Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Read on if you're registered as a Producer Shop and wish to open your own store.
Visit this page if you wish to open an online store for a multi-producer shop front (hub).
In Open Food Network, Order Cycles are where shop managers open their shop. This involves selecting which of their products are in stock, what fees are applied and what dates the shop will open and close.
Why use Order Cycles? Many producers, who are selling small quantities of products, may find it useful to have an order cycle that is perpetually open, and to fulfill orders individually, as they are placed. Other producers, who sell large quantities of products, to multiple customers, find it useful to establish periodic order cycles, which are collectively fulfilled at the end of a period. For instance, a farmer may have an order cycle which is open (accepting orders) for two weeks. At the end of this order cycle, all of the orders are packed, sorted and distributed at the same time. Once this batch of orders has been fulfilled, a new order cycle is opened. Structuring order cycles in this way can make the tasks of packing and delivering orders more efficient.
When logged into your admin dashboard you can access order cycles from this button:
Or 'Order Cycles' on the blue horizontal menu across the top of the page. Then click on +New Order Cycle
Note you cannot create an order cycle until you have set up at least one shipping and one payment method.
You will now be redirected to a new screen:
Name (required): Choose a name for this order cycle. This will only be visible to you, so it can be named anything which is meaningful for you. We recommend that you follow a consistent naming protocol e.g FoodHub_Week27_2014.
Orders Open: This is the date at which your OFN store will be open, and start to accept orders.
Orders Close: This is the date when your OFN store will close, and stop accepting orders. If you intend to have an order cycle which is continuously open, select a close date which is well into the future.
Schedules: leave blank unless implementing Subscriptions.
Ready for (ie Date/Time) (required): This box tells the customer when their order will be ready for either collection or delivery.
If your order cycle is constantly open, rather than periodic, then use this box to enter something like 'Two days after ordering'
If you have product or location specific order cycles running concurrently you may like to 'hack' this text field by adding extra information eg. 'Meat for Tues'
Customer Instructions: This message will be included in the customer’s order confirmation email, below the message that corresponds to their chosen shipping method (see below). This note is designed to only be visible to customers, so you can include more sensitive information like addresses, or phone numbers etc.
Products: You must select the products which will be visible in your online store during this order cycle.
Remember, if you add new products after an order cycle is underway, you will need to select them here else they won't appear online!
Add Coordinator Fee: There is the option of adding a coordinator fee. Here you can apply an enterprise fee that has been created for your enterprise.
Click Create to save this order cycle.
If the opening date of your order cycle has already lapsed then your shop front will be live immediately! If you are not quite ready to open the shop, set the 'Opens At' date to a time in the future.
For periodic, repetitive order cycles, you can copy an existing order cycle and change the dates, to make the process quicker. Select the icon with two sheets of paper to the right of the table as highlighted below:
Order cycles will display as green when they are active, yellow when scheduled for a future date, and grey when they have closed. If an order cycle closed over one month ago, it will no longer display on this list. To view all of your past order cycles click show 30 more days or show 90 more days at the bottom of the list.
Debe crear por lo menos un método de envío antes de poder abrir su tienda.
Antes de seguir leyendo, es posible que desee ver una demostración rápida de cómo configurar su primer método de envío:
Vaya a la página Métodos de envío haciendo clic en Organizaciones en el menú horizontal azul y luego haga clic en Configuración junto a su organización. La página de Métodos de Envío se encuentra en el menú del lado izquierdo.
Haga clic en Crear nuevo método de envío +. Será dirigido a una página como esta:
Marque la casilla junto a su organización en el lado derecho de la página debajo de 'Hubs/Nodos'. Esto indica que el método de envío que está a punto de crear se aplicará a esa organización. Puede seleccionar varias empresas, si lo desea.
Nombre: Elija un nombre para el método. Este nombre se mostrará al cliente durante su proceso de compra y en los correos de confirmación de pedido. Ejemplo:
Descripción: Agregue detalles adicionales, como la dirección precisa del punto de recolección. Estos detalles serán visibles para los clientes en gris junto al nombre (vea la captura de pantalla anterior).
Categoría: ¿Este método es una entrega o una recogida?
Calculadora: Seleccione la forma en que se agregarán las tarifas de envío a este método de envío. Tenga en cuenta que la tarifa de envío puede ser cero. Consulte a continuación para obtener más detalles.
Categorías: Condiciones de transporte (refrigeración, congelado, por defecto) asociadas con este método de envío.
Zonas: Seleccione la zona apropiada (esto es para habilitar la calculadora de impuestos correcta).
Al hacer clic en Crear, se creará el método de envío y, a continuación, se le proporcionarán nuevos campos para agregar detalles de los cargos del método de envío. Los campos presentados dependerán de la calculadora de tarifas de envío que haya seleccionado.
Si cambia el tipo de calculadora para un método de envío, primero debe guardar antes de poder editar la configuración de la calculadora.
Peso (por kg) – Esta tasa se aplica a los productos por kg. La tarifa solo se aplicará a los productos cuyo precio sea por kg, no a los productos enumerados como artículos (por ejemplo, un producto enumerado como "1 manojo de perejil" no contribuirá a la tarifa general que se le cobra al cliente por el envío)
Porcentaje Fijo – Esta tarifa se cobra como un porcentaje del monto total gastado en el pedido.
