very business-friendly. You don't have to live there to register your business, and I think they make it quite easy to do via the web. If I'm not mistaken, they're somewhat lenient when it comes to business taxes, though you can find the other benefits by asking google.

    5. If this is really going to be a 'virtual business' then it shouldn't matter. Find somewhere where you like the weather or the nightlife or the mountains or the beach. In the long run, whether your (online) business succeeds or fails doesn't hinge on where it sits, it's on what you do with it. Though you may want to be within 50 miles of a decent job market in case one (or both) of you needs to get a real job...