?3dCart, Magento, Volusion, Zen Cart? Looking for recommendations based on my situation.
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Is ZenCart not listed because you don't like the cart? Or have you not worked with the software?
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Hey Lux,
Hope you can provide some advice since you worked at Volusion. We are using Volusion right now, it was fairly easy to set up but we have now grown to the point where we need to customize the shopping cart and add a blog (they only allow subdomains, which google treats as a seperate domain). We also need to integrate 3rd party apps like freight calculators and Powerreviews, but do not have access to the back end coding, neither FTP SQL support...
I'm thinking we may need to start a domain and build from scratch, as we've invested tremendous resources into SEO and do not want a big hit to our rankings. Any recommendations from you on which platform and shopping cart to use?
Some quick notes on our site:
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1 year old
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1000 sku but will need to expand to 10,000 in the future
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No IT professional (we will need to hire one in the future)
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i have a few customers now that work with magento. they're all satisfied and as far as i can see it's pretty much optimised out of the box already. you can tweak title tags, urls, meta descriptions, on page copy and i've not seen any duplicate content issues. definitely the solution i would chose, were i to open an ecommerce.
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As a retailer i have used actinic, interspire, oscommerce and am soon to release a magento store.
Interspire i believe is now retired and their support for the product was rubbish which was such a pity as it was so easy to use. Actinic are well behind the curvea nd the software was very buggy. oscommerce was a pain but magento i have found to be really versatile and really not so complicated as people say to use.
You can have a designer re-skin it from scratch, buy a template or buy a template close to what your looking for and then just get it modified - this can save a bit of money. There are loads of extensions that are quite simple to install using Magento connect .
The only downside is it is resource hungry, you'll need a dedicated server to really give it the juice it needs and for us the order processing was hideously longwinded - but there are extensions that can help abbreviate it.
One of the hardest things for us was finding a cart that ticked all the usual boxes but also one thats workflow somewhat resembled ours - you don't want to reinvent all your warehouse pick-pack procedures just 'cos your software says so!
Anyway that’s my personal take. HTH.
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Late to the party here. I'm a Magento user with only about 30 products. The reasons I chose Magneto is for it's hangling of multiple languages. It is by far (and I mean really far) the best at handling multiple languages and maintain continuity as far as design, functionality, and SEO.
This leads me to my second reason: Extremely SEO friendly! I've worked with or demoed shopping carts for Joomla, Wordpress, Modx, and other hosted solutions. Magento can be (actually it must be) customized to do anything you want, like localized checkout process, automatic template switching for holiday promotions, e-mail notifications for any action, custom invoices, and the list goes on. Really, the only limits are either your programming skills or your budget.
About resources, I have to disagree with Ryan on this one. I run my instance on Rochen reseller hosting without issues, granted my site is fairly low traffic given that it's for catering and frozen delivery. But I put out mid-90's on both YSlow and PageSpeed, and that's something I don't see very often with other platforms.
Anyway, if you haven't committed, I do suggest getting to know Magento, but you might need to hire a professional firm to handle development.
Kevin
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Hey AHH888,
Wondering what you ended up doing? We're just on wordpress now with a plugin for the cart but are considering volusion. My main concern is loosing the great SEO we have with our wordpress site right now since one or the other will have to be on a subdomain?
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For simple stores with less than a hundred products, we use Concrete5 cms; the ecommerce addon is easy to use and the whole thing is good for SEO.
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With respect to the fees of changing buying carts, I agree the expenses would be excessive but in case you honestly have full manage over your URL structures, there might be zero loss from 301s as you can see here on hunting apps. The shape I am working on putting in is mysite.Com/keep/product name.
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It relies upon upon the level of answer integration. Volusion simply makes use of a lame "share this" button. I surely might write a blog put up at the distinctive ranges of social sharing like bestespressobeans.net. Not all share buttons are created same.