Tasa Fija (por pedido) – Esta tarifa se aplica como tarifa estándar a todos los pedidos, independientemente del tamaño del pedido.
Tasa Flexible – Esta calculadora de tarifas es especialmente útil si desea alentar a los clientes a realizar pedidos grandes: el costo de envío puede reducirse o reducirse a cero cuando se alcanza un número mínimo de artículos.
"Costo del Primer Artículo": la tarifa que se cobra por el primer artículo del pedido.
"Costo de Artículo Adicional": la tarifa que se cobra por artículos más allá del primer artículo.
"Máximo de Artículos": el número máximo de artículos a los que se aplicará la tarifa. A los artículos comprados que superen esta cantidad no se les cobrará la tarifa.
Por ejemplo: si la tarifa de envío para el 'Costo del primer artículo' es $2000, 'Costo adicional del artículo' = $1000 y 'Max artículos' = 3. A un cliente que compre 5 artículos se le cobrarán $ 4000 de envío ($2000 por el primer artículo, $1000 por los artículos dos y tres y $0 por los artículos cuatro y cinco).
Tarifa Fija (por ítem) – Esta tarifa es una tarifa constante que se aplica a los productos enumerados como "artículos". (No se aplica a los productos vendidos por peso o volumen. Por lo tanto, no se cobrará ningún costo de envío asociado a un cliente que, por ejemplo, compra arroz por kg).
Precio Saco – Este es un método flexible tarifa de envío cobrado por la venta total en pesos, en lugar de número de artículos comprados (Tarifa Flexible arriba).
"Cantidad Mínima": valor Monetario del umbral entre la tarifa de envío normal y la tarifa de envío con Descuento.
'Importe Normal': tarifa de envío aplicada a las ventas por debajo del umbral indicado en 'Importe Mínimo'.
"Importe de Descuento": tarifa de envío que se aplica a las ventas por encima del umbral indicado en "Importe Mínimo".
Etiquetas: ingrese etiquetas aquí si desea diferenciar entre clientes. Las etiquetas pueden ser útiles si desea ofrecer envío gratuito a un subconjunto de clientes o solo ofrecer entrega a aquellos que tienen una dirección registrada cercana. Lee mas .
Para abrir su tienda en línea en Open Food Network y comenzar a vender, su organización debe estar registrada como Tienda Productor o Hub/Nodo Productor / No-Productor. Leer más sobre los diferentes perfiles de organización aquí y aquí.
Los próximos pasos esenciales para configurar son Envío y Métodos de Pago de su organización. En esta etapa también sugerimos crear las Comisiones de la Organización (un margen añadido al precio de cada producto cobrado por el productor proveedor para cubrir los costos de administración y distribución).
Los horarios de apertura y cierre de las tiendas en OFN, así como la opción de sub-seleccionar productos para diferentes fechas y horas de recolección, están controlados por el Ciclo de Pedidos.
Las tiendas en OFN son muy flexibles. Lea más si está interesado en:
Me gustaría que solo los miembros registrados pudieran realizar pedidos (Tienda Privada).
Me gustaría una pantalla 'ficticia' solo en el frente de la tienda solo en el frente de la tienda.
Often an enterprise may want to offer individual customers and wholesale retailers different prices (or even different products- such as bulk buys).
For some enterprises (such as community food groups) 'members' may be eligible to reduced rates in comparison to 'non members'.
'Tags and Tag rules' are the mechanism on the OFN platform whereby differential pricing and other benefits can be imparted to specific customer groups, if desired.
Enterprise fees are useful for producers and hubs who are working together: it allows costs associate with admin, packing, transport, sales and fundraising to be allocated to different parties.
For example a hub may choose to add an enterprise fee of 10% to all the products they sell, to cover their administration costs (storage of products prior to distribution, salaries of people who manage and coordinate sales...)
For producers selling their own products directly, these costs are already present in the price of the product, so applying Enterprise Fees may not seem necessary.
One of the many benefits to OFN customers is price transparency. Shoppers can see the percentage of an item's price assigned to admin, packing etc. This information is displayed by clicking on the pie chart next to the price of a product on the shop front:
Before you move on you might like to have a look at a quick demonstration of setting up your first enterprise fee:
Go to the Enterprise Fee page by clicking on Enterprises in the blue horizontal menu, and then click Settings next to your enterprise. The Enterprise Fee page is found in the menu on the left hand side.
Click Create one now (or Manage Enterprise Fees if you have already set one up and would like to edit it). You will be directed to a page like this:
Enterprise: In the first column, select the enterprise to which the fee applies.
Fee Type: Select the service that this fee applied to. The options are Packing Fee, Transport Fee, Admin Fee, Sales Fee or Fundraising Fee.
Name: Choose a name for this fee.
Tax Category: Select the appropriate tax rate. In most cases the VAT rate for the enterprise fee will be inherited from the product. If the enterprise fee is associated with a service added to the product the fee may be subject to VAT but the product itself not. In which case choose between 'Zero rated', 'Full Rate' and 'Reduced Rate' of VAT to applied to Enterprise fees.
