The slow part is usually the plumbing
What makes selling online slow isn't the products — it's the payment integration, the catalog re-entry, the developer queue. This removes all three: it pulls your existing products straight off your current site, and the simplest checkout option is just pasting your own payment link, so customers pay on your provider's page and you skip the integration entirely. You can be taking orders today.
Why it's actually fast
Import your catalog
Point it at your existing site and it pulls your products — names, prices, images — into the store as drafts to review.
Paste a payment link
The simplest option needs no keys and no code: paste your Stripe, PayPal or Square link and checkout sends customers there to pay.
No integration to build
Because payment happens on your provider's hosted page, there's nothing to wire up and nothing to certify.
Orders tracked both sides
You see every order in your admin; customers track their own from their account.
Runs on what you own
Your store, your data, your compute — not a rented seat on someone else's marketplace.
Upgrade when you want
Start on a payment link today; move to full automatic checkout later without rebuilding the store.
This vs. the usual store setup
| Catalog entry | Imported from your site | Typed in by hand |
| Payment setup | Paste your own link | Build/certify an integration |
| Time to live | Same day | Weeks and a developer |
| Who owns the store | You do | The marketplace platform |
| Your sales cut | Your processor's fee only | Platform fee on every sale |
Questions about ownership
How can it be live the same day?
The two slow parts — catalog entry and payment integration — are removed: products import from your existing site, and checkout can simply use your own hosted payment link, so there's nothing to build.
Do I need payment keys or code?
Not for the simple option. You paste your own payment link and customers pay on your provider's page. Full automatic checkout with keys is available when you want it.
Where do the products come from?
If you already have a site, it reads your product data and imports it as drafts; otherwise you add products in the admin in a couple of clicks.
Is the store really mine?
Yes — it runs on your infrastructure with your customer data, and your payment provider handles the money. You're not a tenant on a marketplace.
Put your products online today.
Import your catalog, paste a payment link, start selling — on a store you own.
See how the Business Builder works →