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A marketplace you own.

On most platforms your store is a booth you rent — they hold your customers, your data and a cut of every sale. This is the opposite: a full storefront that runs on your own infrastructure, with your own payment provider, that belongs to you.

The case

A booth you rent isn't a store you own

When you sell on a marketplace, the platform owns the relationship: your customer list, your order data, and a percentage of every transaction sit with them, and the terms can change. Ownership means the catalog, cart, checkout and order records run on infrastructure that's yours, the customer data lives in your database, and the money settles through your provider to your account. That's how this is built.

What “yours” means for the store

Your storefront

Catalog, cart and checkout run on your own compute — a real store, not a listing on a shared site.

Your customer data

Orders and customer details sit in your own database, not a platform's CRM you can't export.

Your payment provider

Bring your own — Stripe, PayPal, Square or Lemon Squeezy — and the money settles to your account.

No cut of your sales

You pay the platform subscription, not a percentage of every order the way a marketplace takes one.

Order tracking both sides

You manage orders from your admin; customers track theirs from their own account.

Import and go

Bring your existing catalog in and you're running, on a store you keep.

Owned storefront vs. a marketplace booth

Who owns customersYou doThe marketplace does
Order dataYour databaseTheir platform
PaymentYour own providerTheir processor
Per-sale cutNone to the platformA fee on every order
If terms changeYour store is still yoursYou adapt or leave

Questions about ownership

How is this different from selling on a marketplace?

A marketplace rents you a booth and keeps the customer relationship, the data and a cut of sales. Here the store runs on your infrastructure, the data is yours, and your own payment provider handles the money.

Who handles payments?

You do, through your own provider. You bring Stripe, PayPal, Square or Lemon Squeezy; funds settle to your account, not the platform's.

Does the platform take a percentage of sales?

No. You pay the platform subscription; it doesn't take a cut of each order the way a marketplace does. Your only per-sale cost is your payment processor's own fee.

Can I move my catalog in?

Yes — if you already have a site, your products import into the store, so you're not rebuilding the catalog by hand.

Own the store, not a booth.

A full storefront on your own infrastructure, with your own payment provider.

See how the Business Builder works →