bvuser,
This does deserve another thread... this one's been hijacked.
Q: "You have a mall and several stores. I am a supplier for one of your stores. You give me permission to the catalog of one of your stores and I update your database? I don't see why I would do that as a supplier."
Some small suppliers depend on re-sellers for 100% of their sales, not big enough for a stand-alone website.
If I want a website owner to sell my products... but he isn't inclined to or doesn't have the time to add my products to his database, I should be able to load his web-store with my products for him. We both make out... My products get to a wider market faster, he doesn't have to spend time loading products that may not ultimately be worth his time (limited audience). He handles the money end, keeps his discount, and forwards orders (and later, payments) to be filled (via drop-ship).
I have to think that Haines, Amana, Sony upload product info to Sears' website on a regular basis. (I'm sure nobody at Sears is editing pictures and text about Sony TVs) Small companies (such as mine) should jump at the chance to load products onto a website. Reluctance on the part of the site's owner to let someone into the admin side of the catalog is understandable, unless it's limited to only that company's section (category) - hense, the "mall" model.
Go to -
www.crafthome.com - Everybody in the Mission, Arts and Crafts market is represented at this site--- My goods have been on his site for 11 years. Don't you think he should make a mall type website? In some categories, you can make three or more selections before seeing a picture - it's all text - that's NUTS in 2007! BUT.. he hasn't the time to load a new database with 6,000 products, new pictures, thumbs,... but his suppliers can. He'd be up and running in less than a year and I'd be able to keep my part of his database current for him. Better for both of us.
This model is ONE URL, one payment gateway, many categories "owned" by individual suppliers.
Sorry this got a little long.