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The most popular sites are probably Shopify, Magento and WooCommerce. They're all good, but for different reasons.
Shopify - Good if you have the money to spend on a read-to-use straight-out-of-the-box ecoomerce store, and want support from a dedicated team of pros. Shopify has people on hand...
To be honest, if you're quite comfortable with building and designing your own store, you might be better off with Magento or WooCommerce as both are free (well, Magento Community is at least) and give you free reign over your site's code, so you have a lot more flexibility with what you can do...
I work for Veeqo, an inventory management software based in Swansea. We're writing a guide to dropshipping for our blog and are looking for people who run (or have run in the past) businesses using dropshipping to provide some quotes.
If anyone is interested in answering the following...
One of the best things I've found is blogging/guest blogging, which really helps from an SEO point of view. If you write SEO optimized content for your own blog, and then try and write articles for other bloggers, you should see your ranking improve. You should also review your website and make...
Etsy is great for vintage sellers - the site has loads of vintage/craft sellers. WordPress/WooCommerce are also options you could consider if you're not looking for something pricy.
Linnworks is very popular, as are Ordoro and Veeqo. Veeqo offers both Amazon and eBay, as well as other sales channels including WooCommerce, Magento and Shopify, and is priced from £25 a month. It can also take care of your labelling and POS . (Worth mentioning I work for Veeqo, so know a fair...
I work for a company called Veeqo which offers inventory management and POS, and also works with Magento (as well as Amazon, eBay, Shopify, WooCommerce and more). It might be worth considering as you're looking for an integrated inventory management/POS tool, with the added benefit of offering...
I work for an inventory management company, and most of our customers like Shopify or WooCommerce as they're pretty easy to set up and manage. I personally like Squarespace because I find it looks nicest and is the easiest to customise. Have you tried looking at Etsy? I know there are plenty of...
It's one of the most popular inventory management systems, so I reckon it's best to just give it as long as you've looked into it thoroughly and think it'll work. You could also try LinnWorks, StitchLabs, Channel Grabber or Veeqo (please note I do actually work for Veeqo!) as those are all...
I had something similar happen last week - paid for an eBay postage label, then took the item to the post office, only to be told that I had to pay for postage again as the item wasn't covered by Royal Mail (it was jewellery). So I paid a total of around £12 on postage for a parcel that weighed...
I work for a multichannel inventory management software, and Shopify is by far the most used. WooCommerce is second most popular, and a few use Magento. I'm a fan of Squarespace myself.
I'd definitely use multiple platforms, at least to start with. Go where the customers are - and there are plenty on Amazon, eBay, Etsy etc. It shouldn't have a negative effect on your own website - if anything, should drive traffic there if you link back from the other platforms.