June 2011 eCommerce Survey

The June 2011 eCommerce survey of the Alexa top 1 million sites found 25,592 online stores. Magento continues to reign as the most popular platform with 4,705 sites, an 15% increase since February.

Zen Cart sees the largest gains, doubling to 3,167 sites. This results in Zen Cart becoming the second most popular eCommerce software in the top 1 million sites. This increase is predominantly due to improvements in the signatures used to detect technologies. These also led to 800 more web sites running IBM WebSphere being identified. While these two pieces of software were the most heavily affected by adjustments to the survey, improvements were made across the board.

Of all software analysed, osCommerce saw the largest loss; falling from 3,033 sites in February to 2,554 responding in this edition.

Most Popular eCommerce Software – June 2011

June 2011 eCommerce Survey

From a Magento developer’s point of view, of the 4,705 Magento sites found, 274 included indications that they were running on the Magento Enterprise edition. This month, checks were added for Magento Go, Magento’s new hosted solution. This is aimed at small and emerging retailers and therefore we would not expect many to appear in the top 1 million. Indeed, only 8 stores were found using Magento Go. The most popular of these was fkc.com, ranked around 155K busiest site. However, this store is still under construction. On the other hand, chefstore.mx is open for business but only ranked around the 800K mark.

In addition to Magento Go, a number of other eCommerce software packages were added to this survey:

  • ATG
  • ProStores
  • CS-Cart
  • CubeCart
  • ECShop
  • Shopp
  • Yahoo Stores
  • LemonStand
  • 3DCart

As a short aside, I also repeated the analysis of HTML 5 adoption in the top 1 million. 646 of the 25,592 online stores found were using HTML 5, making eCommerce slightly below the average of 2.67% for the rest of the top 1 million.

Full Results

The full results for all eCommerce software detected are provided in the table below. I’ve included the results from the previous two surveys so that growth and decline can be observed for each. I’d be interested to hear your viewpoints on any of these findings.

eCommerce
Platform
November 2010 ResultsFebruary 2011 ResultsJune 2011 ResultsChange
Magento3414407447053414,4074,4705
Zen Cart1556153331671556,1533,3167
VirtueMart268327012683,2701
osCommerce3123303325543123,3033,2554
Yahoo Stores13151315
PrestaShop85210791302852,1079,1302
Volusion8899061099889,906,1099
IBM WebSphere Commerce2231011223,1011
Ubercart706992706,992
Interspire605739819605,739,819
Miva Merchant710894802710,894,802
WP e-Commerce779754779,754
ECSHOP667667
OpenCart335492660335,492,660
X-Cart733740659733,740,659
CS-Cart397397
OXID eSales310314305310,314,305
ProStores275275
Actinic290229237290,229,237
3DCart209209
Shopify122143204122,143,204
Shopp171171
Demandware118140118,140
ATG9191
nopCommerce52648152,64,81
ekmPowershop71586571,58,65
GSI Commerce48596448,59,64
CubeCart4747
Big Cartel28414428,41,44
FoxyCart273427,34
LemondStand1212
TomatoCart1116911,116,9

Another Pretty Graph!

You know you wanted one. The graph below shows the number of sites detected for each eCommerce platform over 3 editions of the survey. All points are plotted on the same axes so that the popularity for each platform can be more easily compared. From this we can see just how much the leaders, Magento, Zen Cart, VirtueMart and osCommerce, are dominating in terms of sheer number of stores.

eCommerce comparison

Once again, the analysis will be re-conducted in around 3 months, so we’ll see if Magento can retain or perhaps even extend their lead. I’m sure eBay would certainly expect so.

Comments on this survey and suggestions for further enhancements or alternative investigations are very welcome. You can leave a comment, email me via the link below, or get in touch on twitter: @bobbyshaw.

Posted by Tom.

About Tom: Magento Loving Managing Director at Meanbee. Main tasks include coding magento themes, drinking tea and reminding Nick what he should be doing.

View the original version of this post.

3 Responses

  1. Tom #

    Glad to see Virtuemart still holding its own (since I use it for all my budget ecommerce customers!) – but also very surprising since its so poorly supported by the creators. It just goes to show what a dedicated and friendly community can achieve – even with a decidedly underpowered and ill configured shopping cart.

    Lets hope Magento(-bay) continues to grow and remain free! If V(-bay) ever sort out the power hunger intrinsic in its code I would love to move my budget clients across.

  2. Mark #

    Interesting article. We have been using Actinic in the past, and I know from searching around that many Actinic owners have been migrating away to other solutions, so the fall in Actinic stores found would confirm what I have seen in forums and other discussion. I’m also interested to know if the Interspire figure includes BigCommerce or is it just their owned cart solution in that total? Cheers, Mark.

  3. Tom #

    Hi Mark, the Interspire figures include sites that are using BigCommerce.

Leave a Reply

  • You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

Tweets from @meanbee

Contact Meanbee

Send us your message