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Internet site design made easy with Goodsie

By | September 22, 2011, 12:15pm PDT

Summary: For $15 per month, small businesses can set up and run branded e-commerce sites with clean designs optimized for multimedia integration.

E-commerce expert Jonathan Marcus is targeting small businesses with a service that lets small businesses create and manage an e-commerce storefront on the internet for a fee of $15 per month.

The service, called Goodsie, has been live since April 2011, and Marcus said it has already attracted more than 500 paying retailers. It was developed by HiiDef, where Marcus is the CEO. The Internet incubator, founded by Jonathan and his brother David, has raised close to $7 million in funding.

Marcus, whose background includes a stint as general manager for Internet video company Vimeo and roles at IAC/Interactive Corp., said Goodsie is targeted at small retailers that want more creative control over their branded ecommerce web sites. He points to an entrepreneurial friend who spent $25,000 to have a site built by another company, only to find that he needed to go through that consultant to make any changes. This can be a significant execution risk as smaller companies seek to scale, Marcus said.

“Most retailers are inherently creative,” he said. “If you give them the right site with tools and the ability to point and click their way into a store, they come up with incredible design. This makes it incredibly easy for them to set up shop online and do it in a professional way.”

The video below provides an overview:

Goodsie.com from Hiidef on Vimeo.

Goodsie is exploring partnerships with existing ecommerce marketplaces where small businesses may already do business; for example, it is looking at ways that a small business could ensure that inventories between their marketplace presence and branded ecommerce site remain in synchronization.

Marcus said one primary focus for the service is ensuring image optimization, so that entrepreneurs can really show off their products. Given his background, it shouldn’t be surprising that video and audio are core to the design experience. When I interviewed Marcus in early September, he said Goodsie was working on an integration with audio platform SoundCloud, so that store owners can integrate music into the browsing experience.

Elizabeth Kott, founder and owner of Closet Rich, a store based in the Los Angeles area that sells hand-selected clothes from A-list celebrities looking to clean out their closets, used Goodsie to create her site earlier this year. She said Goodsie offers a great user experience not just for her site visitors but when she is designing and changing portions of the site. It is clean and straightforward on both counts, she said. She also sees the potential to scale as much as she needs, on her terms. “As an entrepreneur, it is important to start small and think big. I don’t see any barrier to doing that with this site,” Kott said.

Marcus said Goodsie may eventually offer different tiers of service as it adds features and takes on more sites. He believes there are millions of retailers in his addressable market.

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Heather Clancy is an award-winning business journalist with a passion for green technology and corporate sustainability issues.

Disclosure

Heather Clancy

Writing publicly about what the high-tech industry is actually doing to help itself and the world get greener or more sustainable is one way I figure I can contribute more meaningfully to said effort. I am also a big OMG-kind-of-fan of smart leadership, which is why the goodly folks who publish this blog let me go on about this topic and why I am always on the hunt for forward-looking business management ideas.

My daily writing is focused on looking for topics for my blogs, GreenTech Pastures and Business Brains. I also write often about emerging technology trends such as mobile computing, unified communications and cloud computing. Occasionally, I will pop up at an industry conference in some sort of speaking capacity. In cases where a speaking engagement involves a sponsor that may be covered in this blog, that fact will be disclosed in coverage as appropriate.

My corporate writing work usually consists of crafting research white papers about some aspect of technology. In the event that my commentary (in written, audio or video form) mentions a company for which I have provided consulting advice, I will disclose that fact. However, there is no connection between these projects and the topics that I'm covering in my blog.

Biography

Heather Clancy

Heather Clancy is an award-winning business journalist with a passion for green technology and corporate sustainability issues. Her articles have appeared in Entrepreneur, Fortune Small Business, The International Herald Tribune and The New York Times. In a past corporate life, Heather was editor of Computer Reseller News, where she was a featured speaker about everything from software as a service to IT security to mobile computing.

Heather started her journalism life as a business writer with United Press International in New York. She holds a B.A. in English literature from McGill University in Montreal, Quebec, and has a thing for Lewis Carroll.

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