Robert and Kaia: thank you!

Anybody else have an opinion? 
 
Or, in particular, experience with international e-commerce solutions (not 
related to donations and memberships but to sales)?

Amalyah Keshet
 

-----Original Message-----
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
Robert Weiner
Sent: Wednesday, January 07, 2009 2:23 AM
To: 'Museum Computer Network Listserv'
Subject: Re: [MCN-L] Favorite e-commerce system

Dear Simon,

The answer isn't simple.  Merchandise sales (including the ability to manage an 
inventory or calculate tax and shipping charges based on zip code and
quantity) are pretty different from online donations and memberships, or ticket 
sales, or subscriptions.  And then there's the question of integration with 
your web site and back-end database.  But here are some
resources:

Idealware and TechSoup published a roundup of online payment "multitaskers"
in 2007:
http://www.techsoup.org/learningcenter/webbuilding/page6123.cfm
but it's not specific to shopping carts.  They reviewed credit card processing 
options last year:
http://techsoup.org/learningcenter/funding/page10327.cfm
They also reviewed online donation processing systems, although that report is 
4 years old; http://www.idealware.org/donations/
And Affinity Resources maintains a list of online donation processors:
http://affinityresources.com/pgs/awz55Online2.shtml
Page 2 of that chart lists other services from each vendor, including shopping 
carts:
http://affinityresources.com/pgs/awz55Online3.shtml

As to Google Checkout, I'm not wild about it.  The price is hard to beat (at 
least for U.S. charities), but it's limited.  Although it can be used for 
memberships and donations, I think the user experience is too much like buying 
goods, and the receipts can't be customized sufficiently.  PayPal Standard is 
also limited, but the Pro version is pretty robust.  One option might be to use 
a shopping cart for goods and a donation processor for donations and 
memberships.

Robert
__________________________
 
Robert L. Weiner Consulting
Strategic Technology Advisors to Nonprofit and Educational Institutions San 
Francisco, CA
 
robert at rlweiner.com
415/643-8955 
 
www.rlweiner.com
 

-----Original Message-----
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Kaia 
Landon
Sent: Tuesday, January 06, 2009 11:24 AM
To: Museum Computer Network Listserv
Subject: Re: [MCN-L] Favorite e-commerce system

I'm surprised this hasn't drawn any responses to the list yet, so I'll bite.

For most of our e-commerce needs, we simply use Paypal Payments Standard.
We have also used Google Checkout.  Between the two, I actually prefer Google 
Checkout, but it does not have the option to allow people to pay without 
creating an account, while Paypal does.  As far as I am concerned, this is a 
major drawback.  (I also get the feeling that convincing someone to use Paypal 
right now is easier than Google Checkout, but I have no statistics on that.)  
For transactions without an account, however, Paypal requires the visitor to 
click through a TON of screens to actually complete the transaction.  This is 
obnoxious in its own right, and I am quite certain we have lost sales due to 
this (why it needs to be more than 2 screens I don't know).  We have 
investigated our options for running online card transactions through our 
regular credit card processor, but the monthly fees on this are prohibitive for 
the volume of sales we usually do.  If we consistently did $2,000 in sales 
through the website, per month, we would almost certainly use them.

We have experimented with CiviCRM for events, but I'm currently waiting for at 
least 2.2 for it to have more of the features we really need.  For simple event 
ticketing, CiviCRM (in tandem with a payment processor of your choice) can be a 
good choice, but if you need more complexity (multiple registrations without 
requiring multiple email addresses, for instance), it's just not quite there 
yet.

We will probably transition our online store to Ubercart later this year.
Again, this works with your payment processor, so it isn't perfect, but it is 
certainly easy to get running, and is also easy to make changes.
Ubercart has a lot of nice features, especially compared with hand-coding the 
store pages with tables and Paypal.

(Ubercart and CiviCRM both work with Drupal, although CiviCRM at least can be 
standalone.)

Kaia Landon
Curator of Education
Mesa Historical Museum

On Tue, Jan 6, 2009 at 4:20 AM, Amalyah Keshet [akeshet at imj.org.il] < 
akeshet at imj.org.il> wrote:

> Looking for the same information.  Thanks in advance to all.
>
> Amalyah Keshet
> Head of Image Resources & Copyright Management The Israel Museum, 
> Jerusalem
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu] On Behalf 
> Of Tanner, Simon
> Sent: Monday, January 05, 2009 5:26 PM
> To: Museum Computer Network Listserv
> Subject: [MCN-L] Favorite e-commerce system
>
> Hi everyone,
>
> I am wondering if people would be willing to share their favoirte 
> e-commerce systems and providers?
>
> This could be the shopping cart software, or the electronic funds 
> transfer system or a bespoke provider of a turn key solution.
>
> But what is your favorite (and why would be nice)?
>
> Any answers not posted to the list I will provide as a digest.
>
> Many thanks for your help.
>
> Happy New Year!
>
> Simon
> --
> Simon Tanner
> Director,  King's Digital Consultancy Services, King's College London, 
> Centre for Computing in the Humanities,
> 26-29 Drury Lane, London WC2B 5RL
> Tel: +44 (0)7887 691716 or Admin: +44 (0)20 7848 2861
> Email: simon.tanner at kcl.ac.uk
> http://www.kdcs.kcl.ac.uk/
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