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FoxEE (for FoxyCart integration) or TradingEye or something else for web standards savvy UK ecommerce?

January 27, 2009 5:53am

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  • #16 / Mar 03, 2009 8:21pm

    Simon Cox

    405 posts

    I used a good old bolt on cart (and I do mean old looking!) on Artscapeonline.com and Santaballs.co.uk which meant I could use standards with out any bother at all. In the end I went for Romancart which has everything you need and more but the admin interface is lacking any zing - but it works a treat and if you can spare some time to customise the check out pages then the user journey is good. On the EE sites the integration is very simple and there are no constraints. This will do very nicely until Foxy Cart has completed the right UK payment gateways for me.

    Edit: I just realised that I repeated myself from an earlier post - that must be very boring.

  • #17 / Mar 04, 2009 7:49am

    Dom Stubbs

    156 posts

    Thanks all the same, the more I can learn on the subject the better. Having heard back from FoxyCart it sounds as though the debit card support is still several months away, however I’m starting to think that Google Checkout could fill in the gaps. The impression I’m getting is that it would be relatively straightforward to use the JSON cart object to generate a ‘Checkout with Google’ button on the cart page in addition to the main FoxyCart Checkout button. Google Checkout has full support for UK debit cards and their rates aren’t bad at all. I could then inject a note at the bottom of the cart stating that debit cards cards are currently only supported via Google Checkout. As FoxyCart is JS-dependant anyway I can see no harm in the GCO button being the same.

    I don’t think that this route would lose any customers as a fair number of larger, established sites are now offering GCO as a payment option, so I don’t think it would look at all unprofessional. I was afraid that Google would make the process awkward for users without Google accounts but having tested it they actually present a pretty standard checkout form, with the exception of a couple of password fields so that the user can create an account at the same time.

    My real concern with RomanCart is that it appears to insist on you using romancart.com/cart.asp for the checkout URL, which I suspect will set off alarm bells for some users. At least with FoxyCart and can set up secure.mydomain.com, albeit for an extra fee.

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