E-commerce CMS allow other people to sell products - content-management-system

Do you know of an e commerce cms that would allow other people to sell products on my site and I take a certain percentage of the sale?
Thanks!

You could try magento's multi store feature, assign each seller to a store. Not sure how you would handle the transactions. No other e-commerce solution comes to mind with those features. look for a plugin with the feature's you require or build your own. creating your own plugin for magento would be alot less time consuming than building your own geared towards what you describe/require.

Related

How to Integrate Magento 2 Store with Jet.com for sales point of view

I have Magento 2 store and looking jet.com for sales point of view.
Is this possible ?
Please suggest me any possible solution.
Thank you.
You have a couple options:
You can directly integrate with CedCommerce's commercial extension.
You can use a third-party omnichannel integrator that will sync catalog data, inventory and orders to any of a number of marketplaces. While there are a number of these platforms, there aren't many right now that have ready-made integrations with both Jet and Magento. Two that I have found are SellerCloud and ChannelSale. One thing to note is that these typically become the center of your e-commerce operation, with Magento pushed to the fringe, as just another marketplace alongside Jet. That may be good or bad depending on your business model and existing architecture.
Note that I have no first-hand experience with using these integrations or omnichannel platforms like this, so I cannot personally vouch for their quality.

Shopping cart framework that supports multiple vendors?

I'm searching for a shopping cart or web store framework that supports multiple vendors.
There are many, many shopping cart frameworks out there: that page lists couple of hundred. In spite of the comparisons on that page, supporting multiple vendors isn't a comparison item, probably because it's a rare requirement. Separate to that page I have evaluated a few of what appear to be the top frameworks, and none that I evaluated supported this feature. Which carts would you recommend?
Commercial is okay, although I would prefer open source.
Platform (Windows, Linux, ASP.Net, PHP, Ruby... Minix, Fortran... :)) doesn't matter.
A system
where I manually add vendors who request it (instead of them freely
being able to sign up) is also okay, if there's a store where that's
possible but freely joining up isn't built in yet.
Rationale: I'd like to create an app-store like website. "App store" is a close analogy: it won't sell apps, but it will sell digital goods and I'd like anyone to be able to sell their item on the store. It's this second requirement, multiple vendors selling through the store, that I'm finding hard to satisfy.
I've used multiple shopping cart frameworks (a lot of them broken), and my favorite (which just so happens to support multiple vendors) is PrestaShop. It's free, open source, and suppports all that you asked for. Is this the framework you were looking for?
-JXP
The Wikipedia page you cited lists multiple vendor support as a column in Other Features, along with features that are pertinent to your search.
This question otherwise requires domain knowledge and likely requires multiple answers. The best I can do is offer the bounded set of software that competes directly within this space, at least according to Wikipedia.
The easiest solution for achieving your stated goal of allowing multiple people to sell on your site while exercising fine-grained control of who can and cannot do so is perhaps using WPMU's MarketPress in tandem with BuddyPress or WordPress Multisite. I'm not a die-hard fan of WordPress, per se, but that might be an expedient way for you to get to a minimal viable product and to validate your idea before shelling out the time and/or cash to custom build it from the ground up, and/or labor ad nauseam with tweaking an existing framework. MarketPress is a good plug-in that'll give you many of the features of a full-fledged e-commerce framework... BuddyPress, of course, will allow you to set up individual vendor's with their own sites under your brand. The two work together. More on MarketPress at:
http://premium.wpmudev.org/project/e-commerce/installation/
Another alternative is Jimdo's PagePartners. I haven't used it, but it looks intriguing. I like their design sensibilities, and their stated business ethos. This might be a viable option, too. The caveat being: it's not white label. More info about Jimdo's PagePartners here:
http://www.jimdo.com/pagepartner/faq/
Finally, another interesting CMS to explore is SetSeed. I think it'll allow you to launch multiple sites for each vendor via a central hub you control, and will allow you to maintain your branding within each. How, the,n any sort of renumeration would flow back to you for setting up an individual vendor's store would be up to you to figure out... This is a fairly new CMS and it looks like it's evolving smartly and rapidly. If you require some customization of it, to approach more specifically what you ask for, now might be a good time to reach out to the developer...but you might be able to think of an effective way to adapt it for your use right out of the box.
http://setseed.com/multi-site-cms/setseed-hub/
Unfortunately, none of the above is open-source--but, again, the ease by which you could get to a functional site approximating your idea may off-set that drawback. Jimdo is an open-source contributor, however. So, maybe even an e-mail to them might be a fruitful dialogue to begin. If anything, check out each of the above, and it may influence how you search for other solutions, and will at least provide some models in your own thinking or with other developers. The shopping cart is an integrated feature, I believe, in all of the above cases. With regard to giving your vendors the capacity to deliver digital goods (e-books, mp3s, etc.), check out Fetchapp.com. Very cool app. Very easy to set-up...could probably be rolled into one of the above frameworks. The frameworks would handle the issue of individual vendor profiles and/or sub-domains.

