Best Ecommerce Platforms in 2026: Top 10 Compared

Best Ecommerce Platforms in 2026 (Top 10 Compared)

Hey guys, Trevor here. If you’re looking at ecommerce platforms in 2026, I get it. There are over 500 options out there, the marketing pages all sound identical, and picking the wrong one costs you real money in migration fees, sunk subscription costs, and the opportunity cost of building on something that boxes you in before you even get to scale. I’ve been running stores and agencies over at E-Commerce Paradise for 15+ years, and I’ve built on almost all of these platforms at some point, either for my own stores or my clients’ stores. This is the guide I’d hand a friend who asked me where to start.

I’m not going to give you a generic ranking here. What you actually need is honest context on the tradeoffs, because the right platform for you depends on your business model, your technical comfort level, and how fast you want to move. A complete beginner launching a niche store with 50 SKUs has very different needs from an agency building a B2B catalog with 50,000 SKUs. The same platform can be the right call for one and the completely wrong call for the other. If you’re brand new to this, I narrowed it down even further in my guide to the best ecommerce platforms for beginners.

One more thing before we get into it. If you want the full framework on how platform choice fits into the larger high-ticket dropshipping business model, go read my complete guide to high-ticket dropshipping first. Platform choice is one piece. The business model underneath it matters way more.

 

 

Quick Comparisons

Platform Price Best For Key Strength
Shopify $29 – $299/mo Most operators, high-ticket dropshipping Best app ecosystem and infrastructure for scaling
BigCommerce $29 – $299/mo Large catalogs, B2B operations Zero transaction fees regardless of processor
WooCommerce Free (hosting extra) Content-heavy stores, complete stack ownership Full WordPress integration with unlimited customization
Wix eCommerce $17 – $159/mo Small, design-first stores Drag-and-drop builder with zero coding required
Squarespace $27 – $65/mo Creatives, artists, portfolio stores Best-in-class design templates
Shift4Shop Free (US, with Shift4) US operators wanting zero platform cost Enterprise features at no monthly cost
Square Online Free – $79/mo Brick-and-mortar with Square POS Seamless POS-to-online integration
Ecwid Free – $99/mo Adding commerce to existing websites Embeds into any site without migration
Weebly Free – $26/mo Hobbyists, absolute beginners Simplest possible setup with no learning curve
Magento (Adobe Commerce) Custom ($10K+/yr) Enterprise operators, $10M+ revenue Unlimited scalability with dedicated engineering

Why Your Ecommerce Platform Choice Matters More Than You Think

I’ll keep this short because most of you want to get to the actual platforms. But there are three things I want you to keep in mind before you even start comparing features.

First, you’re committing to an operational stack, not just a website builder. The platform you pick dictates which apps you can run, which payment processors play nicely, how you handle inventory with your suppliers, and how your marketing tools integrate. Switching platforms down the road is a pain in the butt. On my own stores and my clients’ stores, a migration usually costs $5,000 to $20,000 in dev work plus weeks of lost sales while you’re fixing things. Pick once, pick right.

Second, the gap between “easy” platforms and “powerful” platforms has narrowed a lot over the past two years. Shopify has added serious developer flexibility and API depth. WooCommerce has legitimate managed hosting options now, which used to be the big reason people avoided it. The old rule of “hosted for simplicity, open-source for control” is still directionally right, but the corners are fuzzier than they used to be.

Third, AI-assisted store building is now a standard feature on multiple platforms. That used to be Shopify’s biggest moat, and it really really isn’t anymore. If you want to see how AI is changing the whole ecommerce operational stack beyond just store setup, I wrote a full guide on the best AI tools for ecommerce in 2026 that covers the current landscape.

What to Actually Look For in an Ecommerce Platform

When I evaluate a platform for a client, these are the seven things I look at. Feature comparison charts on vendor websites are mostly useless because every platform claims to do every thing. What matters is how well they do the specific things your business needs.

Total Cost of Ownership

The monthly subscription is just the tip of the iceberg. Add the cost of themes, apps, payment processing fees, transaction fees if you don’t use the platform’s native processor, premium support, and the dev hours to set everything up. On my high-ticket stores, the all-in cost on Shopify ends up around $400 to $800 per month once you factor in the apps that actually move the needle. Don’t let the $29 sticker price fool you.