Calculator: The fee can be calculated in a number of ways. Select the calculator which best applies.
Click Update, to create the enterprise fee.
You will only be able to specify rates or values (in the 'calculator values' column after the Enterprise Fee has been created.
Flat Percent – This fee is charged as a percentage of the total amount charged in the order.
Weight (per kg) – this fee is applied to products on a per kg basis. The fee will only be applied to products which are priced at a per kg rate, not products listed as items (e.g. A product listed as ‘1 bunch of parsley’ will not have an associated enterprise fee with this option.)
Flat Rate (per order) – This fee is applied as standard fee to all orders, regardless of the size of the order.
Flexible Rate – This fee calculator is especially useful if you'd like to encourage customers to place large orders: the enterprise can be reduced or zero when the threshold number of items has been reached.
‘First Item Cost’: The fee charged for the first item in the order.
‘Additional Item Cost’: The fee charged for items beyond the first item.
‘Max Items’: The maximum number of items on which the fee will be applied. Items purchased beyond this amount will be not be charged the fee.
For Example: if the 'First Item Cost' is set to £0.20, 'Additional Item Cost' is £0.10 and 'Max Items' is 3 then a customer who purchases 5 items will be charged £0.40 in enterprise fees (£0.20 for the first item, £0.10 for items two and three, and £0.00 for items four and five).
Flat Rate (per item): This fee is a constant fee, applied to products listed as ‘items’. (It is not applied to products sold by weight or volume. Hence there will be no associated enterprise fee charged to a customer who, for example, buys rice by kg.)
Price Sack: This is a flexible enterprise fee method charged by total monetary sale, rather than number of items purchased (Flexible Rate above)
‘Minimum Amount’: Monetary value of the threshold between Normal Enterprise fee and Discounted Enterprise fee.
'Normal Amount': Payment Method fee applied to sales below the threshold stated in 'Minimum Amount'.
‘Discount Amount’: Payment Method fee applied to sales above the threshold stated in 'Minimum Amount'.
A list of all customers who have placed an order with your enterprise can be viewed from the Customers menu in the admin dashboard.
You can also manually add a customer by the +New Customer button.
Only people who are in your customer list can be assigned a Tag and hence be assigned to a category. Hence if you have a private shop front you will have to manually add all new customers and assign them the correct tag before they can shop.
Each customer can have a default billing and shipping address. If a customer has a registered OFN account and has completed their details fully their addresses will be copied to this section automatically. Storing a default billing and shipping address can make online purchases quicker for the customer.
You can assign your customers to groups and then offer group-specific pricing and/or product listings.
On the OFN platform this is achieved by assigning all customers belonging to a common group (ie all your wholesale customers) the same tag. To add a tag, simply type its name in the 'Tags' column on the Customers page. A customer can have several tags and of course the same tag can be linked to several people.
Careful when you are adding the same tag to multiple customers (so that they belong to a common group) to select the identical word (tags are case sensitive) from the drop down menu on offer.
Tags also appear in reports. You can use them during csv / excel exports to quickly filter data.
Once customers have been grouped into categories with tags, you will be able to customise their shopping experience in the following ways:
Making particular variants visible/invisible
Making certain shipping methods visible/invisible
Making certain payment methods visible/invisible
Making order cycles visible/invisible
Most often this feature is required by enterprises who have different shop setups for members/non-members or different groups of customers such as wholesale/retail customers.
To access Tag Rules go to Enterprises -> Settings -> Tag Rules
By default, all items will be visible to all customers whether they are tagged or not. You can change the default display rules by selecting +add new default rule. Int the example below, by default, all Order Cycles which are tagged 'wholesale' will be invisible. (For this example, only those customers who are tagged with the label 'wholesalecustomer' can view (and hence purchase from) Order Cycles tagged 'wholesale'.)
Once you have defined default rules, you can then set up exceptions to these rules for specific customer groups.
First define the customer group to which the exception will occur. In the example above, the exception was applied to all customers with the tag 'wholesalecustomer'.
Then, for this customer group, you can choose to customise their shopping experience in one of four ways:
Remember to add the relevant tags to variants, shipping or payment methods, or order cycles, as well as to customers after you have set up a default or conditional tag rule!
We now look at each option, one-by-one:
This rule lets you make particular variants visible/invisible to tagged customers. For this rule to operate you need to have tagged the customer and the product variant in your inventory (not in the producer's product list) with the same tag.
In the example below the 1 kg variant of delux muesli has been tagged 'member'. It would thus be possible to set up tag rules such that by default only the smaller 500 g (non-tagged) variant of delux muesli appears on the shop front unless the customer belongs to a group of buyers all tagged 'member' (in which case they would be able to view the 1 kg option too).
In this example, the shipping method 'Collect in Person' has been assigned to customers with the tag 'member'. One could then set up the following:
a default tag rule: shipping methods tagged 'member' is invisible
a conditional tag rule: for customers tagged 'member' the shipping method tagged 'member' is visible
Thus, only members would be able to opt to collect their purchases in person.
This rule lets you make particular payment methods specifically available or unavailable to particular customers.
