CommerceV3 is an all-in-one eCommerce platform that will both build and host store platforms.
N/A
Webflow
Score 8.7 out of 10
N/A
Webflow is a Website Experience Platform for modern marketing teams, used to visually build, manage, and optimize websites that offer both the consumer experience teams expect and enterprise-grade performance and scale.
$18
per month
Pricing
CommerceV3
Webflow
Editions & Modules
No answers on this topic
Basic
$18
per month
CMS
$29
per month
Ecommerce - Standard
$42
per month
Business
$49
per month
Ecommerce - Plus
$84
per month
Ecommerce - Advanced
$235
per month
Offerings
Pricing Offerings
CommerceV3
Webflow
Free Trial
No
Yes
Free/Freemium Version
No
Yes
Premium Consulting/Integration Services
Yes
No
Entry-level Setup Fee
$1,995 per store
No setup fee
Additional Details
—
Up to a 22% discount available for annual pricing.
More Pricing Information
Community Pulse
CommerceV3
Webflow
Features
CommerceV3
Webflow
Online Storefront
Comparison of Online Storefront features of Product A and Product B
CommerceV3
8.1
1 Ratings
4% above category average
Webflow
-
Ratings
Product catalog & listings
9.11 Ratings
00 Ratings
Product management
7.31 Ratings
00 Ratings
Bulk product upload
8.21 Ratings
00 Ratings
Branding
6.41 Ratings
00 Ratings
Mobile storefront
7.31 Ratings
00 Ratings
Product variations
9.11 Ratings
00 Ratings
Visual customization
9.11 Ratings
00 Ratings
Online Shopping Cart
Comparison of Online Shopping Cart features of Product A and Product B
CommerceV3
7.7
1 Ratings
1% above category average
Webflow
-
Ratings
Abandoned cart recovery
8.21 Ratings
00 Ratings
Checkout user experience
7.31 Ratings
00 Ratings
Online Payment System
Comparison of Online Payment System features of Product A and Product B
CommerceV3
9.1
1 Ratings
9% above category average
Webflow
-
Ratings
eCommerce security
9.11 Ratings
00 Ratings
eCommerce Marketing
Comparison of eCommerce Marketing features of Product A and Product B
CommerceV3
8.6
1 Ratings
11% above category average
Webflow
-
Ratings
Promotions & discounts
9.11 Ratings
00 Ratings
SEO
8.21 Ratings
00 Ratings
eCommerce Business Management
Comparison of eCommerce Business Management features of Product A and Product B
CommerceV3
8.6
1 Ratings
7% above category average
Webflow
-
Ratings
Order processing
8.21 Ratings
00 Ratings
Inventory management
8.21 Ratings
00 Ratings
Shipping
9.11 Ratings
00 Ratings
Custom functionality
9.11 Ratings
00 Ratings
Security
Comparison of Security features of Product A and Product B
CommerceV3
-
Ratings
Webflow
7.8
16 Ratings
5% below category average
Role-based user permissions
00 Ratings
7.816 Ratings
Platform & Infrastructure
Comparison of Platform & Infrastructure features of Product A and Product B
CommerceV3
-
Ratings
Webflow
8.2
13 Ratings
6% above category average
API
00 Ratings
8.113 Ratings
Internationalization / multi-language
00 Ratings
8.311 Ratings
Web Content Creation
Comparison of Web Content Creation features of Product A and Product B
CommerceV3
-
Ratings
Webflow
8.1
19 Ratings
4% above category average
WYSIWYG editor
00 Ratings
8.119 Ratings
Code quality / cleanliness
00 Ratings
8.518 Ratings
Admin section
00 Ratings
6.919 Ratings
Page templates
00 Ratings
8.318 Ratings
Library of website themes
00 Ratings
8.315 Ratings
Mobile optimization / responsive design
00 Ratings
9.519 Ratings
Publishing workflow
00 Ratings
8.418 Ratings
Form generator
00 Ratings
7.015 Ratings
Web Content Management
Comparison of Web Content Management features of Product A and Product B
I believe CommerceV3 (CV3) is best suited for small to mid-level catalog companies. You would want to make sure to integrate CV3 with your back end system or you'll be doing a lot of manual entries or manipulating data for table uploads. You can easily manage the templates in CV3 with a basic knowledge of HTML and work up from there
Since the purpose in my case is to build a small professional looking site to present project outcomes and other research, I can create custom fields and design experimentations. Webflow builds sites that are super professional, with many amazing templates that don't look cheap. Additionally, I can test responsive layouts. Apart from this, I used 1-2 static pages to illustrate key findings for example what a multilingual site could look like with screenshots without needing CMS in free version, which are all the valuable skills to acquire. Compared to WordPress, Webflow is expensive with limited free features, although it has really cool additional features that will make the site I build stand out.
CV3 provides us a plethora of marketing tools to customize offers and campaigns to our customers. I've used BigCommerce and Shopify and neither comes close to the capability of fine tuning sales, offers, and discounts by product, category, customer and more.
The purpose of partnering with any e-commerce platform is to provide a secure site and stable checkout process for our customers. CV3 has been amazing at keeping our site up and running through peak traffic and attempted hacks. The checkout process has been rock solid and also integrates seamlessly with PayPal. I've used Amazon Payments in the past without incident, but decided to end that option due to Amazon's policies.