Payment Processing Economics

Payment fees eat into margins more than most people realize. Platforms that force you to use their processor (or charge a transaction penalty if you don’t) are taking a bite out of every sale. On high-ticket products where margins are tight, an extra 0.5% on every transaction compounds into real money over a year. I break down every gateway option in my complete guide to Shopify payment providers if you want the full comparison.

App Ecosystem and Integrations

Your platform is only as good as its ecosystem. On my stores, I need reliable integrations with Klaviyo for email, my supplier’s inventory feed, accounting tools, customer service software, and reviews. If the app ecosystem is thin or buggy, you end up paying developers to build custom integrations. That’s fine for a big operator but kills the economics of a new store. My rundown of the best Shopify apps covers the ones that actually justify their monthly fees.

Scalability Without Rebuilding

The platform that works at 100 orders per month might break at 10,000 orders per month. Look at how the platform handles high-catalog stores, high-traffic spikes, multi-storefront setups, and international expansion. You want a platform that scales with you, not one you’ll outgrow in 18 months.

SEO Fundamentals

Some platforms have SEO baked in properly. Some make it a fight. Things like clean URL structures, easy schema markup, fast page speed, clean HTML output, and automatic sitemaps matter enormously for organic traffic. High-ticket dropshipping is a long game, and SEO compounds over time if the foundation is right. I go deeper on this in my ecommerce SEO strategies guide if organic traffic is a priority for your store.

Developer Flexibility

Even if you’re a non-coder right now, you’ll eventually want to customize something. Can you edit the theme files? Can a developer build you a custom checkout? Is there an API that lets you automate the stuff that matters? Locked-down platforms save you trouble upfront but cost you flexibility later.

Support and Documentation

When something breaks at 11 PM on Black Friday, the difference between a platform with 24/7 live chat and a platform with a ticket queue is the difference between fixing it in 20 minutes and losing a full day of revenue. Test the support before you commit by sending a pre-sales question with a tricky technical detail.

The Top 10 Ecommerce Platforms in 2026

Alright, let’s get into the actual rankings. I’m ordering these by how often I actually recommend them for high-ticket dropshipping and niche store operators, not by market share. Shopify is still the default for a reason, but the runner-ups have gotten legitimately good and fit specific situations better than Shopify does. If you specifically want the best platform for a dropshipping business model, I also wrote a dedicated dropshipping platform comparison that goes deeper on that angle.

1. Shopify: Best Overall for Most Operators

If you asked me to pick one platform and walk away, I’d pick Shopify every time. It’s what I build on for 90% of my client work, it’s what I recommend to beginners, and it’s what I use on my own stores. The reason is simple. Shopify has the deepest app ecosystem, the most reliable infrastructure, the best theme marketplace, and the most documented SEO and marketing playbooks in the industry.

Plans start at $29 per month for Basic, $79 per month for Shopify, and $299 per month for Advanced. For most high-ticket dropshipping operators, the Shopify plan at $79 is the sweet spot. You get lower transaction fees, better shipping rates, and professional reports that actually tell you what’s happening in the business. The Advanced plan is worth upgrading to once you’re doing $50,000 per month or more because the transaction fee savings alone pay for the upgrade.

The downside is that Shopify’s theme customization hits a ceiling for operators who want pixel-perfect control. Liquid templating is flexible, but once you’re trying to build something beyond what the theme editor supports, you’re paying a developer. For most people, that ceiling is fine. For design-obsessed operators, it can feel limiting. If you want to see what’s available, I ranked the best Shopify themes in 2026 with options for every budget and niche.

I wrote a detailed breakdown over on the Shopify blog’s ecommerce fundamentals guide referenced for more context on the platform philosophy, but the practical reality is that Shopify is the safest default if you don’t have a specific reason to pick something else.

Ready to build on the platform 90% of my client stores run on? Start your Shopify free trial here and you can have a store live this weekend.

Recommended Tool: Shopify is what I build on for 90% of my client stores because the app ecosystem, infrastructure, and documentation make scaling predictable. Try Shopify here.

2. BigCommerce: Best for Large Catalogs and B2B

If you’re running a store with thousands of SKUs or selling B2B alongside your direct-to-consumer business, BigCommerce is the one I actually prefer over Shopify. The native functionality for large catalogs is stronger, the B2B features are built in rather than bolted on through apps, and there are zero transaction fees regardless of which payment processor you use.