This tag rule might be useful if you only wish to offer members the option to pay by cash on collection (but make non-members pay upfront by card or PayPal), or if you would like to offer your wholesale customers only the option to pay by BACS.
In this example, the payment method 'Cash' has been assigned to customers with the tag 'member'. One could then set up the following:
a default tag rule: payment methods tagged 'member' is invisible
a conditional tag rule: for customers tagged 'member' the payment method tagged 'member' is visible
Thus, only members would be able to opt to pay for their purchases in cash on collection.
This rule lets you make certain order cycles visible only to certain customers.
This tag rule might be useful if you wish to open two order cycles concurrently with different enterprise fees associated to each. For example, one might be for wholesale customers- displaying bulk buy goods and lower enterprise fees, while another would be visible to the public and list products in smaller quantities but with a higher margin.
In this example, the above Order Cycle has been assigned to customers with the tag 'member'. One could then set up the following:
a default tag rule: order cycles tagged 'member' are invisible
a conditional tag rule: for customers tagged 'member' an order cycle tagged 'member' is visible
Thus, only members would be able to purchase goods from this order cycle.
Sometimes our users want to charge different prices for different customers, often based on their member vs non-member (or wholesale vs retail) status. Currently, there’s no way to automatically charge different prices for members vs non-members, but there are some round about ways of achieving the same thing.
You can use customer tagging, with tag rules to achieve this by:
Beyond the use of tags, some enterprises opt to set up two hubs: one for wholesale customers/members only (see Private Shop front) and one for everyone else.
This method offers the most flexibility: prices can be fine-tuned for customer groups on a case-by-case basis rather than a blanket percentage or fixed price difference.
Read on if you selected the Enterprise Profile ''.
Visit this , if you registered as a '' and want to set up an order cycle for your shop front.
You open you shop by creating an Order Cycle. When you make an order cycle you select when you shop is open (from and until), which products will go into the shop, and any fees that you'll apply.
Why Order Cycles? Some hubs may wish to have an online store which is perpetually open, and to fulfill orders on a one by one basis, as they are received. However, many hubs operate on a periodic ordering system, which allows them to process orders in bulk, making their production, packing and distribution activities more efficient (and reducing associated overhead costs).
For example, an order cycle might be open for two weeks. At the end of the fortnight, all orders will be packed and delivered at the same time on the following Wednesday. Once this batch of orders has been delivered, a new order cycle may reopen.
A quick demonstration of setting up a new order cycle:
Or from the horizontal menu at the top of the page.
Once the order cycle coordinator has been chosen, the process of setting up is divided into three steps:
Name (required): Give the order cycle a name which is meaningful to you. We recommend that you follow a consistent naming protocol e.g FoodHub_Week27_2014. We also recommend that you include the name of your hub in the order cycle name, so that OFN support can identify your order cycles if you need assistance.
Orders Open at: This is the date and time at when your OFN store will be open, visible and start to accept orders from customers.
Orders Close: This is the date (and time) when your OFN store will close and stop accepting orders. If you intend to have an order cycle which is continuously open, select a close date which is well into the future.
Products which are out of stock (ie their 'in stock' value is zero) are included in this list. If added to an order cycle they will not appear on our shop front. It is always good to double check stock levels.
The Receival Details field is optional. Information added to this field will automatically added to any email sent to producers at the end of an order cycle (after clicking 'Notify Producers'). It might be a good idea to include an exact delivery address for produce prior to distribution to customers here.
Select the name of the enterprise in the first dropdown box, then click the name of the enterprise fee in the second dropdown box. In the example below, an enterprise fee named OrderAdmin is applied to the Producer of Fruit.
Here you can select one or more hub-distributors. All hubs chosen to be a distributor in this order cycle will have an open shop front for the duration of the order cycle. In a simple model, only one hub is listed as the sole distributor for the order cycle. Select the hub, and check the box 'Select all' to add all incoming products to the shop front. For more flexibility, the same order cycle may have multiple hub distributors. In this case you may wish to select a different subset of the available incoming products for each distributor, and/or, add different delivery dates for each.
The ‘ready for (ie Date/Time)’ (required): This box tells the customer when their order will be ready for either collection or delivery. If your order cycle is a perpetual one, which fulfills orders on an individual basis rather then in bulk, you should enter something like ‘Two days after order is received’. The example below shows how an order cycle with a ready for date of 'Saturday 7th December’ is displayed on the shop front.
The note is also shown at check out, when the customer selects their shipping method (see below) and is included in the order confirmation email.
The Pick-Up Instructions message will be included in the customer’s order confirmation email, below the message that corresponds to their chosen shipping method (see below). This note is designed to only be visible to customers, so you can include more sensitive information like addresses, or phone numbers etc. See below for an example of the order confirmation email.
Add Fee: Again, a previously created enterprise fee can be assigned to this distributor. For simple models (with one hub distributor, who also is the coordinator of the order cycle) adding a fee at this stage is the same as adding a 'Coordinator Fee' (it will apply to all products). For complex models, the coordinator may wish to add different fees to all products sold though each distributor. The best place to implement this functionality is here.
Click Save to schedule the order cycle. If the opening date has already passed, your shop is instantly open! If you are not ready to open right away, enter dates in the future, which you can change later.
