Online Cannabis Sales Are About To Flourish With The Rise Of Cannabis Marketplaces

gb123

Well-Known Member
With a market cap just over $900 billion, Amazon is the largest company in the world. It got there by capitalizing on society’s ever-increasing reliance on e-commerce, delivering products faster and more conveniently than physical retailers.

Over the last two decades, nearly every facet of the retail sector has been transformed by the web. Companies are now de facto expected to complement brick and mortar establishments with a sleek and easy-to-use online component.

But one subsector that’s still only beginning to transition online is cannabis, as most cannabis companies are still struggling to reconcile newly legal product lines with strict government regulations. In Canada, where it was legalized last year, only two of the country’s ten provinces—Saskatchewan and Manitoba—permit the sale of cannabis on non-government-operated websites.



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Even marketing the products can present a whole new set of challenges, as cannabis companies cannot run ad campaigns on digital giants like Google or Facebook.

These Restrictions Won’t Stop the Inevitable


Since legalization, companies in both Saskatchewan and Manitoba have seen enormous demand for cannabis ordered online.

It makes sense when you think about it—if you were at home and wanted to order weed, would you rather get dressed, trudge your way down the store, wait in line, and potentially have to talk to strangers to place an order, or would you rather get your re-up with the click of a button?

Despite the regulations, the marketing restrictions, and the complexity, any retail cannabis company that’s not establishing itself online is quickly making itself obsolete. Convenience will be the determining factor in cannabis consumer preferences, and nothing is more convenient than the Amazon model.

However, because major online services like PayPal, MailChimp, Wix, and Shopify are electing to steer clear of the cannabis industry, companies will have to look to cannabis-centric solutions to gain a foothold online.

Enter CBD and Cannabis Marketplaces

Luckily, some companies offer e-commerce services specifically designed to empower cannabis firms. e Technologies Inc. is a sort of Shopify for the cannabis sector. CannaOne’s flagship product, Bloomkit, is a turnkey enterprise software solution that delivers everything a cannabis company needs to retail online. Unlike other e-commerce platforms currently targetting cannabis, CannaOne’s Bloom Product Suite employs artificial intelligence to gather structured data from purchases. This allows the platform to fulfil orders and recommend products to shoppers.

CannaOne’s first marketplace created through Bloomkit is BWell Market, which connects consumers in the US who are looking for CBD products with CBD retailers. BWell has more than 11,000 members who can take their pick of over 100 products.

There’s also Green Marimba. Based in Colorado, Green Marimba can host dispensary websites, manage inventories, and help establish customer bases with email campaigns and customer relationship management (CRM) tools. It also helps cannabis companies improve existing websites, upgrading professionality from pre-legalization bargain-bin web domains to sleek and fully compliant online storefronts.

Using a regulatory compliance system called Metrc Integration, Green Marimba helps businesses navigate various cannabis laws so that retailers can focus on sales. The company also has a team of attorneys with legalization experience on hand as a kind of call-support for dispensaries.

To enable cheaper, faster, and higher-quality B2B transactions in the sector, LeafLink serves as a wholesale marketplace for companies in the cannabis industry. In addition to making easy, bulk orders online, retailers can manage inventories, request samples, and take advantage of CRM services all in one place.

LeakLink is backed by s, the investment firm offshoot of cannabis giant Inc. Between thousands of cannabis brands and retailers, LeakLink recently passed $1 billion in annualized orders, which represents approximately 16 percent of all wholesale cannabis orders in the US.

Cannabis and e-commerce are two of the most dominant innovations in retail right now. As more and more states liberalize their cannabis laws, users are projected to spend more than $66 billion on cannabis products in the US alone. Much of that will be done online. Cannabis companies need to make use of the resources available to them in order to stay relevant and to capture an important and lucrative corner of this growing market.
 

odam2k

Well-Known Member
I thought online sales were already flourishing.... maybe not the govt shops, but the MOM's seem busy?
 

oddish

Well-Known Member
The MOMs are doing great. They tend to have a more consistent and reliable supply too.
They're also dominating the edibles and vape pen market due to restrictions on what the legal stores can sell.

Selling online isn't all that difficult, but where they have to be cautious is working with companies that cave to basic warrants.
If you setup a Wordpress or Shopify site using your own credit card and the police send a cease and desist and a warrant to the provider, they'll know who is running the site in a heartbeat.
The smart MOMs (very rare) are using proprietary solutions that don't use paid services or rely on providers who could turn on them at any time.
 

AquaTerra

Well-Known Member
The MOMs are doing great. They tend to have a more consistent and reliable supply too.
They're also dominating the edibles and vape pen market due to restrictions on what the legal stores can sell.