Plans start at $39 per month for Standard, $105 per month for Plus, and $399 per month for Pro, with Enterprise pricing negotiated directly. The plans have revenue-based tiers, which means you get bumped to the next tier as you grow. On high-ticket stores doing $400,000 per year in revenue, BigCommerce will push you to Pro, which is a heads-up worth knowing.

Where BigCommerce falls short compared to Shopify is the app ecosystem and theme marketplace. Both exist, but they’re noticeably thinner. For operators who want every fancy app imaginable, Shopify wins. For operators running a big catalog with B2B components who want powerful core features baked in, BigCommerce is the better call.

The BigCommerce guide to B2B ecommerce is worth reading if you’re evaluating the platform for a B2B use case specifically. It covers the native functionality in a lot more depth than a third-party comparison can.

Running a large catalog or need real B2B features without paying for 15 apps? Start your BigCommerce trial here and test the native feature depth on your actual product data.

Recommended Tool: BigCommerce is the best choice for large catalogs and B2B operations with zero transaction fees regardless of payment processor. Try BigCommerce here.

3. WooCommerce: Best for Complete Control and Customization

If you want full ownership of your stack and you’re comfortable with (or can hire) a developer, WooCommerce is the play. It’s a WordPress plugin, which means you get all the WordPress flexibility, all the plugins, all the themes, and a true self-hosted setup where you own every piece of code.

The plugin itself is free. The hosting costs depend on your traffic, running anywhere from $30 per month on budget managed hosts to $500 or more per month on high-performance managed WordPress hosts. Add themes (free to $200), essential plugins ($100 to $500 per year), and development costs, and the total cost is comparable to Shopify for most stores. If you go the WooCommerce route, picking the right host matters. My best hosting for ecommerce guide ranks the top options by speed, uptime, and ecommerce-specific features.

What makes WooCommerce shine is flexibility. If you want a completely custom checkout, a unique product page layout, deep content marketing integration (because you already have WordPress sitting right there), or a setup that doesn’t fit any cookie-cutter template, WooCommerce will let you build it. If you want to launch in a weekend with no dev work, this isn’t the right tool.

One specific use case where WooCommerce wins every time is content-heavy stores. If your business model includes long-form blog content, SEO-driven authority building, or educational resources alongside your products, the WordPress foundation makes this dramatically easier than doing it through Shopify’s blog.

The WooCommerce official documentation is comprehensive if you want to go deeper on the technical setup. Budget developer time to actually implement what you read there.

Want full stack ownership and a WordPress foundation for content marketing? Get started with WooCommerce here and build exactly the store you want.

4. Wix eCommerce: Best for Design-First Small Stores

If you’re running a small, visually-driven store and you want a drag-and-drop editor that gives you pixel-perfect control over your design without touching code, Wix has gotten a lot better than most ecommerce people give it credit for. The design flexibility out of the box is genuinely stronger than Shopify’s.

Plans with ecommerce features start at $27 per month for Core, $36 per month for Business, and $59 per month for Business Elite. The pricing looks great on paper, but Wix’s app ecosystem is thinner than Shopify’s, and the SEO capabilities (while much improved) still lag behind the leaders. For a small store where you care more about looking beautiful than scaling to seven figures, Wix can be the right call.

I don’t recommend Wix for serious high-ticket dropshipping operations. The ceiling on what you can do at scale is lower than Shopify or BigCommerce, and the migration path off Wix if you outgrow it is rough. But for boutique shops, artisan sellers, or service businesses selling a handful of products on the side, it works.

Running a small design-first store and want drag-and-drop control? Launch your Wix ecommerce store here and get something beautiful live today.

5. Squarespace: Best for Creatives and Portfolio Stores

If you’re a creator, artist, designer, or someone whose brand aesthetic is the primary selling point, Squarespace is worth a serious look. The templates are genuinely beautiful, the editor is clean and intuitive, and the integrated blogging, email, and scheduling features make it a decent all-in-one for a personal brand business.

Plans start at $16 per month for Personal (no ecommerce), $23 per month for Business, $28 per month for Commerce Basic, and $52 per month for Commerce Advanced. The ecommerce features are solid for small-to-mid catalogs but not deep enough for serious operators. Transaction fees on the lower plans eat into margins fast if you’re not careful.

The sweet spot for Squarespace is a creative business selling fewer than 500 SKUs where design matters more than catalog depth. Yoga instructors selling merchandise, photographers selling prints, designers selling ebooks, that kind of thing. For a high-ticket dropshipping store with 50 suppliers and 5,000 SKUs, it’s the wrong tool.