For periodic, repetitive order cycles, you can copy an existing order cycle and change the dates, to make the process quicker. See below.
Order cycles will display as green when they are active, yellow when scheduled for a future date, and grey when they have closed. When an order cycle close over one month ago, it will no longer display on this list. To view all of your past order cycles click ‘show more’ at the top of the list.
By using this button at the top of the page, all the producers linked to the order cycle will receive an email containing a list of the products ordered for that particular order cycle thus far. Delivery instructions (if this field is completed in the incoming products section) will be also sent in the email.
This rule lets you make particular shipping methods specifically available or unavailable to certain customers. For this rule to operate you need to have tagged the customer and the shipping method with the same tag. To tag a shipping method, go to edit and apply the relevant tag.
For this conditional tag rule to operate you first need to have tagged the customer and the payment method with the same tag. To apply a tag to a visit go to Enterprises-> Settings -> Payment methods and select edit.
For this rule to operate you need to have tagged the customer and the order cycle with the same tag. To tag an order cycle, see the Tags tab in the outgoing section of an order cycle (page 3 of the ).
Make certain available only to specific customer groups: for example 'bulk buys' at a reduced rate per weight available only to customers with a wholesale tag.
Run more than one concurrently with only members (or wholesale customers) able to view and purchase from the order cycle carrying a lower enterprise fee.
You could use to charge different prices to different customers. To ensure that only members select the reduced 'member rate' you would need to add a tag to this shipping method (else anyone could 'cheat' and select the lower cost shipping rate).
If you make a is cash on collection available to members only then you would add a mark up to all other payment methods, such that non-members are charged more for their goods.
By using the feature the two shops could offer the same products but you can set the pricing for each independently.
You can create an order cycle, and view previous order cycles by clicking on Manage Order Cycles on your .
You will not be able to publish a live order cycle until you have at least one and method set up for your enterprise.
The first step is to select a coordinator for your order cycle. Only the enterprise who coordinates an order cycle have permission to modify and manage all aspects of the sales cycle. Other enterprises involved in an order cycle (as suppliers or distributors only) will have restricted access. For more information on cross-enterprise management in the context of order cycles, .
Schedules: Leave blank unless using .
Add Coordinator Fee: As a hub, the coordinator is most likely you. Here you can apply your Enterprise Fee which acts as the markup. The fee will be calculated according to the calculator selected in . You can only apply an enterprise fee which has previously been created.
On this page you can select the producers, and their produce, which will be available in this order cycle. In the dropdown menu you will see all producers who have granted you permission to add their produce to your order cycle (See section). After selecting a supplier and clicking Add Supplier all of the products associated with that supplier will be visible. Check those products you wish to add to the store, or click select all.
The Add Fee button in this section, at the end of each producer's entry in the table, allows you to add different to different suppliers. For example, transporting flour or heavy goods to customers may be more expensive for a hub than salad. Hence, a hub can, in a transparent manner, add a slightly higher enterprise fee to all goods supplied by the flour miller than the salad farmer.
This fee will be applied to all of the Producer of Fruit’s products which are purchased. The fee is calculated according to the fee calculator which was selected when the was created.
The tags column is where you can tag your order cycles to customise whether they are visible/invisible to certain customers. See for more information.
Online stores can be opened and closed by creating 'order cycles' on the Open Food Network platform.
The OFN web address for your shop will only display your list of products for purchase when an order cycle is open.
The format of setting up an order cycle for a 'hub' (multi producer shop) differs slightly from that for a 'shop' (single producer shop).
It's possible to offer multiple order cycles simultaneously, for example to allow a purchase for delivery in 1, 2 or 3 weeks.
This page explains the varying rights each enterprise has in the context of complex multiple enterprise order cycles. Be it:
a hub which distributes goods only,
or a hub which coordinates the order cycle (and may or may not also supply or distribute goods).
For more details about simple order cycles involving a single producer selling their own stock only (producer shop), see here.
The coordinator has the highest degree of control over an order cycle. Other enterprises can view the order cycles they are involved in, but only edit settings which affect them.
Once an order cycle has been created it is not possible to change the coordinator.
The Coordinator of an Order Cycle can:
Create the order cycles
Set and edit the name of the order cycle as well as the opening and closing dates.
The coordinator can add enterprises as suppliers. However, to do this the supplying enterprise (registered as a Producer with OFN) must have granted the coordinating hub permission to add their products to an order cycle.
The coordinator can select all or a subset of products from their suppliers that they wish include in the order cycle.
The coordinator can apply differential enterprise fees to each supplier. For example, they may wish to charge a supplying butcher a higher rate (to cover the extra cost of refrigerated transport) than a baker.
The coordinator can choose which enterprises the products listed in an order cycle are distributed through (including themselves).
To do this each potential distributor must be:
Registered as a Hub.
Have granted the coordinating hub permission to add products to an order cycle.
If a potential distributing enterprise appears in the list of possible options in the outgoing section of the order cycle but can not be selected then it is probable that they haven't set up shipping and/or payment methods yet.
