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  3. ecommerce app ?

ecommerce app ?

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  • d19dotcaD Offline
    d19dotcaD Offline
    d19dotca
    wrote on last edited by
    #12

    My recommendation: WordPress + WooCommerce plugin (this is effectively the most supported and most common solution with a plethora of online tutorials and resources to rely on too) -- OR -- WordPress + SureCart plugin (the newer player on the block which aims to be a much simpler WooCommerce with even more better features)

    --
    Dustin Dauncey
    www.d19.ca

    timconsidineT humptydumptyH 2 Replies Last reply
    3
    • d19dotcaD d19dotca

      My recommendation: WordPress + WooCommerce plugin (this is effectively the most supported and most common solution with a plethora of online tutorials and resources to rely on too) -- OR -- WordPress + SureCart plugin (the newer player on the block which aims to be a much simpler WooCommerce with even more better features)

      timconsidineT Offline
      timconsidineT Offline
      timconsidine
      App Dev
      wrote on last edited by
      #13

      @d19dotca Hadn't heard of SureCart so will check that out.

      timconsidineT 1 Reply Last reply
      1
      • timconsidineT timconsidine

        @d19dotca Hadn't heard of SureCart so will check that out.

        timconsidineT Offline
        timconsidineT Offline
        timconsidine
        App Dev
        wrote on last edited by timconsidine
        #14

        Thanks everyone for your input.
        My state of mind currently :

        I had wanted to use OpenCart but I can't get it packaged for Cloudron (and can't update the previous custom package on git.cloudron.io). Also a native installation seems broken for now.

        I usually shy away from Wordpress. Seen too many impossible to maintain installations. But WP + Wordfence + WooCommerce (or SureCart) might be workable. I just have to get over my "PTSD" about WP.

        Snipcart looks interesting but it is one more component (and fees) which seems unnecessary just to get buyers to Stripe, which is my preferred payments platform. (Paypal almost stole £5k from me so they're banned 😆 )

        It's not new but I have discovered that Stripe have payment links which give a URL which I'm hoping can be put on a button in Ghost or other simple CMS. They don't provide cart functionality, but they're neat as a one-click purchase mechanism.

        Stripe does have a checkout module, but I haven't worked out if it can be used with something like Grav (or Ghost).

        1 Reply Last reply
        2
        • DanTheManD Offline
          DanTheManD Offline
          DanTheMan
          wrote on last edited by
          #15

          I had Prestashop installed as a lamp app in Cloudron. It ran for half a year without any problems, but I didn't do anything with it so I removed it recently.

          timconsidineT 1 Reply Last reply
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          • DanTheManD DanTheMan

            I had Prestashop installed as a lamp app in Cloudron. It ran for half a year without any problems, but I didn't do anything with it so I removed it recently.

            timconsidineT Offline
            timconsidineT Offline
            timconsidine
            App Dev
            wrote on last edited by
            #16

            @DanTheMan yes I looked at Prestashop a while back but was not keen on their plugin structure.

            1 Reply Last reply
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            • RazielKanosR Offline
              RazielKanosR Offline
              RazielKanos
              wrote on last edited by
              #17

              I managed more over 200 WP + WooCommerce shops in my active time in roughly 20 years in the business. I really don't get where that "hard to handle" myth for WordPress comes from... try working with SAP - THATS hell on earth xD

              For a purrrfect cache solution, Check out SwiftPerformance

              MooCloud_MattM 1 Reply Last reply
              3
              • d19dotcaD d19dotca

                My recommendation: WordPress + WooCommerce plugin (this is effectively the most supported and most common solution with a plethora of online tutorials and resources to rely on too) -- OR -- WordPress + SureCart plugin (the newer player on the block which aims to be a much simpler WooCommerce with even more better features)

                humptydumptyH Offline
                humptydumptyH Offline
                humptydumpty
                wrote on last edited by
                #18

                @d19dotca Surecart got me interested so I watched some of their feature videos on their YT channel. A lot of the good features are behind a paywall and for basic variations (color, size, etc.) you need to be on the Pro plan ($199/yr; that's with a 50% coupon). I feel their pricing doesn't fit their audience though. A "simple" shop owner shouldn't have to pay that much for what is considered a basic ecommerce feature. The 100 product limit on the free plan is understandable for example. I feel that in Tim's case, a WP + Stripe checkout pages is a much better route. Especially since he intends on using Stripe so he can use Stripe's dashboard to manage his finances and orders. But if Stripe checkout is the option he takes, then WP might not be needed and other platforms might do the job, even a static site generator which would eliminate the need for caching, security plugins, etc. (general WP headaches 😉 ).

