Finally have a budget for a great seo ecommerce site but need help choosing wordpress, joomla, modx, magneto or? Thank you in advance for your generosity of time
-
Are you going to have multiple shipping options? Do you want shipping automatically calculated? And do your paintings hit dimensional weight thresholds? I sell everything from six-foot-long fiberglass model boat hulls that are only a couple of pounds to thirty pound boxes of ball bearings that are easier and cheaper to send than the boat hulls. Shipping from an ecommerce site has been a nightmare for us, and it's something to consider when looking at your package choices.
-
we really don't have logistics nightmares as we sell less items with bigger margin. Shipping for us is not a concern and don't need it even calculated. Most times we just include shipping and custom framing with out pieces.
Just wondering what people are using out there product sites and what they like. Something that is seo friendly. Easy to customize. People rarely by high end art without communicating with us first so the functionality isn't that important when it comes to product management etc....
Seo is most important to me
-
artversion1,
With all due respect, in my experience, Magento is one of the worst possible solutions for eCommerce from an SEO perspective. It's one of the most difficult CMSs ever created from that perspective. Yes, it can be used. However the handful of times I've seen it in place, I've needed to spend much more time working with developers to "get it right" especially in taking it to a higher level of SEO, than Joomla, Drupal, WordPress...
-
Hi Ryan, Well I am not a developer so don't want to give you the wrong advice. I am sure there are many here on SEOMoz who can advise better than myself.
Good luck.
-
I would like to recommend Prestashop. Its very stable, faster and really mature CMS for e-commerce created by French developers.
The downside is that the modules are normally really expensive (the cheaper will cost around € 30) and are generic**,** but you can easily hire freelancers to do that part of the job for you, i just didnt because im aprogrammer and was able to build my own modules.
Some points that I really like about Prestashop is: SEO Optmized, have a great cache (making pages loading speeds really fast) and is deeply integrated with ajax, making it really user friendly.
Currently im finishing a site that uses Prestashop, if you want to take a look its at http://www.ilet.com.br , not finished yet but can give you an Idea of how the CMS works.
And I wouldnt recommend Wordpress, yes, it is a great CMS and with the right plugins or templates you can have a fully operational e-commerce, however, it is not robust like Magento or Prestashop for e-commerce.
We have to keep in mind that Wordpress were built as a blog system, while others CMS like the two above were Build thinking about e-commerce. You will have much better resources (community, developers, cms) on the long run using a solution that is designed for what you want to do than trying to adapt something.
-
I use wordpress alot but have not found a great eCommerce plugin i like yet - If your going to go with eCommerce i would go with opensource carts like cubecart etc -If you find a good wordpress plugin pm me
-
Mr. Nelson,
Perhaps you should take a look at Marketpress and the community that surrounds it. There is a lot of development and support there and the costs are well within your stated budget. Best of luck.
-
Please excuse me but it would be absolutely crazy to get a developer to develop your website from scratch when extremely smart developers have spent thousands and thousands of hours building open source solutions that fit your needs perfectly. Your website is a straight forward ecommerce store. You can get close to 100% of the functionality you need from http://magentocommerce.com (the market leading ecommerce software). Wordpress and Drupal are excellent CMS's but you want to sell so I recommend you use the best opensource ecommerce software available. I don't understand why anybody would suggest you create an ecommerce store from scratch with a budget of 5-10K. GAP, Nokia, Lenovo, Zend have the resources to create an ecommerce store from scratch... you don't ... but they chose Magento. Since you don't have unlimited resources to create custom software you NEED to WORRY about choosing the right platform. Write down the features you need and compare each platform and simply find the one that fits.
-
Will echo Alan's sentiments on Magento. Not only is it just a pain from an SEO perspective, I think it's terrible from the user-end perspective compared to other solutions. I think a good CMS balances the needs of all users (or departments) and is respected by all groups: developers, marketers, designers, and end users. Magento does not.
