Exporting their products abroad is the choice of more and more companies. For cross-border e-commerce companies, joining a good platform directly determines the subsequent benefits. Today I am not going to teach you how to choose a platform, but mainly to help you see which cross-border e-commerce platforms are available.
1. North America
Amazon: The world's largest e-commerce company, operating sites in 14 countries: the United States, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Italy, Japan, Mexico, the Netherlands, Spain and the United Kingdom, as well as Amazon Business.
Bonanza: A seller-friendly e-commerce marketplace with over 10 million items, no listing fees, and no monthly fees, selling in Canada, the UK, France, India, Germany, Mexico, and Spain.
Cratejoy: A subscription platform that provides comprehensive services that cater to consumer interests, such as healthcare. The site receives approximately 30,000 transactions per month and over 3 million page views per month.
eBay: has sites in 24 countries and regions - the United States, Canada, Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, Spain, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, Australia, China, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Taiwan, Thailand and Vietnam.
Etsy: A creative handmade e-commerce platform with approximately 30 million customers each year.
Jet: Although owned by Walmart, it operates as an independent website with millions of visitors every day.
Newegg: A global electronics e-commerce platform that has been in operation for 17 years, has tens of millions of customers, and sells products in 50 countries.
Reverb: An e-commerce platform for buying and selling music equipment, as well as articles and videos for users to learn, with about 80 million global users visiting the site each year.
Walmart: Started accepting third-party sellers in 2016, and now has more than 1 million products on its website.
Wayfair: A home decor-focused marketplace with more than 10 million products from more than 10,000 suppliers.
Wish: A B2C e-commerce platform with about 100 million visitors per year, most of the products are low-priced. Wish is reportedly the most downloaded shopping app in the world.
Zibbet: A platform for independent artists, craftsmen and vintage collectors, similar to Etsy, with about 50,000 sellers, mainly offering handmade products.
2. Europe
Allegro: Poland's largest e-commerce platform with more than 15 million customers and 70 million products sold per month.
Asos: UK platform targeting younger shoppers, with over 80,000 products and sites in Australia, the United States, France, Germany, Spain, Russia and Italy.
Cdiscount: French platform with around 1 million unique visitors per day, a wide range of products for sale and annual sales of over 2 billion euros.
Cel: Romanian platform, about 500,000 customers, more than 50,000 products, free registration.
DaWanda: It’s a German marketplace for handmade products, but it will be closed on August 30 this year, and buyers and sellers will be migrated to Etsy.
Emag: The largest e-commerce website in Romania, with thousands of users every day and free registration.
Flubit: UK-based platform known for competitive prices and featuring over 60 million products.
Fnac: French platform that sells a wide variety of products to millions of customers and has physical stores in France and other countries.
Fruugo: A British platform that covers 32 countries. Sellers can sell in these countries and regions by registering once. The website supports 21 currencies and 17 languages.
Game: A UK platform focused on selling games, toys and media products, it has grown rapidly in the past few years and processes thousands of orders per month.
Mobile.de: German platform for selling vehicles to businesses and consumers, with customers across Europe.
Okazii: 18-year-old Romanian platform with more than 3,000 products sold every day and about 3 million visitors per month.
OnBuy: A UK-based marketplace that attracts shoppers with affordable prices and charges sellers low fees.
Otto: The German platform was launched in 1995, and nearly half of Germans shop on the site.
PriceMinister: A French platform owned by Japan's Rakuten. It is reportedly the fifth most visited e-commerce site in France.
Real.de: German marketplace that sells millions of products, including electronics, toys, home and garden items, fashion, furniture, etc.
Tesco: A British grocery giant that launched an e-commerce platform model a few years ago.
Zalando: German platform that has expanded to multiple countries in Europe, has more than 22 million customers and sells more than 250,000 products.
This is the end of the introduction to international e-commerce platforms in this issue. If you want to get more information about international e-commerce platforms, please pay attention and we will continue to answer your questions~