Okay guys WE GET IT. You love AMD, so we'll work very hard to provide you with AMD stuff at awesome prices.
Completely missed the point :faceaplm:
1. Drop the superiority complex, that you know better than everyone else because you have more "experience".
2. Don't attack other corporations, ever. Lamegg? Crapzon? That isn't cool.
3. I don't get the point of the bazillion pictures? Just trying to show off how awesome you are? I think we got the point from your first few pictures that yes, you have a shop and you have stock and are legit. We got it. Anything further than that is just bragging.
4. You need to RELATE to your consumers. Right now, everything you've posted, you're entire marketing scheme (yes, you're looking for suggestions, but a huge part of this has clearly been marketing) is extremely, extremely arrogant. Drop the "we're better than everyone else attitude". Drop the "we're only for gamers and enthusiasts because those are the only people that deserve to buy from us attitude". Because, as a startup, you need to RELATE to people and build trust. You're definitely not doing that right now.
For your business, the most important things would be quick, cheap shipping and low prices. The main problem with all the other small companies like PerformancePCS or FrozenCPU is that items that both the them and Newegg carry, Newegg is cheaper and doesn't screw you on shipping.
Another thing would be not having ridiculously long product names (*cough* Newegg). Having all the product specifications listed accurately and being able to sort by these easily is important. Formatting is especially important. For example, Newegg has DDR3 RAM split into three sections for PC10600, PC10660, and PC10666. That's just silly.
I find a concise shopping cart page to be useful. Just listing the price, a small picture, and the name. I hate it when I go to the shopping cart page and it's way bigger than my screen. Scan.co.uk is a great example of a site that has done it right.
Of course great customer service is important, but realize a large portion of your customers won't ever contact customer service if nothing goes wrong with their order.
I don't like kits, they're the lazy way out of building a computer and always come with a catch. I don't think a company should decide what a consumer should buy. Combo deals like Newegg does (You can find thousands of combos, so it's not as limiting) is the way to do it.
Don't endorse specific brands only. In general, don't be inclusive. You want to be open to everyone and everything.