In February 2003 we received 140 survey responses from readers of Web
Marketing Today, Doctor Ebiz, and Web Commerce Today, asking
them to vote for their favorite (and unfavorite) shopping cart programs, and to
comment on them if they desired. Our readers selected about 50 carts. Here's how
our readers voted. The graph on this page includes the most popular programs. (A bar graph appears on the detail
page.) Actual data from the survey is below. Note: not all respondents gave
reasons why they liked a cart, and a couple of respondents voted for several
favorites, but not so as to greatly skew the results.
You'll see my observations at the bottom of this webpage. First, the data.
Shopping
Cart
Favorite
Votes
Unfavorite
Votes
1ShoppingCart
11
4
2Checkout
2
Able
Commerce
2
1
Actinic
3
3
AmeriCart
2
bCentral
1
1
BizHosting
1
CandyPress
3
Cart32
3
2
CartIt
Commerce
1
CartManager
2
CCNow
1
2
CFWebstore
1
ClickBank
6
3
ClickCartPro
2
Comersus
1
Commission
Cart
1
CompleteStores.com
1
CoolCart
1
Dansie
3
2
DigiBuy
0
1
DigitalRiver
1
3
DXcart
2
EasyCart
1
2
eBay
2
4
ecBuilder
1
2
EC Store
0
1
EcommerceTemplates.com
1
Flashecom.com
1
goEmerchant
1
Hazel
0
1
Interchange
2
1
Intershop
2
1
Kagi
1
1
King-Cart
1
Mals
E-Commerce
3
Mercantec
2
1
MerchandiZer
1
2
Miva
12
8
MOFcart
1
MonsterCommerce
1
MS Commerce Server
2
4
Nexternal
Solutions
2
Open Market
1
1
osCommerce
4
Oracle
Small Business
1
PayPal
11
7
Paysystems/Revecom
1
1
Quikstore
1
SecureNetShop
1
SecureNetShop
1
ShopFactory
1
1
ShopSite
6
1
Store2003
1
StoreFront
10
4
Synergyx
1
1
VPASP
2
WebCart
2
1
WebCatalog
2
1
WebOrder
2
1
With-It
Solutions
1
0
X-Cart
1
0
Yahoo! Store
9
10
Total votes
146
81
Whenever we do this kind of reader's survey, some software developers write
us and blame us for being unfair, for not giving them a chance, etc. I encourage
such insecure developers to "grow up." This does not presume to be a
scientific survey. Nor are all the readers' candid comments necessarily
well thought through or completely fair. They are just candid opinions -- but as
such are quite valuable. I have excluded a couple of comments that I felt overly
puffed one product or overly downed another, but other than that I have allowed
my readers' comments to come through clearly. I hope you find their comments
useful.
Types of Sales of Respondents
You might be interested in what kinds of products are sold by these
respondents. Here's what they reported:
Sales Type
Responses
Percent
Tangible (Inventory)
82
68%
Tangible (Drop-Ship)
24
20%
Digital Goods
28
23%
Combination tangible/digital
19
16%
Website Content
11
9%
Service
21
18%
Leading carts varied on the kind of products sold:
The best carts are not necessarily represented by the
most votes. Microsoft Commerce Server is arguably the most flexible cart
listed and was voted for by only one respondent -- one that does over $1
million per month in volume.
The most popular carts also tended to receive the most
negative votes. All this means is that more people know about them and
have tried them -- and some had a bad experience with them. Yahoo! Store and
Miva are popular, but have a substantial number of cart-haters -- Yahoo!
Store especially, probably because of their pricing changes.
The e-commerce software market is diverse and maturing.
Several years ago I predicted that the shopping cart software market would
contract to just a few vendors. The opposite has happened. Dozens of carts
are used, with hundreds still available. And all carts are much better now
than a few years ago, with more options for product display, shipping,
inventory, e-mail marketing, affiliate programs, etc.
I see some relative newcomers that weren't on my radar
before. This survey brought to my attention some newer hosted carts that
include order management capabilities -- Mals-e.com
(www.mals-e.com) and Nexternal Solutions
(www.nexternal.com). osCommerce
(www.oscommerce.com) is an open code system based on PHP and MySQL that can
run on both Unix and Windows servers. Interchange
(www.icdevgroup.org) is another open systems cart with great flexibility to
hook to both new and existing databases. Both are "free" but will
take a good bit of customizing and perhaps debugging.
There is no single right shopping cart choice. Unless
you're looking for an enterprise-level shopping cart system, probably many
carts will meet your needs. Yes, they vary -- some are simple, some are
flexible, some have many tools available, some are priced at different
levels.
Brief user comments, both pro and con, are most helpful.
Take the user comments on shopping carts with a grain of salt, but you'll
probably avoid some bad decisions in choosing a shopping cart by reading the
user comments. Some will steer you clear of problems you didn't know
existed!
Have fun as you learn from your fellow e-commerce merchants!