A New Test Site or Take Down the old Site? - Creating a New E-Commerce Site

Fundisi History

OK, the decision is made - for better or worse. We go with Wordpress and add an e-commerce plugin to it.

An e-commerce plugin? I thought you were going to program this all yourself, Dave?

No, sanity has prevailed again. Rather get the best possible e-commerce plugin and spend enough time with it to extract the maximum from it.  If it still won’t quite do the trick, then custom-programming will have to be brought to bear. But first, the best plugin needs to be found. From quite a few that I have found, there appear to be three popular possibilities whose owners seem to be really serious about their product:

  1. Market theme
  2. Shopp
  3. WP E-commerce

Now which one to choose? That choice had better be the right one, or more time will be lost…

  • They all say they are the best and will do wonderful things for me.
  • They all offer a whole hoard of features, most of which I do not understand.
  • Some advertised features I see no necessity for.
  • Some advertised features I doubt will work the way I want them to work.
  • They all cost money (albeit not a devastatingly large amount).

What to do? Well, the best way would be to set up a site and try them out. Oops… One claims to be free (WP E-commerce), but you need to buy at least one essential add-on. The rest don’t seem to offer trial versions at all.

Well, let’s start with the free one. If it does the job more or less, then they have made the sale and I’ll go with them. Otherwise, I’ll have to buy the next most-promising one. Or maybe I’ll bite the bullet and get all three and try them out. Expensive but maybe wise. I’ll decide later and start with the free one for the moment.

Now, where to set it up?

  • On a local server? This will probably take too long to set up and may not be totally compatible to what is offered by my hosting company anyway.
  • Delete the old site (after backing it up, of course) and install the test setup in its place? This would be fine, but in the meantime there would be no site up at all! And if I ran into payment-gateway problems, at least there would be an existing site to cross-check with, if I didn’t delete it.
  • Rent some new server space temporarily, and point another domain name to it? This might be the most expensive option, but it wouldn’t break the bank either!

So, the third option it must be. Now to order a new site and let the site hosting company set it up. This usually takes 24-hours so in the meantime, I’ll continue trawling the Internet for information on these three plugins…

5 Comments

  1. ObsessionO  •  Feb 12, 2009 @17:25 pm

    This is a great post, let me know how this works about for you. There is also Yak http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/yak-for-wordpress/ I believe it’s called, and someone has modified OScommerce to work with wordpress themes, but these three that you mentioned seem to be the most popular wordpress addon’s.

    Oh don’t forget eshop. It’s also free.
    http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/eshop/

    I am in the process of playing with these myself. I want to see if Shopplugin will allow for multiple stores, still waiting for an answer there. Also there demo does not work, because the admin page link is not showing on the current theme. That might be one way for you to test it out before you pay for it.

    Eshop is very light. If you have a few things to sell it might be ok. I have heard wp ecommerce is very buggy, but I have not tried it yet, so I will reserve judgement.

    I look forward to your update.

  2. Dan Milward  •  Feb 13, 2009 @06:01 am

    Hey there. We just uploaded another version of the WP e-Commerce Plugin (otherwise known as the WordPress e-Commerce Plugin.

    I would suggest you test with this version:
    http://downloads.wordpress.org/plugin/wp-e-commerce.3.6.10RC5.zip

    If you need a hand with anything let me know - there are also other hosted solutions available too. These might be good for you if you don’t want to wait for hosting accounts to be setup etc… checkout http://www.getshopped.com for hosted e-Commerce.

    (that said getshopped.com uses wp e-commerce and not the latest version - when it does use the latest version getshopped.com will be the best).

    Ciao,

    Dan

  3. Dave  •  Feb 13, 2009 @10:08 am

    @ObsessionO
    Thank you for your comments and your other suggested links.
    Watch how things develop - I’ll try and report the state of affairs each weekday.

    @Dan Milward
    See today’s (Friday 13th) post - you feature prominently as an example of how correctinternet publicity should be done. Thank you :-)

  4. Market Theme  •  Feb 13, 2009 @22:40 pm

    Hi Dave,

    In your article, you mentioned not knowing exactly how to proceed in setting up your online store, so I thought I’d suggest a possible solution you might want to consider.

    Some of our members with existing blogs who want to add an online store, actually setup a second installation of Wordpress into a sub-folder (named “store” or “products” or something). Then, they install a stock version of the Market Theme onto that one.

    The benefit of this, is that on their main original blog all they need to do is add a link in their navigation area to this new “store” subfolder, and maybe edit the colors in the stylesheet to match if they desire. It makes installation a breeze, without having to do much to their original site.

    Of course a person can always just setup the Market theme AS their site — but from what you described above, I thought this might be a possible idea for you.

    One last thing… You can checkout an online demo of the Market Theme here if you like:
    http://www.markettheme.com/demo

    I hope this helps, and I look forward to the writings of your findings.

    Eli

  5. Obsessiono  •  Mar 20, 2009 @10:49 am

    http://tribulant.com/products/view/10/wordpress-shopping-cart-plugin

    I have found another shopping cart. This one is commercial, but the back end looks good. I have looked all over, but very few reveiws. I think this looks like a good contender for Shopp.net, wordpress E-Commerce, eshop, and there are a couple more.

    @Dan Milward

    I just saw the link and I think I will test out the new version. I am specifically looking for something that has several payment options available. I have tried several carts, but most use paypal. I think it’s nice to use paypal, but it’s good to have other options as well.

    @Dave

    I look forward to your feedback. In some ways things move fast in a web 2.0 world, but in others they don’t move fast enough. :-)

    I have set up a test store blog, and there are so many add on’s you can use to enhance a blog to look more store like. Eg. language, currency exhange, zoom functions, etc.

    I look forward to hearing back from others on their experiences with the latest versions of these many carts.

    The great thing about so many carts is that it’s slowly becoming recognized that wordpres is not only CMS ready, but ecommerce ready.

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