OWNER PRODUCT SETUP
Welcome to your Product Catalog Journey
STEP 1 OF 10
Welcome to your Product Catalog Journey
Every successful business starts with a well-organized product catalog. Whether you sell food, beverages, retail products, services, digital products, memberships, or packages, this guided journey will help you prepare everything your customers can browse and purchase.
π¦ Professor Owl Says...
Think of your Product Catalog as the shelves inside your business. Before customers can place an order, they first need something to see, compare, and choose. Don't worry if you're starting from scratch. We'll build everything together, one simple step at a time.
π Organize
Create categories and subcategories that make browsing simple.
π Build
Add products, services, bundles, packages, and digital offerings.
π° Price
Configure global-ready pricing, taxes, discounts, and promotions.
π Launch
Publish your catalog to your Live Store and Business OS.
STEP 2 OF 10
Create your product categories
Categories help customers quickly understand what your business offers. They also organize your Live Store, checkout, inventory, reports, and future marketplace listings.
π¦ Professor Owl Says...
Think of categories as the main aisles of your business. A restaurant might use Pizza, Drinks, and Desserts. A salon might use Hair Services, Nail Services, and Packages.
STEP 3 OF 10
Organize your subcategories
Subcategories help customers browse your catalog more easily. They are optional, but recommended if you have many products.
π¦ Professor Owl Says...
Think of subcategories as shelves inside each aisle. For example: Pizza β Classic Pizza, Premium Pizza, Family Pizza Drinks β Coffee, Tea, Milk Tea, Soft Drinks
STEP 4 OF 10
Add your products
Products are what customers browse, compare, customize, and purchase. This step supports food, beverages, retail items, services, digital products, memberships, bundles, and future BuildFrame business models.
π¦ Professor Owl Says...
Every great business starts with great products. Give each product a clear name, helpful description, proper pricing, and organize it well so customers can quickly decide what to buy.
STEP 5 OF 10
Add product variations
Variations let customers choose options such as size, flavor, color, material, duration, package level, or service type.
π¦ Professor Owl Says...
Variations change the product itself. Examples: Small, Medium, Large, Hot, Iced, Blended, Red, Blue, 30 minutes, or 60 minutes.
STEP 6 OF 10
Create product add-ons
Add-ons are optional extras customers can purchase together with a product. They help increase order value while giving customers more choices.
π¦ Professor Owl Says...
Variations change the product. Add-ons are extras. Example: Extra cheese, drinks, fries, gift wrapping, warranty, premium support, or accessories.
STEP 7 OF 10
Create product collections
Collections help you promote groups of products such as Best Sellers, New Arrivals, Bundles, Seasonal Offers, or Featured Services.
π¦ Professor Owl Says...
Collections are like display tables in your store. Use them to highlight what you want customers to notice first.
STEP 8 OF 10
Set inventory rules
Inventory helps your business avoid selling unavailable items and prepares your catalog for orders, reports, purchasing, and stock control.
π¦ Professor Owl Says...
Some products need stock tracking. Others are made to order or always available. Choose the setup that matches how your business works.
STEP 9 OF 10
Set product pricing
Configure selling price, sale price, compare-at price, cost, tax setting, and profit-ready pricing for your product catalog.
π¦ Professor Owl Says...
Good pricing is clear for customers and healthy for your business. Always consider cost, profit, taxes, and discounts before publishing.
STEP 10 OF 10
Product Catalog Ready
Review your catalog setup, preview your Live Store, then continue building the rest of your Business OS.
π¦ Professor Owl Says...
Congratulations. Your catalog is becoming the engine that powers your Live Store, checkout, orders, inventory, reports, and customer experience.
β Categories
Catalog structure prepared.
β Products
Items, services, or packages added.
β Pricing
Prices ready for checkout.
β Store Preview
Ready to view customer experience.