                timconsidineT d19dotcaD 2 Replies Last reply
                3
                • humptydumptyH humptydumpty

                  @d19dotca Surecart got me interested so I watched some of their feature videos on their YT channel. A lot of the good features are behind a paywall and for basic variations (color, size, etc.) you need to be on the Pro plan ($199/yr; that's with a 50% coupon). I feel their pricing doesn't fit their audience though. A "simple" shop owner shouldn't have to pay that much for what is considered a basic ecommerce feature. The 100 product limit on the free plan is understandable for example. I feel that in Tim's case, a WP + Stripe checkout pages is a much better route. Especially since he intends on using Stripe so he can use Stripe's dashboard to manage his finances and orders. But if Stripe checkout is the option he takes, then WP might not be needed and other platforms might do the job, even a static site generator which would eliminate the need for caching, security plugins, etc. (general WP headaches 😉 ).

                  timconsidineT Offline
                  timconsidineT Offline
                  timconsidine
                  App Dev
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #19

                  @humptydumpty god analysis, thank you.

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  1
                  • humptydumptyH humptydumpty

                    @d19dotca Surecart got me interested so I watched some of their feature videos on their YT channel. A lot of the good features are behind a paywall and for basic variations (color, size, etc.) you need to be on the Pro plan ($199/yr; that's with a 50% coupon). I feel their pricing doesn't fit their audience though. A "simple" shop owner shouldn't have to pay that much for what is considered a basic ecommerce feature. The 100 product limit on the free plan is understandable for example. I feel that in Tim's case, a WP + Stripe checkout pages is a much better route. Especially since he intends on using Stripe so he can use Stripe's dashboard to manage his finances and orders. But if Stripe checkout is the option he takes, then WP might not be needed and other platforms might do the job, even a static site generator which would eliminate the need for caching, security plugins, etc. (general WP headaches 😉 ).

                    d19dotcaD Offline
                    d19dotcaD Offline
                    d19dotca
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #20

                    @humptydumpty totally agree. Wasn’t my first choice but I’ve heard a lot of good things about it. I’d still stick with WP & WooCommerce.

                    --
                    Dustin Dauncey
                    www.d19.ca

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    1
                    • RazielKanosR RazielKanos

                      I managed more over 200 WP + WooCommerce shops in my active time in roughly 20 years in the business. I really don't get where that "hard to handle" myth for WordPress comes from... try working with SAP - THATS hell on earth xD

                      For a purrrfect cache solution, Check out SwiftPerformance

                      MooCloud_MattM Offline
                      MooCloud_MattM Offline
                      MooCloud_Matt
                      wrote on last edited by MooCloud_Matt
                      #21

                      @RazielKanos
                      The main question is scale; even 200 wp is a small group, especially if you don't let your customer install what they want from the store, and the store that you have don't have custom code in it, that needs to be tested, or are regionals store that doesn't need to scale.

                      And in any case, wp is not modern, it tries to stay up to date, but it is a monolithic software, which means you have disadvantages.

                      • Lower security because the frontend has access to the DB, which allows more exploitation.
                      • Front-End and backend are together; this doesn't allow you to scale quickly/easily.
                      • Plugin compatibility with different versions of PHP.
                      • WordPress is terrible in rollback, you need to use a backup.
                      • Working on multiple branches is not possible, in some cases not even staging is possible.

                      Maybe in some cases, the advantages (easy to find a compatible provider, plugin ecosystem, easy to find documentation, visual builder) make it a good option for you, but you can't say that is not a hard solution to maintain compared to a JAMstack solution.

                      But if you ask me what you should start with, if you want to build an e-shop, I would go on JAMstack almost in all cases, vue and svelte are super easy to learn and you can do a lot with almost 0 understanding of JS or TS, copy and pasting from the documentation.

                      Matteo. R.
                      Founder and Tech-Support Manager.
                      MooCloud MSP
                      Swiss Managed Service Provider

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