-
I'm really surprised no one has mentioned Big Commerce. I searched high and low for a ecommerce solution that has the robust feature set that Big Commerce provides and nothing comes close.
In the beginning of my search I was trying so darn hard to find something that integrates with Wordpress because I love it so much. But the top choices Shopp, WP Ecommerce and etc. did not have the robustness that I found in Big Commerce.
While Alan is right in that you need to follow the pre-design development process and figure out what fits your need, I took a really long view on my vision for my ecommerce website and wanted to pick a service that I could "grow" into. Big Commerce fits that need. Their platform has the balance of everything I was looking for.
-
I'm a long time (15 years) web developer, and have drifted into search in the last years. I've seen a lot of things come and go. If this were my project, I'd avoid a custom solution that puts you at the mercy of a developer.
Look for something that's stable, and popular, with a large developer pool. In my opinion Wordpress is great for point of presence sites, but is not yet there for eCommerce.
Although I am a developer, ff this were my project, I'd go with Drupal and something like Ubercart. You may not get all the customization you want, but you won't wind up beholden to a developer either.
-
This post make me laugh because I have been in this position before and I go the same feedback as you are getting.
My conclusion was simple. I absolutely agree that the most crucial aspect (and probably the biggest pain in teh butt) is very thorough documentation or roadmap of what it is that you want to accomplish. IN my experience this road map at first included everything under the sun - all the cool bells and whistles.
Prioritize those features - take the top priorites and look at the top CMS solutions - all of them have been talked about here. Make sure that there are CMS extensions that solve your business needs and remember the goal of the site.... probably to sell something or teach something or some combination of the two. SAY THE GOAL OUT LOAD SO YOU DONT FORGET and get caught up in all the cool things these systems can do.
Pick the CMS that solves the business issues and fulfills the requirements of your document.
I personally love Joomla because it is very mature, has lots of great extensions, is very customizable.
Wordpress easiest - remember, that doesn't always mean best
Drupal most customizable
Joomla somewhere sandwiched in between
GOOD LUCK!!!!
-
If you want simple, powerful design, you really cannot go wrong with RapidWeaver. Combine this with a powerful content system like Wordpress.org and you have a winning combo. RapidWeaver (Real Mac Software) has a learning curve of about a month or so, but man it rules. With YourHead plugins (namely "Stacks"), Nick Cates Themes, Cartloom shopping cart, you are ready to go. I started knowing nothing and ten years later I am doing amazing things with these combos. You should try it too!
-
Being a fulltime web developer with over 500+ sites in the past 12+ years, I can tell you from experience that we've used/seen/fixed/tried all these options that people have discussed and we've come back to the oldie & goldie each time in Wordpress.
Here's a couple quick reasons:
1. It has a TON of man hours into developing a platform that isn't perfect, but works better than 99.99% of all people/companies could put together.
2. It is proven and it WORKS solid.
3. There are tons of plugins that make your site do what you'd like it to do. Don't have one with a function that you are wanting? Either code the functionality directly into the site or build your own plugin and have it do exactly what you'd like.
4. It's extremely flexible to work with to get it to do/integrate with whatever you'd like.
5. It's easy to find developers to work on it since there are a lot of WP developers out there that can help you out. Some of these other platforms, if your developer leaves you, then you're sunk.
Those are just 5 quick reasons why we recommend WP and keep coming back to it. I can't even begin to tell you the number of clients that we've gotten because their developer recommended a solution or custom built them a platform, then the developer went out of business, got lost on a boat in the middle of the sea, or just completely quit returning phone calls and they left the customer out to die. Then the client calls us and has to make another decent investment for us to build them something brand new from scratch on WP. The most recent, was with a client who had their custom built platform for 3 months and the developer disappeared.
Sorry to say but these stories happen all the time. That's why we're not cheap, but we take amazing care of our clients day & night (including sending them $100 of cookies like we did for a client yesterday. LOL!)
Hope this helps. Let me know if you have any other questions.