magento v opencart?

gibby

Free Member
Sep 11, 2007
1,248
121
Edinburgh
I'm in the process of setting up 3 new ecommerce sites.
All will have around 1000 products, need to handle shipping rates by postcode and ideally run off 1 admin for all 3 stores.

We already have a cubecart store but need something that can handle better features.

Would value any feedback on magento and opencart.
 

antropy

Business Member
  • Business Listing
    Aug 2, 2010
    5,322
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    West Sussex, UK
    www.antropy.co.uk
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    gibby

    Free Member
    Sep 11, 2007
    1,248
    121
    Edinburgh
    Thanks. So far open cart seems to be in favour.
    Both are very impressive but open cart runs faster and seems easier to use.

    We have to check a few more things but can anyone answer these?
    Is opencat able to show uk vat correctly? We need it to show the price including the vat content for customers but also report it for sales figures?

    Also is there a mod that allows us to surcharge x amount for products from a certain category?
    We need to add 1 charge for frozen goods from a category and a second for chilled.

    So much to take in.

    Ta.
    G
     
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    greengecko

    Free Member
    Feb 3, 2010
    254
    38
    Thanks. So far open cart seems to be in favour.
    Both are very impressive but open cart runs faster and seems easier to use.

    We have to check a few more things but can anyone answer these?
    Is opencat able to show uk vat correctly? We need it to show the price including the vat content for customers but also report it for sales figures?

    Also is there a mod that allows us to surcharge x amount for products from a certain category?
    We need to add 1 charge for frozen goods from a category and a second for chilled.

    So much to take in.

    Ta.
    G

    There may well be a way to do such things with OpenCart, unfortunately as I haven't ever got beyond basic tasks I cannot comment. However from the feedback from others, as soon as you want to start doing complex ecommerce operations then magento is the best suited.
     
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    gibby

    Free Member
    Sep 11, 2007
    1,248
    121
    Edinburgh
    Thanks for the info on vat.
    One of our stores will be selling food, and we need the store to automatically add 1 surcharge when frozen items are orderd and possibly a 2nd for chilled.

    This is to cover the extra chilled/frozen packaging needed for these products.

    We have tried in the past to let customers add these but no matter how we explain it they miss it, causing the need for extra emails and calls.

    G
     
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    joshgeake

    Free Member
    Jul 25, 2013
    158
    26
    I've launched sites with both and here's my opinion...

    Magento is like the bigger brother of Opencart. I'd say that whilst Opencart's a Lotus (nimble, adaptive, fast but awkward), Magento's more of a BMW M5 (more expensive, big, heavy but at times more practical and capable).

    If you wanted to buy a ~$50 theme and adapt it to your needs then I'd choose Opencart, it will work just fine and you'll be able to dive in and dabble however you wish. It's lightweight and unless you install a load of extensions, fast on a small vps.

    In contrast Magento's more set in its ways and needs significant power to get it running quickly. The default setup is superb if you want to sell more complicated products e.g. multiple varient t-shirts with a standard stamp (Colour, Fit and Size). Opencart's more awkward in this scenario. Magento will crack whatever nut you throw at it, the question is whether you need its sledgehammer.

    It depends on the circumstances as to whether Opencart's any better or worse than Magento. Both are building audiences and I can see them happily coexisting. One's owned by PayPal, the other's run from a small office in Hong Kong. For them to be competing is quite an achievement really!

    Not many people need all of Magento's bells and whistles and for the ones they do then a little code tweak here and there within Opencart will do it.

    The other thing I've found with Magento is it's far more commercialised. Developers rarely help a customer with their modules however with Opencart I've generally found them to be fantastic.
     
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    antropy

    Business Member
  • Business Listing
    Aug 2, 2010
    5,322
    1,104
    West Sussex, UK
    www.antropy.co.uk
    Magento's more of a BMW M5

    Wow, really? The BMW M5 is one of the most beautifully engineered cars that has ever been built.

    Magento is more like a big American muscle car - it doesn't handle particularly well, uses a lot more resources than it should, but people tend to like it anyway because it looks cool.

    OpenCart is more like an Ariel Atom - light, fast, easily customisable, you can get at all the parts when you need to, and it can out-handle and out-pace the big boys.
     
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    ProjectOcto

    Free Member
    Aug 1, 2013
    153
    19
    Manchester
    One thing that hasn't been raised here - what does your BUSINESS need?

    Magento, OpenCart and other high profile platforms are great at doing all the essentials well, and at a cheap cost. (you can build it yourself or get a designer/integrator to help).

    Bu add-ons aside, you may hit limitations with the site's evolution. Magento etc were initially built as 'one size fits all' platforms to get people going. Then add-ons were created by a variety of companies to make it 'many sizes fits many'.

    I believe the most important thing is your relationship with your developer (if outsourcing the build, or using add-ons etc to evolve). If your site doesn't handle shipping/product attributes/images/notifications exactly the way YOU want it to, you have to either ask your developer to modify things, or put up with it. Your developer's (or your!) capability to evolve the system then becomes crucial.
     
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    S

    ShallWeStart

    If your business requires ebay integration then i'd go with Magento, they have an excellent and free ebay modeule (by M2E Pro).

    If you have no specific business requirements and are just looking for a bog-standard solution which looks good then OpenCart is better: it's lightweight, easy to learn and cheaper.

    If you've not had experience customising magento then it's a bit of a learning curve.
     
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    joshgeake

    Free Member
    Jul 25, 2013
    158
    26
    If your business requires ebay integration then i'd go with Magento, they have an excellent and free ebay modeule (by M2E Pro).

    ...but the eBay API is already integrated within Opencart 1.5.6!

    Opencart and Magento really do seem to be converging to pretty much the same product. Frankly, I still prefer the simplicity that's integral to Opencart over the 'tick every possible box' mentality of Magento.
     
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