The coordinator can choose from the complete list of incoming products, which will be displayed on each distributing Hub's shopfront. The supplier (producer profile or shop) must have set up an enterprise permission of 'add to order cycle' between themselves and the specific distributing hub (as well as the coordinator).
The coordinator can apply differential enterprise fees to each distributing hub if desired. This might be advantageous if one hub is further away from the coordinator than another, and hence would have a higher transport overhead associated with it.
The supplier (producer) can view all the order cycles they’re involved with by visiting the order cycle summary page (from the top horizontal blue menu), even if they haven't created the order cycles themselves. By clicking on the order cycle an incoming producer can see their details only, not the products or details of others involved in the order cycle. They can edit items relating to themselves: for example they can remove a product which is out of stock from an order cycle. A supplying enterprise can not alter the name nor dates of an order cycle.
In the Reports section (top horizontal blue menu) an incoming supplying producer can view the orders they have received for the order cycle
An incoming supplying enterprise can not see the names of customers who bought their products if they are not also the order cycle coordinator. We hope in future updates of the platform to include this functionality.
A supplier can view, add and remove their products from the 'Incoming Products' section of an order cycle.
A supplier can add/remove enterprise fees which are applied to their products in the 'Incoming Products' section of the order cycle. This might be useful for producers who supply several hubs, some of which are much further away from them than others. They may wish to add an extra levy to more distant hubs to cove transport costs.
The degree of influence a supplier has over their products in the 'Outgoing Products' section of an order cycle depends on the specific enterprise permissions they granted the distributing hub and vice versa.
If the distributing hub granted the supplying producer (profile, shop or hub) the right to 'add to [the hub's] order cycle' then the supplier can view, add and remove products from the list in the 'Outgoing Products' section of the order cycle.
If the distributing hub did not grant the supplying producer (profile, shop or hub) the right to 'add to [the hub's] order cycle' then the supplier can view but NOT add and remove products from the list in the 'Outgoing Products' section of the order cycle.
A supplier is never able to change the pickup/delivery details, or the enterprise fees applied to the distributor.
A distributor can view Order Cycles they’re involved with in their Order Cycle summary page, even if they did not create them themselves (ie. they are not the order cycle coordinator). By clicking on an order cycle, the outgoing distributing enterprise can see the details of an order cycle which relate to them only. (For example, if they are not the sole distributor of the order cycle they will not be able to see who the other distributing enterprises are nor the products they will offer on their shop front.) The outgoing distributing hub can view and edit details of their distribution- delivery dates and methods, and enterprise fees for distribution- but no the name nor period of the order cycle itself.
In the 'Reports' menu, a order cycle distributor can view the orders which have been placed (along with customer names) to aid delivery/dispatch of goods.
A distributor can view the incoming products of supplier who have granted them the enterprise permission 'add to order cycle' but they can not edit stock levels/availability nor apply/remove producer specific enterprise fees.
At present, only the coordinator of an order cycle can add extra suppliers (producers) to it.
The degree of influence the distributing hub has over the products in the 'outgoing products' section of an order cycle, depends on the enterprise permissions between them and the supplying producer.
The distributing hub can add/remove products from its outgoing exchange. This only applies to product from producers who been added to the order cycle by the coordinator, and have granted the distributor the enterprise permission 'add to order cycle'.
Can change the pickup/delivery details
Can add/remove their enterprise fee
You must create at least one payment method before you can open your shop.
Before you read on, you might like to look at a quick demonstration of how to set up your first payment method:
Go to the Payment Methods page by clicking on Enterprises in the blue horizontal menu, and then click Settings next to your enterprise. The Payment Methods page is found in the menu on the left hand side.
Click Create new payment method + . You will be directed to a page like this:
Tick your enterprise, in the box on the right hand side of the page titled Hubs. This indicates which enterprise the payment method you are about to create will apply to. You can select more than one enterprise.
Name: Choose a name for this payment method. (eg 'Pay with credit card using Paypal'). This name is displayed at checkout and on customers' order confirmation emails.
Description: provide further details about the payment method. For example, for a bank transfer, you would enter the bank account details in this box into which you would like a customer to make the BACS payment. This description is displayed at checkout and in order confirmation emails.
Active: Select whether this payment method is currently visible and available, or not.
Tags: Use tag rules if you want to make certain payment methods available/unavailable for specific customers (for example you may wish to allow only wholesale customers to pay by BACS but 'force' domestic customers to pay by Credit Card or PayPal.). For more information read here.
Payment providers: Select the option which is relevant to the payment method you are creating. There are five options:
Cash / EFT / etc. (Cash, cheque or bank transfer. These payments do not go through an online payment portal and do not involve automatic validation)
MasterCard Internet Gateway Service (MIGS)
PayPal Express
Pin Payments (Australia only)
Stripe
Calculator: Select how you would like any charges associated with the payment method to apply to an order. Note that payment method fees can be set to zero. See below for more information about Payment Method Fees.
By clicking Create, the payment method will be created and you will have new fields to define payment method fees. These fields visible depend on which 'Calculator' you selected.
If you change the Payment Method fee 'Calculator' field you must first save your changes (Update) for the new associated fields to become visible.
For Paypal, MasterCard, Stripe and Pin Payments (Australia only) additional instructions are below.
