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Switching from a self-written engine to a paid CMS for an online store - now or in a year?
Good day!
The situation is as follows:
I got a new job, where my main goal is to open and promote an online store, I have practically no experience in this matter, but the management even has an idea of how it should all be extremely blurry.
It turned out that they had a self-made engine, with a bunch of bugs and flaws, which was made by a familiar programmer.
Having raised the issue of switching to other CMS, after long negotiations we settled on Bitrix, with the condition that we switch to it only after a year. (As far as I understand, the toad is strangling a license to buy and sales are already needed, although it may take more money to finish what we have now with a jigsaw and a file than Bitrix costs.) The
question is as follows:
Continue to put pressure on the authorities about the immediate transition to Bitrix, or give up on this matter? They want to open literally in a couple of weeks, but in the form in which everything is now, it will be just a collapse.
And what problems can there be in terms of promoting such a division during the year and the subsequent transition to a normal CMS?
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Drink what you have. You need to make sales on which your workplace and salary (not only yours but also the team) depend. If you don’t care, then of course you can say let’s immediately go to Bitrix and a month and a half of downtime. But look at it from the director's point of view. Would you like a downtime of a month and a half?
Do what you have. Customers will come, requests will come. And then when there are more chances to take Bitrix, maybe there will already be loot for it.
I think it’s worth putting pressure on the authorities, put pressure on it correctly, make up all the advantages of the platform, say that Bitrix conducts regular seminars on online shopping. The complexity of the transition will depend on the structure of the product catalog of your online store. By the way, if you become a Bitrix partner, you will receive a 40% discount on the purchase of products.
You can also see free CMS like openCard, but I’ll say right away that I’ll have to buy additional modules, or finish it myself.
On the other hand, you are paid money for your work, you can score and not invent a new job for yourself.
It is necessary to try to convince the management that the use of Bitrix will be cost-effective: give a rough estimate of the cost of implementing Bitrix and the cost of improving the current engine (with a description of the pros / cons). The management most likely does not understand anything in technology, but is simply trying to save money: the engine is there, which means it is easier to set up than to take something else, and even pay for a license. In general, you need to justify your position.
And that there are no other alternatives besides Bitrix? A cheaper solution, such as NetHouse , is tailored for online stores. And you don't have to pay millions.
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