Selling fewer than 500 products and design matters more than scale? Start your Squarespace store here and pick a template that actually looks like a brand.

6. Shift4Shop: Best Free Option with Real Features

If you’re processing payments through Shift4, their ecommerce platform Shift4Shop is genuinely free. No monthly subscription, no transaction fees, no catch beyond the requirement to use Shift4 as your payment processor. For US-based operators who qualify, this is one of the best deals in ecommerce right now.

The platform has been around since 2001 (originally as 3dcart) and has deep feature coverage including multi-currency, multi-language, built-in CRM, and unlimited products across all plans. The UI feels dated compared to Shopify, the theme selection is smaller, and the learning curve is steeper, but the feature depth is there.

The catch is the Shift4 processor requirement. If you don’t qualify for Shift4 (non-US merchants, certain industries, very new businesses), the free plan doesn’t apply and you’re looking at paid plans that aren’t as compelling. For the right operator, this is a legitimate way to launch without a monthly platform fee. For most, Shopify’s $29 plan is still the easier path.

US-based and qualify for Shift4 payment processing? Start your free Shift4Shop store here and skip the monthly platform fee entirely.

7. Square Online: Best for Existing Square POS Users

If you’re already running a physical store or a mobile business through Square’s POS system, Square Online is the natural extension. The inventory sync between online and in-person is seamless, the backend is familiar if you’re already using Square, and there’s a free plan that lets you get started with zero commitment.

Paid plans run $29 per month for Plus and $79 per month for Premium. The ecommerce feature set is solid but not deep, and the platform is clearly optimized for retail businesses rather than pure-play online operators. If you’re running a high-ticket dropshipping store without any physical presence, there’s no reason to pick Square Online over Shopify.

Already running Square POS in your physical store? Launch Square Online here and sync your in-person and online inventory seamlessly.

8. Ecwid: Best for Adding Commerce to Existing Sites

If you already have a website built on WordPress, Wix, Squarespace, or any other platform and you want to bolt on ecommerce without migrating, Ecwid is the cleanest solution I’ve seen. You embed a widget into your existing site, and suddenly you have a full storefront with cart, checkout, inventory, and everything else.

The free plan handles up to 5 products, Venture is $21 per month for 100 products, Business is $39 per month for 2,500 products, and Unlimited is $89 per month for unlimited catalog size. Ecwid was acquired by Lightspeed a few years ago, which gave them better infrastructure and integration capabilities.

This is a specific-use-case tool. For a dedicated ecommerce business, I’d build on Shopify or BigCommerce directly. For a blogger, content creator, or service business that wants to sell a few products without rebuilding their whole site, Ecwid solves the problem elegantly.

Already have a site and want to add commerce without migrating? Start with Ecwid here and embed a full storefront into your existing site in minutes.

9. Weebly: Best Simple Drag-and-Drop Option

If you want the absolute simplest path to a functional online store and you don’t care about scaling past a few hundred SKUs, Weebly (now owned by Square) gives you drag-and-drop simplicity with basic ecommerce features built in. The learning curve is nearly zero, the pricing is low, and you can have a store live in a couple hours.

The tradeoff is that you hit a ceiling fast. The app ecosystem is thin, the customization options are limited, and serious operators will outgrow it within a year. I wouldn’t recommend Weebly for a real business anymore, but I’m including it because it still has a niche for hobbyists and absolute beginners who want to test the ecommerce waters with the lowest possible commitment.

Want the absolute simplest path to a functional online store? Start with Weebly here and have something live in a couple hours.

10. Magento (Adobe Commerce): Best for Enterprise and Complex Requirements

If you’re running an enterprise operation with complex B2B requirements, multi-storefront needs, deep customization demands, and the budget to support a dedicated dev team, Magento (now Adobe Commerce) is the platform built for you. It’s the most powerful ecommerce platform in the mainstream market, full stop.

Adobe Commerce pricing is negotiated based on gross merchandise volume and starts around $22,000 per year for the smallest enterprise customers, scaling up from there. There’s also the open-source Magento Community Edition, which is free but requires hosting and full development in-house.

For 99% of the people reading this article, Magento is overkill. It’s a platform for operators doing $10 million or more in annual revenue with dedicated engineering teams. If you’re in that range, you probably already know this. If you’re not, stick with Shopify or BigCommerce.

Doing $10M+ in revenue with complex enterprise requirements? Learn more about Adobe Commerce here and talk to their enterprise team about a custom build.