To setup a PayPal payment method, you need a PayPal business or merchant account. You can create one here. Once you have that, you can set up ‘API access’ within PayPal, which will enable OFN to connect customers directly with your PayPal account.
Login to your PayPal Account
Under your account name on the top right there is a drop down menu with 'Account Settings'
3. Select 'Update' from API Access
4. Select 'Manage API credentials' from the custom checkout experience option.
From here you will be able to access your API username, password and signature.
In OFN, make sure you are logged in as your Enterprise User. Go to an Enterprise and create a Payment Method. Select PayPal and fill in the details from the PayPal site.
Server: Change the ‘server’ field to ‘live’ – this is case sensitive.
Login:Type the API Username.
Password:Type the API Password.
Signature:Type the API Signature in this field.
Solution: Solution determines whether or not a user needs a PayPal account to check out.
Type “Mark” if you do want users to have a paypal account, or “Sole” if they can checkout without a Paypal account (with credit card).
Landing Page: You can select which page to show customers once they’re redirected to PayPal.
Type “Login” to direct customer to the login form for PayPal (if you selected “Mark” above). Or type “Billing” to show show customers a form where they can enter their credit card data and possibly sign up for a PayPal account (if you selected “Sole” above).
MasterCard Internet Gateway Service (MIGS)
Set up of this service needs to be done through your bank. So far it has been tested with Bendigo Bank.
Stripe is an online payment platform similar to Paypal. It will allow you to accept credit card payments from your customers. Stripe is a global platform, but is only available on certain OFN instances. Contact your local OFN team to see whether it’s available on your OFN.
Stripe is simple to setup for shop owners and is reasonably priced. The fees charged by Stripe vary in each country; Australia, Canada, France, UK, USA.
Stripe is also easy for customers to use. Unlike Paypal, when the customer checks out, they don’t need to login with Paypal to place their order, rather they just need to enter their card details and then complete their order.
Stripe is the recommended payment method for shops who wish to use subscriptions on OFN, as Stripe allows customers to give permission to a shop to automatically bill their credit card for subscription orders. This isn’t offered by Paypal, Pin or MIGS payment platforms.
Connect with Stripe
Before you can setup a payment method that uses Stripe, you’ll need to Connect with Stripe. To do this, click on the ‘Connect with Stripe’ button.
You’ll be taken to a form to fill in your details. If you already have an account with Stripe, you can login, if not, fill in the form to create a Stripe account.
The information you’ll be asked for includes: country, a description of your business, your Business address and ABN, your personal details and your bank account (where received payments will be deposited).
Create a New Payment Method
Once you’ve connected with Stripe, you can then create a payment method which will work with your connected account.
Treat the Name, Description, Active and Tags fields as you would with any payment method.
Provider: Select Stripe.
Once you select Stripe, ‘Provider Settings’ will be shown.
Stripe Account Owner:
Select the enterprise that has a Stripe account connected.
If you select an enterprise that is not Connected to Stripe (see above) , you will get the error shown below. Either click ‘Connect One’ or return to your Payment Methods tab to Connect with Stripe. See instructions above.
When customers checkout in a shop and pay with a Stripe payment method, they’ll have the options of selecting a tickbox allowing their credit card details to be stored against their account (if they are logged in).
Customer can also save a credit card in their Account, or delete saved ones.
When the customer next shops with an OFN shop offering Stripe as a payment method, they’ll be able to select from their saved credit cards.
Viewing and redeeming your payments via Stripe
When a customer pays for their order with Stripe, the funds (minus Stripe's fees) will go to your stripe account. Depending on your setting in Stripe the funds will be automatically transferred to your chosen bank account periodically.
Taking further payment
If you need to take additional payment from a customer because they have further balance due, you can create an invoice in Stripe. The customer will get sent an email asking for them to pay with Credit/Debit card. This won't be communicated to OFN, so you'll need to mark the payment off manually.
For Pin Payments you only require your API key. You need to set up an account with Pin Payments first, and can get a discount by signing up as an OFN member (https://pinpayments.com/partners/openfoodnetwork/signup)
API Key:Enter your “Live Secret API Key’ here – you can find this in your PinPayments account (see below). First from your account, select API Keys. Then once you have generated an API key, copy the ‘Live Secret API Key’ and paste it into the API key field in OFN.
Server:Type ‘live’ – this is case sensitive.
You can attach a fee to payment methods. Most commonly this is used to pass on a payment portal's fees to the customer. For example, you may wish to charge the customer for the convenience of paying by PayPal to cover the fee charged by PayPal.
Payment Method Fees DO NOT include tax (VAT)
Flat Percent: This fee is charged as a percentage of the total amount charged in the order.
Flat Rate (per order): This fee is applied as standard fee to all orders, regardless of the size of the order.
Flexible Rate – This fee calculator is especially useful if you'd like to encourage customers to place large orders: the cost of payment can be reduced or zero when the threshold number of items has been reached.
‘First Item Cost’: The fee charged for the first item in the order.
‘Additional Item Cost’: The fee charged for items beyond the first item.
‘Max Items’: The maximum number of items on which the fee will be applied. Items purchased beyond this amount will be not be charged the fee.
