Once you’ve made the decision to make an online store, the process of launching it can be confusing and overwhelming. There are a lot of decisions to make, and focusing your efforts in the wrong areas can lead to months of wasted effort.
Fortunately, you don’t have to blindly guess at the best approach. Based on my successes and failures founding numerous eCommerce stores, these guidelines will help make your own eCommerce launch a successful one. If you want to learn how to make an online store, you’ve come to the right place.
The more time you spend wrestling with a complicated shopping cart, the less time you’ll have to focus on what really matters: creating valuable content, interacting with your customers and marketing your business. So make picking an easy-to-use platform a priority when launching. You can always change/upgrade later if you need to (just make sure you don’t botch your website migration).
The easiest way to build an online store is to use a fully hosted, subscription-based cart. These services take care of all the hosting, payment integration and technical details, allowing you to quickly get a site up and running.
There are numerous options to choose from but I strongly recommend Shopify (aff link). It’s the cart that I migrated my own store to and have been thrilled with the features, performance and support. Here’s a full list of popular hosted carts on the market:
You’ll pay a monthly fee for just about any hosted cart, but it will be a small price to pay for not having to worry about security patches, server configurations and regular updates.
If you’re technically inclined and want a bit more control over your store, you’ll want to pick a self-hosted cart. My top picks for self-hosted cart for a new store owner are WooCommerce and OpenCart.
WooCommerce is a plug-in for WordPress which transforms the popular CRM into a shopping cart. It’s fairly easy to install and has a number of themes available for it.
OpenCart is a stand-alone openhttps://www.ecommercefuel.com/shopping-cart/
source shopping cart that’s known for being lightweight and easy to customize. If you’re a bit more comfortable on the technical side I’d recommend going with them.
I do NOT recommend Magento for new store owners despite it’s popularity. It’s a very powerful cart but is overly complex and extremely difficult to host. I used to be a Magento user and moved to Shopify due to the complexity and problems it caused – particularly for a small team without a dedicated programmer on staff.
Here’s a list of the most popular self-hosted carts on the market today:
I recommend staying away from ZenCart and osCommerce, as they are old platforms that people are moving away from. You can read more about the best eCommerce carts in our shopping cart comparison guide.
It’s time to kill your perfectionist tendencies! Making an online store and launching it quickly is one of the best things you can do for your fledgling business.
If you’re new to your niche, you likely have no idea who your customers are or what they need. Oh, you may think you know, but you don’t. So trying to invest in creating the perfect store to address your customers’ needs, wants and problems is almost certainly a waste of time. Instead, build a basic store online as quickly as possible to start interacting with your customers to learn more about them.
Once you have a better idea about your niche, then you can improve your website based on your new knowledge. And while you’ve been collecting all this information, you’ve almost certainly rung up a few sales, too.
Another reason to launch quickly is because it takes a lot of time and effort to market your store. The sooner you have a storefront up and online — even a really basic one — the faster you can start telling the world about your business, building links and marketing.
In order to launch as quickly as possible, I recommend:
1) Using stock descriptions and pictures – If you’re new to the niche, you likely know next to nothing about your products! So use the manufacturer’s information to launch quickly and come back to write unique copy when you actually have something unique and authoritative to say.
2) Using a pre-built template – I don’t care what world-class graphics designers say; you do NOT need a fancy $5,000 custom-built template to do well with eCommerce. One of my most popular eCommerce stores uses a built-in template, and I have never heard a single customer say, “Hey! Is this a stock template? I’m not sure about you guys ….” Even if you use the most popular template in the world, 99.9% of your customers will have no idea.
When making your first online store, I strongly recommend doing as much as possible yourself in the beginning. If you don’t understand how your business fundamentally works, you won’t be able to effectively train a team in the future. And having to rely on paid contractors (programmers, web designers, etc.) every time you need to make a change is an expensive and helpless position to be in.
Doing things yourself also makes you prioritize what’s important to move forward and what can wait. It’s really easy to throw money at a problem instead of really analyzing whether it’s: 1) really necessary and 2) a good investment. When you do most things yourself early on, you’re less likely to waste money on nonessential items.
I learned this lesson the hard way when I launched TrollingMotors.net. In the past, I’d done just about everything myself, from building the site to marketing and SEO, when launching an eCommerce site. When it came time to automate the business, I knew it inside and out and was able to competently train a team to manage it for me.
