I think Weebly is a great product, but I believe that there is an enormous opportunity for a truly open-source component-based system, that otherwise works very similarly, to take its place.
To me, the whole idea of drag-and-drop components is a no-brainer, and its amazing that open source web developers haven't caught on to that yet.
I know there's work being on WordPress to make it easier, like adding front-end editing and likely drag and drop. Websites are so commoditized these days it seems inevitable.
People don't always have the time or budget to work with me or the company I work for. When that is the case, I always recommend Weebly. It's nice that I can also recommend them for ecommerce sites as well.
Shopify offers a great product and has been innovating in the eCommerce space for years. We think what they've done is very cool, but we also think there's a lot of room for improvement.
So far we've focused our efforts on building an intuitive way for anyone to create a high quality site. Our new eCommerce offering is the best of both worlds, mixing our easy drag & drop interface with the power of a fully-featured eCommerce platform. This is useful, for example, when dragging a video into your product description -- it all just works.
Check out the demo video we put together below. Would love to hear your feedback.
These questions are answered in the article. 3% commission to Weebly. Stripe or Authorize.net in addition to the past PayPal/Google Checkout options. Stripe and PayPal start at 2.9% + $0.30/trans.
Actually, the 3% commission is only for free users. If you're on the Business plan ($19-29/month depending on term) there is no commission at all to Weebly.
Not sure the value prop for anyone to use Weebly over Shopify to sell something. Their admin is incredibly intuitive and they don't charge an additional commission if you use their payment system.
We actually do not charge an additional commission with our Business Plan, priced at $29/mo, and we integrate with Stripe, PayPal, Authorize, and others to come.
Making things as intuitive as possible is something we lose sleep over. Check out our demo video and let me know what you think.
Like Dan said, we think that mixing a very intuitive CMS with a powerful eCommerce platform is really compelling.
We compare really well to Shopify on a feature basis, but have some other cool things, like secure checkout on your own domain, faceted search (e.g. http://www.dangshades.com/apps/search?q=polarized) and an amazing mobile checkout.
I don't quite understand the comparison to pricing at Amazon and Etsy.[1] Amazon and Etsy are marketplaces, which justifies their commissions. Weebly's product lets users create their own sites.
The pricing makes sense for Weebly (users can waive the commission by paying a flat monthly rate), I'm just confused by the comparison in the article.
[1] "Weebly takes a 3% cut of sales, while competitor Etsy takes 3.5%. Amazon charges 6-15% of a seller’s sale price, and so does Buy.com, which in addition takes a flat 99 cent commission from each sale."
14 comments
[ 1028 ms ] story [ 401 ms ] threadTo me, the whole idea of drag-and-drop components is a no-brainer, and its amazing that open source web developers haven't caught on to that yet.
I know there's work being on WordPress to make it easier, like adding front-end editing and likely drag and drop. Websites are so commoditized these days it seems inevitable.
So far we've focused our efforts on building an intuitive way for anyone to create a high quality site. Our new eCommerce offering is the best of both worlds, mixing our easy drag & drop interface with the power of a fully-featured eCommerce platform. This is useful, for example, when dragging a video into your product description -- it all just works.
Check out the demo video we put together below. Would love to hear your feedback.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GnqEB0XxAbM
Making things as intuitive as possible is something we lose sleep over. Check out our demo video and let me know what you think.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GnqEB0XxAbM
We compare really well to Shopify on a feature basis, but have some other cool things, like secure checkout on your own domain, faceted search (e.g. http://www.dangshades.com/apps/search?q=polarized) and an amazing mobile checkout.
The pricing makes sense for Weebly (users can waive the commission by paying a flat monthly rate), I'm just confused by the comparison in the article.
[1] "Weebly takes a 3% cut of sales, while competitor Etsy takes 3.5%. Amazon charges 6-15% of a seller’s sale price, and so does Buy.com, which in addition takes a flat 99 cent commission from each sale."