For Example: if the 'First Item Cost' is set to £0.20, 'Additional Item Cost' is £0.10 and 'Max Items' is 3 then a customer who purchases 5 items will be charged £0.40 in payment fees (£0.20 for the first item, £0.10 for items two and three, and £0.00 for items four and five).
Flat Rate (per item): This fee is a constant fee, applied to products listed as ‘items’. (It is not applied to products sold by weight or volume. Hence there will be no associated payment method fee charged to a customer who, for example, buys rice by kg.)
Price Sack: This is a flexible payment fee method charged by total monetary sale, rather than number of items purchased (Flexible Rate above)
‘Minimum Amount’: Monetary value of the threshold between Normal Payment Method fee and Discounted Payment Method fee.
'Normal Amount': Payment Method fee applied to sales below the threshold stated in 'Minimum Amount'.
‘Discount Amount’: Payment Method fee applied to sales above the threshold stated in 'Minimum Amount'.
Payment portals often charge businesses a fixed amount per transaction plus a small % of the total cost. Thus fees encountered by a Hub or Shop for customers who purchase the same total amount in multiple small sales will be higher than if the customer did all their shopping at once.
The Flexible Rate and Price Sack calculators, applied to payment method fees, may prove useful to counter balance this.
Issuing and managing refunds depends on how a customer originally paid for their order. More details are found here.
It is possible to have more than one order cycle open at the same time. This has the effect of creating two (or more) open shopfronts, which the customer can choose between from the one website address (URL). This feature is helpful when you want to have different ‘conditions’ in the two shopfronts such as different products (wholesale or retail), different enterprise fees (such a non-member mark-ups) or different order cycle opening and closing dates (for different deliver runs).
When the customer first lands on your shopfront page they will be requested to choose an order cycle before products are visible:
When the customer selects an order cycle, the shopfront will load with the specific products, fees and opening and closing dates of that order cycle.
Tags can also be used to make order cycles visible or invisible to specific customers. For example, if you tag your wholesale customers as 'pro', then you can make an order cycle with wholesale pricing visible only to 'pro'.
You can choose whether you want your order cycles to be listed in the dropdown menu by closing date (closing soonest first) or by opening date (opened earliest first).
This is setup in your enterprise settings -> Shop Preferences -> Sort Order Cycles On Shopfront By
Customers can navigate between order cycles:
If you don’t want your shopfront to be visible to the public (ie. you would like to host a shop front from which only members can place orders), there are two ways that you can make your shop more private:
make you shop 'Invisible' and only share the shop website address (URL) with your desired customer base
make your shop 'private' and only visible to registered customers.
In your , under Primary Details, you can set your profile to 'invisible'.
When the Visible in Search? option is set to 'not visible' your OFN enterprise will be hidden in both all searches within the platform and in external web the search engines. Your enterprise will not appear in the "shops" menu nor on the OFN map page.
The benefit of this method for making your OFN shop front invisible is that you can invite (by email, perhaps), customers by sending them the direct link to the store. It is also a simple and effective way to manage your enterprise.
However, access to the store is not restricted: anyone who knows the website address of your shop (URL) will be able to visit the shop and place an order.
Hence, if someone on your mailing list forwards an email from you to a friend, the friend can place an order without being a registered customer. You will need to manually double check that all orders came from registered customers, posteroiri.
A stricter, but potentially more time consuming approach, is to let your OFN enterprise remain visible in the enterprise settings above but change the Publicly Visible Shopfront option (under Enterprises-> Settings-> Shop Preferences) to Visible to Registered Customers Only.
Whilst your enterprise will be visible in a search of the OFN platform, your customers would need to log into their OFN account in order to view your shop front and the products on offer. Other registered OFN shoppers, who are not on your customer list, will not be able to see your shop front once logged into their OFN accounts.
You can also delete customers who you no longer want to be able to see your shop or place an order.
When visitors to your shop arrive at the shop, if they're not logged in yet, they'll see the message below.
From here there's 2 pathways:
a) If the customer logs in, or signs up with an email address that is on the shop's customer list, they'll be taken to the shopfront as usual.
b) If the customer logs in or signs up with an email that is not on the shop's customer list they'll see the message below. They can then contact the shop to request access.
In some cases, shop owners may want to be able to display products in their shop but not actually allow customers to checkout. For example to show their full product range (which may vary seasonally), or to give potential customers an idea of the products which will be on offer in the next order cycle, before it opens.
To setup a display only order cycle:
Open an as usual, with the products you wish to display and date range for the order cycle to remain open.
Deactivate all your - this can be done from Enterprises -> Settings -> Payment Methods and then un-checking all options:
Your shop will now be in the ‘display only’ state. Below is an example of how the shop appears to customers. It’s clearly marked as closed, but customers can see the product range. If they do try to add items to cart or checkout, they’ll be stopped.
When you next open a live order cycle from which you wish to sell produce, you will need to reactivate at least one payment method.
In order to create the order cycle for your 'display only' shop front you will need to have at least one Payment Method active else the order cycle will not work. It is only after it has been set up that you must deactivate the Payment methods in order to create a display only shop front.
You'll need to maintain your list and manually add all new customers, before they can place their first order.