CV3's architecture on the back-end is designed to be plain and simple which provides an easy-to-use interface to streamline our work. The template driven structure to manage the front-end will become a favorite for most programmers in no time at all. In fact, I'm not a programmer, but do customization and design changes almost on a daily basis with ease. Any changes made to a template may be viewed on a staging server before pushing live. Templates, as well as other data may be downloaded any time for backups. Exports and imports of product data is simple and powerful allowing me to change massive amounts of data easily.
Customer support is always a contentious issue with most providers, however, CV3 has by far been the best I've encountered in over 30+ years of experience with software vendors. They are very responsive and escalate the issue to the proper person without having the redundancy you experience with so many other companies. They understand the issue the first time, and tell you the truth.
Any e-commerce business is about shipping. CV3 has the most powerful tools to control shipping. It will challenge the most creative minds on how to best merchandise products based on weight, dollar amount, global geographical location, dimensions, category, exception rules, by carrier, all the way down to the sku level which can have it's own set of rules. It gets complicated, but it works great and ties in with the promotional features as well.
Saves time- because I don't have to do double entry of content.
It saves money. I like that it is an all-in-one system, so I don't have to host elsewhere.
Flexibility - Webflow provides me with a lot of flexibility in my webpage design, allowing me to adjust pages as needed, depending on the content types.
An area I'd like to see enhanced is the sku level pricing calendar. You can set specials prices to start and stop at certain dates and times, but it's fixed to certain years. You can't have your chosen items go to seasonal pricing every year at the same time, you have to change the years each year.
There are multiple product setups: basic, parent with children, and sub-products. Each type exports on the same datasheet all intermingled and this can be tedious isolating the different types for editing and re-import.
Vendor and Brand are data points on each item, but they are not controlled by a table. We end up with the same vendor or brand misspelled multiple times.
There is no FTP capability (PCI issue?) and no blog site with the parent domain. These have to be handled using a separate sub-domain.
The shipping calculator for customers should be available anywhere there is a shipping option presented during checkout.
Faster live times. Currently, it takes about 5 to 10 minutes to see template/product changes pushed to the live cdn.
Brand recognition is still behind WordPress, which can make it a challenging sell for clients looking to play it safe in their CMS decision.
The CMS is ideal for smaller datasets, but higher content sites introduce some minor challenges.
Alignment between designers and developers is key prior to implementation. The flexibility of the platform requires careful planning to avoid over-engineering.
Webflow is very easy for a beginner to get started with and achieve good results, but to achieve an expert level of understanding requires experience and some web development knowledge. HTML5, CSS3 and JavaScript knowledge aren't required to use Webflow, but an expert will know BEM class naming patterns, be able to create reusable elements and design systems, and add 3rd party integrations that require custom code.
In my experience, their customer service is an absolute joke, I tried reaching out to them they took forever. I had to keep following up with them as if they never received it in the first place. It’s a new platform, so guidance is needed. Tried the university they offer, in my opinion, it is completely useless, I would just completely move on from this website.
In my opinion, it is horrible, the rendering takes forever. I have the newest MacBook and the platform will still lag and slow down on me. I’m not a developer, I am a designer which makes it worst because I am using the features they are providing not extra coding features. In my opinion, it is a horrible platform really, stay away.
I haven't had to engage them from a support perspective; however, there is a considerable user community for tips/ideas/troubleshooting and the like. I believe the Pro plan supports additional resources but we didn't find that the cost justified the outcome. Overall the need for support has been relatively minor.
In my view, CV3 meets our needs better by allowing us a much easier way to manage the front end the way the templates are structured. BigCommerce recommended using an FTP tool to download, modify, then upload. Shopify has some very sophisticated templates, which, in my mind, required a senior level programmer or lots of outsourcing for even minor changes. Neither of the other systems come close to CV3's marketing capabilities through their promotional tool without any add-ons. Shopify, for example, is stripped down and if you want a certain feature you have to find one of their approved partners, sign-up, integrate the feature and hope it works. To purchase all the features we're currently using in CV3 you'd have quite a list (and expense) of partners. Examples would be enhanced shipping capabilities or the ability to customize a product purchase. CV3 has features specifically geared for a catalog company, like request forms and capturing key codes. Plus, built-in rewards program, wishlist, gift certificates, bulk email, and data feeds for Google Shopper, Channel Advisor and SingleFeed.
A lot more design control and easier to create a custom site, and then also to scale that site going forward. There's a lot about WordPress I miss, though, when it comes to managing a blog—user permissions, SEO control, edit HTML version of posts.
I feel it doesn’t perform the way it’s supposed to and it doesn’t have any beneficial factors to it. In my opinion, there is no reason to use a platform like this when Wix and Shopify, and WordPress exist. I believe Webflow is a platform that shouldn’t exist and it’s only popular because of the hype it received. I tried it and hate it completely.
One positive impact has been the use of product reviews. This feature has helped us weed out bad products and promote good ones while allowing customers to share their experience.
It's a fixed fee user agreement which favors increasing sales.
The stability of the checkout process has helped conversions and lowered support.
Having integrated inventory with our back end has helped meet customer expectations.
The promotional capabilities of CV3 has allowed us to provide new and different offers keeping customers engaged.