Ecommerce Platforms Compared: The Quick Reference

Here’s how I’d think about which platform fits which situation in one pass:

For a new high-ticket dropshipping store with 50 to 500 SKUs and a single founder, Shopify is the default. You can launch fast, the app ecosystem fills every gap, and it scales with you through seven figures without rebuilding. I’ve built dozens of stores on Shopify and it’s rarely the wrong answer.

For a store with 1,000+ SKUs, B2B requirements, or complex catalog needs, BigCommerce is often the better technical fit even though Shopify has more surface-level polish. The native features reduce app dependency, which means lower total cost and fewer integration headaches.

For operators who want complete ownership of the stack, deep customization, or strong content marketing integration through a WordPress foundation, WooCommerce is the right call. Accept that you’ll need developer help at some point.

For everything else, it’s a fit question. Wix and Squarespace work for small design-first stores. Square Online works for retail businesses adding online. Ecwid works for existing sites adding commerce. Shift4Shop works for US operators who qualify for the free Shift4 plan. Weebly works for hobbyists. Magento works for enterprise. For the full head-to-head breakdown, my Shopify vs WooCommerce vs BigCommerce comparison digs into the three frontrunners side by side.

One of the most common mistakes I see is people picking a platform based on monthly price without understanding the total cost of ownership. That $16 per month Squarespace plan looks great until you realize you need a theme ($200), three apps ($80 per month), a custom developer ($2,000), and you still can’t do half the stuff a $79 Shopify plan handles natively.

How to Pick the Right Platform for Your Situation

If you want a simple decision framework, here’s how I’d approach it.

Step 1: Get Clear on Your Business Model

Are you selling high-ticket products through dropshipping? Low-ticket products you manufacture? Digital goods? Services with a physical product component? The business model shapes the platform requirements. High-ticket dropshipping specifically benefits from platforms with strong Google Shopping integration, deep review management, and solid phone-sales-friendly features, which is exactly what Shopify does well.

If you’re still figuring out your business model, go read my high-ticket niches list before you pick a platform. Platform choice is downstream of niche and model. Pick the niche first, then the model, then the platform.

Step 2: Map Your Actual Technical Resources

Are you a solo founder who can’t code? Pick a platform with the deepest app ecosystem so you can buy your way around technical gaps. Shopify wins this by a mile. Are you a technical founder or do you have a dev team? Then WooCommerce or even Magento becomes viable because you can actually use the flexibility. Don’t pick a platform that assumes resources you don’t have.

Step 3: Plan for Two Years, Not Six Months

The platform that works for your launch might not work for your scale. If you think you’ll be doing $500,000 per year in 24 months, pick a platform that supports that level now instead of building on something that’ll force a migration. Migrations are expensive in both direct cost and lost momentum. My best ecommerce platform for small business guide covers which platforms scale best without forcing a rebuild.

Step 4: Think About Your Supplier Stack

If you’re dropshipping from suppliers, the platform needs to integrate cleanly with their inventory feeds, ordering systems, and fulfillment workflows. Some platforms handle this better than others, and some suppliers only support integrations with specific platforms. Before you commit, talk to your top suppliers about which platforms they integrate with natively. I cover this in detail in my complete guide to finding suppliers for high-ticket dropshipping, which walks through how to evaluate supplier tech compatibility alongside the other operational factors.

Step 5: Set Up Your Business Foundation First

One thing I see beginners do constantly is pick a platform, build a store, and then realize they don’t have an LLC, a business bank account, or a payment processor set up. That sequence is backwards. Get the legal and financial foundation solid before you start spending on platform subscriptions and app fees. My business formation checklist walks through exactly what needs to be in place before you launch.

Recommended Tool: Use AI tools like Claude to automate your product descriptions, SEO content, and store copy across any platform, so you can launch faster and publish expert-level content without hiring writers. Try Claude here.

FAQ: Common Platform Questions

Is Shopify Really the Best Choice for Everyone?

No, but it’s the best choice for most operators most of the time. It becomes the wrong choice when you have large catalogs, heavy B2B needs, deep customization requirements, or a specific business model that another platform serves better. For a new operator with a standard niche store, Shopify is almost always the right call.

Can I Switch Platforms Later if I Pick Wrong?

You can, but it’s expensive. A full migration with data transfer, design rebuild, SEO preservation, and supplier re-integration typically runs $5,000 to $20,000 on a reasonable-size store and takes four to eight weeks. Pick carefully upfront.

