Zlio is a site that allows you to build your own online store.
This is certainly nothing new, there are lots of sites where you can get free online stores. But Zlio has some bells and whistles that are quite nice.
The basic idea is a bit like Squidoo, you create an online store inside Zlio , and it gets indexed by search engines so that when people search for what your store sells, they’ll find you. You create small, focused, stores selling niche products, rather than one large mega store. Similar to creating Squidoo lenses.
One of the nice bits is that Zlio fully supports Google and Yahoo sitemaps, and provides a spot for you to type in the verification code for each. For those of you who haven’t used Google’s webmaster tools, the verification code establishes your ownership of the site in Google’s eyes, and gives you access to diagnostics and insight into your site’s search engine rankings.
There are also spots where you can type in meta keywords and a meta description for your store, and another spot where you put the code for whatever analytics program you’re using (such as Google Analytics). Most of what would need you to edit HTML on a normal website is available in configuration edit boxes in the control panel.
As far as the store itself goes, the interface for picking products is nice, and you can add reviews of products, associate products with keywords, etc. You have complete control over the categories of products in your stores, and can assign each product to any category you want.
For the looks of the store, Zlio has templates available and you can hand edit the CSS for the site (also available in a configuration edit box). There’s also a quite nice drag and drop screen for moving visual elements around on the page of your template.
I can’t report yet on how well a store ranks in search engines, and you do need to do some basic off-page SEO yourself, such as getting backlinks to your store. But the on-page SEO is nicely handled by the store itself and the product keywords you enter.
I knocked together a store about puzzles for kids in about five minutes, so you can see what a very simple store is like. The use of subdomains for the web address is quite nice for SEO purposes, too.
Zlio is quite nice for non-technical people, and saves quite a bit of time for techies, too. If stores rank as well in search engines as Squidoo pages, this is going to become my new favorite recommendation for beginners.
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8 Responses
July 18th, 2007 at 4:05 pm Quote
1What is the percentage break down for income?
July 18th, 2007 at 4:40 pm Quote
2You’re basically making an affiliate sale through each merchant. So if you sell Canon digital cameras through your store, when someone goes to buy they’ll get a list of participating online merchants. Each has a different commission schedule, ranging in general from 3% to 8%. You also get 10% of what your referrals make, and 5% of what their referrals make.
July 18th, 2007 at 5:21 pm Quote
3How does that compare to Squidoo Commission? Do you get to split Adsense 50/50 with Squidoo?
July 18th, 2007 at 8:24 pm Quote
4Hi Tyson, Adsense isn’t split 50/50 with Squidoo, but rather all the Adsense earnings are pooled and divided amongst all the lenses based on traffic and PR and other arcane formulas. You can ad Adsense to a Zlio shop, and it’s split 60/40 (I think the 40 is to you).
August 7th, 2007 at 9:33 am Quote
5Just for your info Jay, for Adsense, the 60 are for you (40 for us)
Thanks for all your posts
Best regards
Jeremie Berrebi
President/CEO
Zlio.com
August 7th, 2007 at 10:44 am Quote
6Hi Jeremie, thanks for the clarification! That makes Zlio an even better opportunity than I’d thought, and it was pretty darn good to start.
November 21st, 2007 at 8:34 pm Quote
7Sounds like an interesting opportunity. Can you share any income reports?
November 21st, 2007 at 9:46 pm Quote
8Hi Josh, I don’t have any income reports, since I haven’t done anything but experiment with the shop building features. My shop is live, but not promoted and so isn’t showing up in any search engine results.
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