But when launching TrollingMotors.net, I figured I could simply pay someone else to do all the hard work for me! So I outsourced the site design to an expensive developer and invested a significant sum on a long-term SEO contract for marketing and traffic. Overall, I invested more than $15,000 getting the site up and running. With other people doing all the work, I figured this was going to be an easy, painless process!
But then I started running into problems. When I needed to make a simple change to the site, I had to contact my developers for help. I wasn’t familiar with the new shopping cart they used, and had to rely on them to make basic changes. And because I wasn’t spending as much time marketing and connecting with others in my niche, I didn’t understand my market nearly as well.
Finally, more than a year after I hired my SEO firm, the site’s traffic took a huge nosedive when rankings dropped precipitously in Google. The reason? The firm I’d entrusted with SEO and marketing had used some sketchy tactics, and we’d been penalized by Google.
I’m now much more involved with TrollingMotors.net’s site design and marketing, but it was an expensive lesson. Don’t make the same mistake! You don’t have to do everything forever, but make sure you’re intimately involved with the major aspects of your business early on. It’s a much cheaper option in the long run.
Most people grossly underestimate how much marketing is required to build a viable eCommerce business. Especially in the early days, it takes a LOT of effort to get your business on the map and noticed. For the first six months of any new eCommerce site, I’d recommend the following time priorities:
That’s 67% of your time spent exclusively on marketing! Not A/B testing, business streamlining or crafting a strategic vision. Not improving your site design or logo. Fanatical marketing. The majority of eCommerce sites fail because they underestimate how crucial early stage marketing efforts are and don’t gain enough traction. Don’t let that be you.
You may be thinking, “Chill out with all this marketing hype! I’ll just run some advertisements.” It’s true that advertising is a great way to kick-start your eCommerce business in the beginning, when no one knows about you. And you can instantly drive traffic to your site to learn about your market by interacting with customers. But advertising, especially pay-per-click models like AdWords, is usually a poor long-term strategy for generating traffic.
The most effective advertising methods, like PPC Google ads, are expensive and will severely eat into (if not eliminate) your profits. Pursuing SEO and other organic marketing efforts will provide a much higher return on your investment, more sustainable traffic and ultimately significantly higher profits.
Like any business, there’s a LOT to know and learn when starting a successful online store! If you’d like to learn more check out the free six day mini-course on how to build your own profitable store. There are also plenty of great eCommerce conferences with lots of useful information.
Photo by Jurvetson
124 Comment
[…] Launch a successful online store by Ecommercefuel […]
[…] Launch a successful online store by Ecommercefuel […]
Great article Andrew. The importance of needing to put a lot of effort into the marketing side has made me feel positive about all the efforts I am currently putting in to try and get my business of the ground. Thanks!
Hi, 1st off all, I am very impressed by ur post. Thank u for the post.
Currently I am running a mobile shop. I have some doubt to clear. For example, for the product Micromax MMX377G, the MRP is 1900 and the micromax distributor is giving me 20% discount. But, the online whole-sellers are selling this product by 60% discount.
I would like to run an online store too beside my mobile shop. So, my question is, is it possible to sell that product online as well as offline, if I purchase the product from online wholesellers. Will there be any objection from the local distributor, if I sell that product offline, i.e. in my mobile shop.
Please clarify my doubt.
Thank You
It’s necessary to move your store online or integrate ecommerce onto your website is as eCommerce skyrockets as an industry. I enjoy the focus this article has on the importance of the eCommerce platform. Business owners are forced to pick from a variety of different platforms, a decision that can have its advantages and disadvantages. Shoprocket has a similar bost post that you may be interested in reading. https://blog.shoprocket.co/which-ecommerce-platform-is-best-for-your-online-business/
Great blog – thank you – still relevant years after it was posted. We’re in the early stage of the journey at glamgobeauty.com and trying to balance SEO and SEM along with other approaches (affiliates, email lists etc….)
We feel we’ve got something really strong to offer but it clearly takes time. Any advise (if your still monitoring replies) on good places to post content
Hi Andrew,
Thanks for writing this article. I have recently launched my web store selling lifestyle items and men’s fashion (trulysuperficial.com) and I think many of these advices would have done me some good had I saw them sooner. I definitely agree with the doing it yourself strategy. It is much cheaper and prevents you from depending on others in the future. I have also found out that the meta data things for social media scaring (open graph) are a pain in the a$$.
