Web Development service

Web Development · Retail & Shops

Web Development for furniture stores.

For a physical store, the web should not pretend to replace the counter. It should show what is available, keep inventory, POS, and customers aligned, remove Excel from the back room, and provide real data on loyalty, requests, and availability before someone walks into the store.

People renovating look for inspiration online. Your furniture needs to be there.

01Awareness

If you're a furniture store, sound familiar?

  • 01

    Loyalty still on paper

    Stamped cards, discounts written by hand, customers lost between the register and notebooks. This way, a clothing store does not know who comes back, what they buy, when to contact them, or which promotions are just burning margin.

  • 02

    Inventory out of control

    Excel says one thing, the POS says another, and the shelf says something else. In a bookstore or hardware store, this becomes time wasted on the phone, items promised and then missing, duplicate orders, and staff chasing broken data.

  • 03

    Availability invisible online

    The customer searches for a model, bouquet, ring, or lamp, but before leaving home they cannot understand whether it is really there. A nice but silent showcase site dumps everything onto the phone and the people in the store.

02Online retail without a plug-in circus and too many agencies

5 items
  1. 01

    Client portal with login

    A private area for loyalty points, purchase history, preferences, requests, and notifications. Not a fake account: a useful space for frequent buyers and for anyone managing the relationship after the sale.

  2. 02

    Inventory connected to the POS

    Integration between availability, categories, variants, sizes, colors, and the real status of items. Less copy and paste, fewer duplicate files, fewer made-up answers when a customer asks whether a product is in stock.

  3. 03

    Store dashboard

    A clear panel to read sales, online requests, most-searched products, recurring customers, and critical stock levels. Numbers should help the counter, not fill meeting reports.

  4. 04

    APIs with existing systems

    Clean connections with CRM, ERP, register, newsletter, or catalogs already in use. If a system already exists and supports the work, we integrate it. We do not throw everything away for a technical trend.

  5. 05

    Automation without fluff

    Chatbots and AI flows for repetitive questions: hours, availability, in-store pickup, gift requests, order status. They need to lighten staff workload, not become a vending machine for vague answers.

03 - Micro story

A store with a physical register and online catalog updated stock at the end of the day, after many products had already changed. Customers asked about availability, and staff checked manually. Web Development connected the product database, indicative availability, pickup requests, and a dashboard for fast updates. The site does not promise perfect stock when the data is not perfect. It shows useful information and asks for confirmation where needed. After 45 days, requests without product data dropped by 52%.

04Frequently asked questions

5 answers
  • The questions I hear all the time.

  • Can I show only products available in the store online?

    Yes, if inventory is connected to a reliable source: POS, management software, or a central database. For a physical store, it makes sense to show availability, variants, and in-store pickup without promising full ecommerce when it is not needed. First, we clean up the data. Then we publish it.

    Do I need to rebuild the management software I already use in the store?

    Not necessarily. If the current software works well for the register, items, or customers, we can connect it through APIs, controlled exports, or scheduled syncs. The point is to avoid duplicate entry and conflicting data, not change software on principle.

    Is digital loyalty useful even without ecommerce?

    Yes. In a physical store, digital loyalty helps you understand return visits, purchased categories, birthdays, preferences, and local campaigns. It does not replace the relationship at the counter. It makes it less blind. A stamped card tells you nothing. Period.

    Can customers check sizes, colors, or items before coming in?

    Yes, with a catalog connected to real availability or updated at sensible intervals. For clothing, jewelry, flowers, or furniture, this reduces useless calls and wasted trips. Update times and reservation rules need to be stated clearly.

    Can I start from one part, like inventory or the client area?

    Yes. It often makes sense to start from the issue creating the most chaos: Excel, loyalty, availability, or online requests. We design a technical base that does not block the next steps. No huge castles, no plug-ins tossed in at random. You decide.

05 - Start here?

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