Selling online isn't all that difficult, but where they have to be cautious is working with companies that cave to basic warrants.
If you setup a Wordpress or Shopify site using your own credit card and the police send a cease and desist and a warrant to the provider, they'll know who is running the site in a heartbeat.
The smart MOMs (very rare) are using proprietary solutions that don't use paid services or rely on providers who could turn on them at any time.
You don't need propitiatory solutions that's just crazy when there's 100's of opensource shopping cart scripts.
 

oddish

Well-Known Member
You don't need propitiatory solutions that's just crazy when there's 100's of opensource shopping cart scripts.
That's part of the issue though. For example, I know multiple MOMs that are using Wordpress and WooCommerce or other shopping cart solutions.
Many of them have been exploited, one of them in Hamilton has had their database dumped twice, including addresses and order history for all customers.
Some of these MOMs have no idea what they're doing and these open source ZenCart and Magento solutions can be a problem.

Speaking of online sales, check out this bargain strain just added to my LP:

Screen Shot 2019-09-06 at 12.58.24 PM.png
 

QUAD BREATH

Well-Known Member
That's part of the issue though. For example, I know multiple MOMs that are using Wordpress and WooCommerce or other shopping cart solutions.
Many of them have been exploited, one of them in Hamilton has had their database dumped twice, including addresses and order history for all customers.
Some of these MOMs have no idea what they're doing and these open source ZenCart and Magento solutions can be a problem.

Speaking of online sales, check out this bargain strain just added to my LP:

View attachment 4390410
Do you even shill bro?
 

AquaTerra

Well-Known Member
That's part of the issue though. For example, I know multiple MOMs that are using Wordpress and WooCommerce or other shopping cart solutions.
Many of them have been exploited, one of them in Hamilton has had their database dumped twice, including addresses and order history for all customers.
Some of these MOMs have no idea what they're doing and these open source ZenCart and Magento solutions can be a problem.

Speaking of online sales, check out this bargain strain just added to my LP:

View attachment 4390410
If its on the internet its going to get hacked/cracked eventually. A lot of hacks don't necessarily mean the software was exploited but that there could have been other scripts on the server that allowed cross account/site exploits. Gov services has been exploited many times. There's 100's of commercial e-commerce sites exploited everyday it's not anymore risky for MOM's just because they sell weed.
 

oddish

Well-Known Member
If its on the internet its going to get hacked/cracked eventually. A lot of hacks don't necessarily mean the software was exploited but that there could have been other scripts on the server that allowed cross account/site exploits. Gov services has been exploited many times. There's 100's of commercial e-commerce sites exploited everyday it's not anymore risky for MOM's just because they sell weed.
I disagree with the "all going to get hacked" approach, but that's because it's my career to make sure that doesn't happen (in a different industry).
I've seen some that do it better, store less data permanently and, even if they were hacked, have everything encrypted and stored properly.
Open source ecommerce, on the other hand, does very little to help in those situations.

The reason it matters for cannabis users is because MOMs are "illegal". Proof of your purchases and address are in those exploits.
 

gb123

Well-Known Member
Speaking of online sales, check out this bargain strain just added to my LP:
.
idiot fool moron
there's more but hey :finger::roll::spew::hump::dunce::dunce::dunce::dunce::dunce::dunce::dunce::dunce::dunce::dunce::dunce::dunce:

ANYONE WHO WOULD PUSH POISON LP SHWAG IS A COMPETYE IDIOT. MORON .GOOF. ASSHOLE at their finest!!!
WTF ODD ONE
YOU WIN THE PRIZE! :)
Pushng poison on folks Yer and IDIOT STIMPY! and ya dont even fuckin know it
but HEY I dont mind informing ya any :)k
 

oddish

Well-Known Member
idiot fool moron
there's more but hey :finger::roll::spew::hump::dunce::dunce::dunce::dunce::dunce::dunce::dunce::dunce::dunce::dunce::dunce::dunce:

ANYONE WHO WOULD PUSH POISON LP SHWAG IS A COMPETYE IDIOT. MORON .GOOF. ASSHOLE at their finest!!!
WTF ODD ONE
YOU WIN THE PRIZE! :)
Pushng poison on folks Yer and IDIOT STIMPY! and ya dont even fuckin know it
but HEY I dont mind informing ya any :)k
ok, but this time it was sarcasm.
I wouldn't pay $12 for tweed's busted up crumbly flowers.
Not even if it was your money.
 

radiant Rudy

Well-Known Member
idiot fool moron
there's more but hey :finger::roll::spew::hump::dunce::dunce::dunce::dunce::dunce::dunce::dunce::dunce::dunce::dunce::dunce::dunce:

ANYONE WHO WOULD PUSH POISON LP SHWAG IS A COMPETYE IDIOT. MORON .GOOF. ASSHOLE at their finest!!!
WTF ODD ONE
YOU WIN THE PRIZE! :)
Pushng poison on folks Yer and IDIOT STIMPY! and ya dont even fuckin know it
but HEY I dont mind informing ya any :)k
Emoji's, masterfully expressing the dull musings of a shit choked, dim witted, broken child.
 

The Hippy

Well-Known Member
ok, but this time it was sarcasm.
I wouldn't pay $12 for tweed's busted up crumbly flowers.
Not even if it was your money.
That was from JWC schwagg warehouse. The fuckin goof is one of the biggest assholes in this industry. Buying from him removes any manhood one may have had.
Might as well drop n suck like a slave girl would.
I hope that cunt is crushed to death by something.
 
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