[…] Launch a successful online store by Ecommercefuel […]
Love this article. I think the reality of starting up is you have to force relevance! No one owe’s you anything and you have to earn brand knowledge and relevance- how do you do it? Marketing, marketing, marketing. You either pay for it, or work hard getting your message out.
I’ve recently started Brandsnow.com.au – selling branded merchandise into Australia- to date, all my traffic has been paid for in some form or another. Either CPC or affiliate. Am I working on growing unpaid? Absolutely but up front I am trying to get the message out there. Feedback on my site is alway’s appreciated!
Hello Andrew
You are a God sent. I am inspired by your words. I am a Young African from Cameroon. I want to creat an online store for the first time and will be getting into a niche that needs valorization in cameroon. The fourniture sector. I think what i just read from you at the moment has given me the fuel needed to make this happen dream a reality.
Stay bless and continue to write inspiring arts like this.
Hi Andrew,
Thanks for such inspirations and ideas you’ve shared, deeply appreciated.
I’ve ran into so much problems regarding my clothing line ecommerce web ever since year June 2014. Its been half a year.
http://www.20hommes.com
I have all the ideas and story regarding my streetwear brand. However, I have no idea how can I share it with my audience. I have no idea how can I do a perfect webstore like other brands do. In additionally, I’m facing serious financial problem with this company. I have thought of using SEO.
right now my plan is to:
take better product pictures.
nicer lookbooks
better descriptions
Live chats with customer
Newsletter
Right after these are all set, I’ll use SEO.
Does this plan sound reasonable? I’m stuck and lost. I have no idea how to generate my sales, although I have my ideas on this business.
Please help me out Andrew!
Best regards,
Bryan
Hi Andrew,
Thanks for such inspirations and ideas you’ve shared, deeply appreciated.
I’ve ran into so much problems regarding my clothing line ecommerce web ever since year June 2014. Its been half a year.
http://www.20hommes.com
I have all the ideas and story regarding my streetwear brand. However, I have no idea how can I share it with my audience. I have no idea how can I do a perfect webstore like other brands do. In additionally, I’m facing serious financial problem with this company. I have thought of using SEO.
right now my plan is to:
take better product pictures.
nicer lookbooks
better descriptions
Live chats with customer
Newsletter
Right after these are all set, I’ll use SEO.
Does this plan sound reasonable? I’m stuck and lost. I have no idea how to generate my sales, although I have my ideas on this business.
Please help me out Andrew!
Best regards,
Bryan
[…] Launch a successful online store by Ecommercefuel […]
[…] https://www.ecommercefuel.com/launch-online-store/ […]
Great post. In addition to getting your ecommerce shop up and running quickly you should also consider to check some of the more manual processes to make sure your plan is solid. Do you know how you are going to ship for example? or what about the return process? Here are some other things you might want to think about as well: http://goo.gl/jRa5Uf
[…] Launch a successful online store by Ecommercefuel […]
I am having some difficulty because I am trying to get my distributors product information to show up on my site. I have absolutely no knowledge of xml and that is what I need in order to integrate their site with mine. I have tried to go through the distributor, but all I get is a written guide.
[…] Launch a successful online store by Ecommercefuel […]
Great post, I followed your advice and created a website in shopify. Keptedition.com, now to market it!
[…] blog is for people who want to build a successful online store. If you want to learn about ecommerce tips and tricks, as well as read case studies, that blog is […]
[…] blog is for people who want to build a successful online store. If you want to learn about ecommerce tips and tricks, as well as read case studies, that blog is […]
[…] blog is for people who want to build a successful online store. If you want to learn about ecommerce tips and tricks, as well as read case studies, that blog is […]
[…] blog is for people who want to build a successful online store. If you want to learn about ecommerce tips and tricks, as well as read case studies, that blog is […]
Great article! I learned some good information. I’ve been planning my store for about 2 yrs now and finally got the means to get my online jewelry store up and running. And my road blocks have been my marketing strategies. I reach out to people, but don’t really see a lot of interested people. I just launched a few days ago sweetuniquesg.com and could use some productive criticism. Thank You!
Great article and thanks to all of your readers for their helpful hints. I have not found Google ads have given me any return. I may not have been taking full advantage so don’t take my jaded experience as gospel. I have just had a website developed ( http://www.ccawear.com.au ) and I was told that my response times were slow so I might be penalised by Google. Any truth in this?