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Home >> Enterprise Business Applications >> Online Retailing and Ecommerce

The ultimate e-commerce software shopping list

The ultimate e-commerce software shopping list

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 02 Sep 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

We break down some of the market’s biggest players with analysis from Forrester and Gartner. Get everything you need to make online payments easy, affordable and feature-rich

With New York-based Venda, Walker said the company offers a very strong and often updated product for medium-to-small businesses looking to get online quickly with a complete toolset. One key feature is a tabbed interface UI for managing the site, which allows for a multitude of user management, customer service, order management, and security capabilities.

On the pricing side, Alvarez said, Venda is the most unique of the SaaS players in that it offers a fixed price per month. “For $12,000 a month, you get a full service e-commerce site,” he said. “If you sell more than that every month, it’s great. If you don’t, it’s not so great.”

The Gartner analyst also warned that the company’s SaaS model is all-inclusive for B2C e-commerce capabilities, but the fixed monthly price doesn’t include back-end system integration or customization options.

Alvarez said the collary with all three of these companies, as with anything in the SaaS realm, is that there is no way to licence any of these tools. “So later on if the rental or subscription model is not appealing to you, you might wind up having to migrate to a different company’s solution,” Alvarez said.

ERP players: Oracle, SAP

In terms of the two major ERP players, Oracle’s iStore and SAP’s E-Commerce platforms tend to have adoption for B2B users within their respective install bases.

“Oracle is very strong in Oracle, so it sells well in its install base because of its integration to Oracle,” Alvarez said. “And the same applies to SAP. If you’re looking for something that’s open to non-Oracle or non-SAP environment, that’s when an IBM WebSphere or ATG come into the picture.”

Walker agreed, saying that both platforms tend to be a component of the back office systems in larger IT shops that use the product. “Because of this, it’s often very rare that you’re going to find a B2C e-commerce site running or Oracle or SAP,” he added.

Alvarez said Oracle has added B2C-focused UI improvements, shopping cart pricing enhancements and single page checkout capabilities. SAP’s improvements, on the other hand, are part of its larger CRM offering.

“If you’re looking to have e-commerce as part of a single CRM solution from one provider, than SAP E-Commerce for SAP shops would be the one to look at — especially for B2B,” he said.










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Rafael Ruffolo Rafael Ruffolo was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2006 to 2011. He was the winner of a Kenneth R. Wilson award for business journalism in 2009.

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