By MicroBiz LLC
11/22/2020 COVID Has Made Ecommerce a Necessity for Retailers
At the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, non-essential
store owners found themselves unable to open their brick and mortar
stores. To stay in business, many of
these retailers quickly pivoted to selling online. Many launched basic websites that provided
instructions on submitting phone orders or launched stand-alone ecommerce
sites. Other retailers with more time
and resources invested in integrated ecommerce-POS solutions.
Key Benefits of a POS-Ecommerce Integration
An ecommerce site offers many benefits. The most basic websites allow retailers to
post store hours, directionsand major brands.
Basic ecommerce sites offer the ability to sell store items online or
products than can be quickly and reliably drop shipped from a supplier. Websites can also help reinforce the store
brand or market position.
At bare minimum, an integration between an ecommerce site
and the store’s POS system should sync the inventory levels between the two
systems. This will enable the website to
reflect an item’s availability based current store stock levels and prevent the
biggest issue when starting to sell online – accepting payment on an item that
is no longer in stock. More advanced
POS-ecommerce integrations sync the customer order data - including customer
record and transaction information - from the ecommerce site to the POS
system. This allows the retailer to
maintain online and store customer data in one system and run combined
reports. The most advanced integrations
sync changes in the product and customer records, include the ability to accept
gift cards online and offer ‘buy online-pick up in store’ services. Obtaining these advanced capabilities usually
requires switching POS systems or paying for a custom integration.
Open Source vs. Paid Platforms
Ecommerce platforms range greatly in price and
complexity. For smaller retailers, open
source ecommerce platforms such as WooCommerce and Magento offer tremendous
value for their overall cost. These two
platforms are supported by armies of third-party developers that offer a
variety low cost ‘plugins’ to extend the functionality of the base platform.
There are also a variety of paid ecommerce platforms, such Shopify and
BigCommerce. These paid ecommerce
systems offer simpler onboarding but can become costly as the developers of
these paid systems tightly control (and charge for) hosting services and access
to modules that extend functionality.
A third option is to use a proprietary integrated ecommerce
platform developed by the POS software’s developer. These proprietary systems offer tight
integration between ecommerce and store operations - often have significant functional
limitations compared with pure play ecommerce sites. In addition, ecommerce sites built on these
proprietary POS platforms generally cannot be switched to or connected a
different POS system in the future if you want to switch systems. This creates a significant barrier to
switching.
Costs of an Ecommerce Site Can Add-up
Operating an ecommerce site can be expensive, depending on
the complexityand size of the site. At the lower end of the cost range, the
software of open source ecommerce platforms such as WooCommerce is free, with
the retailer only having to pay for hosting.
The larger open ecommerce platforms offer marketplaces where retailers
can purchase a variety of extensions or plug-ins at relatively low process to
extend the fictions and features of the core site. The paid platforms generally bundle software
and support into a combined subscription fee.
The larger paid ecommerce platforms also have marketplaces, but because these
are operated for profit, the cost for plug-ins can be higher than prices on the
opensource platforms. Overall costs can range
from as low as $15 per month for hosting a basic WooCommerce site to hundreds
(or thousands) of dollars per month for a larger paid ecommerce site. Thesecosts are in addition to initial build
out costs and money spent on online marketing and search engine optimization.
Ecommerce is Here to Stay
The ongoing pandemic has increased the strategic value of an
ecommerce site. While many retailers
have invested in launching or enhancing their ecommerce operations, these
efforts were met with varying levels of success. However, it’s clear that the movement of
retailers to sell online is here to stay.

MicroBiz Cloud is POS and retail automation software for specialty retailers. The MicroBiz POS system is designed to automate manual tasks that can consume management time and support the capabilities retailers need to complete in today's market.Our point of sale software enables and supports the ca…