What About the Platform’s Marketing Claims?

Ignore them. Every platform’s marketing page claims the same things. What matters is real performance in your specific use case. Talk to operators actually running stores on the platform. Browse the support forums. See what problems come up repeatedly. Marketing pages are designed to convert you, not inform you.

How Much Should I Budget for Platform Costs?

Plan for $300 to $1,000 per month in total platform and app costs once you’re operational. That’s the subscription, essential apps, theme (amortized), and payment processing fees. Stores doing six figures per year can absorb that easily. Stores struggling to reach break-even get crushed by it. Build your revenue before you pile on fancy apps.

Should I Build a Custom Platform Instead?

Absolutely not, unless you’re doing eight or nine figures in revenue and have unique requirements that no SaaS platform can meet. Custom platforms sound appealing until you realize you’re on the hook for security patches, browser compatibility, checkout optimization, fraud prevention, and a hundred other things that Shopify or BigCommerce handle for you. Use the tools that exist.

The Bottom Line on Ecommerce Platforms in 2026

Pick the platform that fits your specific business model and technical resources, not the one with the most impressive marketing page. For most new high-ticket dropshipping operators, that’s Shopify. For large catalogs and B2B, it’s BigCommerce. For deep customization and content-heavy stores, it’s WooCommerce. For most specialty use cases, there’s a platform on this list that’s the right fit.

The more important thing is what you do on the platform. A beautifully designed Shopify store with no supplier relationships, no Google Shopping campaigns, no email marketing, and no phone support will make zero sales. A basic BigCommerce store with great suppliers, strong ads, smart email flows, and someone answering the phone will crush it. The platform is the foundation. The business built on top of it is what makes the money.

Final Verdict: Shopify Is the Platform I Recommend in 2026

If you made it this far and you still want a straight answer to “which one should I pick,” here it is. Shopify is the platform I recommend for the vast majority of operators in 2026. It’s what I build on for 90% of my client work, it’s what I use on my own stores, and it’s the one I’d pick if I were starting over from scratch tomorrow.

The reasons are simple. The app ecosystem fills every operational gap you’ll run into. The infrastructure handles Black Friday traffic without breaking a sweat. The theme marketplace gets you to a professional-looking store without custom dev work. The SEO fundamentals are solid out of the box. And the documentation is deep enough that you can troubleshoot almost anything without waiting on support. Every other platform on this list has a specific edge in a specific situation, but Shopify is the one that’s the right call across the widest range of businesses.

The only reasons to pick something else are if you’re running a 1,000+ SKU catalog with B2B needs (BigCommerce), you need complete stack ownership with a WordPress foundation (WooCommerce), or you’re doing $10M+ with dedicated engineering (Magento). For everyone else, Shopify is the answer.

If that sounds like you, start your Shopify free trial here and you can have a real store live this weekend. No credit card required to start, and the Basic plan at $29 per month is more than enough for your first six figures in revenue.

Our Turnkey Done-for-You Store Service handles everything from platform selection to supplier sourcing to a fully built store, so you can skip the trial and error and start selling on the right foundation from day one.

Our 1-on-1 Coaching Program connects you with experienced coaches who have built and scaled stores on these platforms, giving you personalized guidance on platform choice, supplier outreach, and scaling strategies.

Join the Ecommerce Paradise Masterclass and Community for step-by-step training, live group coaching calls, and a network of high-ticket dropshippers who are building real businesses alongside you.

Our Google Shopping Ads Service puts your products in front of buyers who are actively searching and ready to purchase, driving qualified traffic directly to your store regardless of which platform you choose.

Check out our Recommended Resources page for the tools, software, and services we personally use and recommend for running a successful high-ticket dropshipping business.

I wish you guys the best of luck out there building your stores. Platform choice matters, but it’s not the hardest decision you’ll make in this business. Pick a solid foundation, get the operational fundamentals right, and focus most of your energy on suppliers, marketing, and customer experience. That’s really really where the game is won. Thanks so much guys, and I’ll see you in the next one.

For more on building your ecommerce foundation, check out our comprehensive guide to high-ticket dropshipping, our complete guide to finding suppliers, and our business formation checklist.

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Trevor Fenner
Email: trevor@ecommerceparadise.com
Phone: (307) 429-0021
5830 E 2nd St, Ste. 7000 #715, Casper, WY 82609
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