What are the pros and cons of using Joomla as a CMS for an e-commerce site selling physical products?

I am not a developer/engineer so
please excuse my ignorance (and feel
free to edit where I have not
expressed myself correctly)
In particular I would like to know if Joomla is sufficiently complex to handle:
Using the API of several logistics/delivery services
Doing A/B testing
Integrating seemlesly with a payment gateway
Any other important things I am not even thinking about just yet?
You don't really want to know about Joomla, you want to know about the e-commerce extensions for Joomla. If you are purely going to be selling products and not producing any content, then I would probably opt for a dedicated e-commerce solution like Magento. If you need the additional features for managing content outside of the products you intend to sell then I would go with Joomla + Virtuemart + k2 + K2mart. Joomla and K2 will handle all of the content needs you may have. Virtuemart is the most robust of the e-commerce packages but it can be hard to work with for product display, which is why I recommend K2mart. This allows you to use the checkout portion of VM - payment processing, shipping calculations, invoices and notification with the power of K2 templating to display product categories and detail pages. It also makes your e-commerce pages much more SEO friendly. All of those are free extensions with the exception of K2mart which is very reasonably priced.
Virtuemart has a large selection of shipping options including several popular shipping services with APIs. They have payment processing for all of the big paymeny gateways. You can do A/B testing with an extension designed to integrate with Google Webmaster Tools.

what's a good CMS for e-commerce?

what's a good cms for web shops ? I've always used Drupal so far, but I haven't ever developed webshops. I saw there are Magento and a Drupal module Ubecart.
I actually would like to know a "known, easy to use webshop framework so I don't have to take care abuot security issues.. etc
thanks
I have been using both Magento (community edition) and Ubercart depending on client's target hosting preference. I must say that Magento has some impressive functionality and flexible as it has been around for a while. However there are some serious problems with this. Upgrading Magento to the latest version is a complete nightmare and have a good chance of needing to reinstall. Building your themes in Magento is so convoluted, it takes so many inheriting files to create a simple layout change. There is cummunity support, but most of them screaming for help as I remember. Magento model is "make money from support". So I found that they are not so quick to help on the forums.
With Ubercart it is refreshing to see the amount of active help. I think this is important if you are new this. If you are already familiar with Drupal, then I would say stick with Ubercart. It is much simpler to manage than Magento.
They are both good with application security, but you will need to setup your own SSL cert anyway. I've played with some other carts such as Zen and OS Cart, but found them inferior compared to Ubercart and Magento.
There are more than 500 of them. shopping-cart-reviews.com has a search by parameters feature, does a good job.
If I where you, I would compare open source packages like magento and ubercart against hosted ones like our own SolidShops.com.
Check out my blog post about magento (and open source ecommerce packages) versus hosted ones. I've outlined when to go best with open source / hosted depending on your situation.
We've built SolidShops.com specifically for web designers that need an easy and flexible platform for building small to medium sized stores. It's hosted so you won't have to install, update, secure, backup, ... a thing
Design is 100% flexible if you know html and css and it's a breeze to set up.

Where to Start for Building a Product Catalog

I've been asked to develop a product catalog for our company. We have maybe 20 products, but I'm not sure where to start.
I have some PHP experience and Wordpress CMS experience. I was hoping for an existing framework or solution so I wouldn't have to start from scratch. Anyone have any ideas?
I'm not looking for an ecommerce site as we are NOT selling anything through the site. Its just a showcase.
Especially if you don't ever want to sell: Don't use a framework. Use Wordpress! Create a site for every product, and link them appropriately. Use a theme that allows you to group sites.
This way you work with a CMS you are familiar with, you have the advantage of all the Wordpress goodies (permalinks come to mind), and you don't have to code much at all.
Opencart is a great solution can be easy moded as product catalog
Check their forums