Create a simple product

⏱ 2-minute answer below · full page ≈ 10 min · skim the bold lead-ins to move faster.
In short. A simple product is one SKU, one price, one image — no size or color picker. Go to Store Management → Products → Add New, fill Title + price + stock, attach an image, write the SEO fields, pick Publish or Draft, and click Create Product. The whole flow takes about 5 minutes. If your product needs a size or color picker, use Create a variable product instead.

On this page: Steps — fill the product · Steps — pricing · Steps — inventory · Steps — images · Steps — SEO · Field reference · Troubleshooting


Overview

The Add New Product screen is your catalog entry point — reach for it every time you have something new to sell. For products with no variant picker (no size, no color), this is the complete setup flow.

When you click Create Product, the product is written to your store. Choose Publish and it is immediately visible on /products. Choose Draft to polish it before going live.

Scope

Covered: title, slug, description, pricing (regular + sale), inventory (SKU + stock), shipping fields, images, categories, SEO card, and publish status. Not covered: variable products with size/color pickers, downloadable file delivery, or bulk catalog imports.

Preview: Create simple product form overview — a screenshot of this screen will be added here.

Status and catalog view

The Status dropdown decides whether your product goes live on /products the moment you save, or sits quietly in Draft. Here is what the status tabs on the Products list look like after you have seeded a handful of products:

Examples

Example 1: A physical product (Tote Bag). Fill Title (Canvas Tote Bag), Description, Regular price 30.00. Open the Inventory tab for SKU and stock. Attach the photo, pick Apparel, set Sort to 1, click Create Product. The product lands at /product/canvas-tote-bag and the catalog archive at /products. The URL comes straight from the Slug field — here is what a seeded catalog looks like on the public site:

Other common simple-product patterns in brief: a digital download — tick Virtual on the General tab and omit shipping fields; a sale item — fill Sale price below Regular price and a "Sale!" badge appears automatically on the public listing.

Example 2: Saving to Draft first. You have a new product but the photo shoot is next week. Fill everything you know now, set Status to Draft, click Create Product. The product is saved and editable but not visible on /products. Flip Status to Publish when you're ready — either from Quick Edit on the Products list or from the edit page. After saving in Draft you'll see the confirmation below, and the Draft count on your Products list ticks up by one.

After clicking Create Product with Publish, the new row appears in the admin list alongside the rest of your catalog — SKU, price, stock count, category, and Sort all visible at a glance:

And on the public side, the product page shows the image, price, description, and Add to Cart — the same shape every published product gets:

Fields

Quick reference for every field on the Add New Product form. All fields are optional unless marked required.

FieldTab / LocationRequiredWhat to enter
TitleMain panelYesThe product name shown on the public page, cart, receipts, and emails.
SlugMain panelAutoURL path — auto-filled from Title; edit before first publish only.
DescriptionMain panelNoRich-text pitch — what it is, who it's for, why it's worth buying.
Product typeProduct data headerYesLeave on Simple for this guide. Switch to Variable for size/color variants.
VirtualProduct data headerNoTick for non-shipping items (PDFs, services, digital goods).
DownloadableProduct data headerNoTick if the product delivers a file to the customer after purchase.
Regular priceGeneral tabYesStandard price. Two decimals. Example: 30.00.
Sale priceGeneral tabNoDiscounted price. Must be strictly less than Regular price.
SKUInventory tabNoYour internal product code. Recommended pattern: BRAND-TYPE-DETAIL.
Manage stock?Inventory tabNoOn = tracked count; Off = always available.
Stock quantityInventory tabIf manage stock onCurrent inventory count. Decrements per order.
Allow backordersInventory tabNoWhat happens when stock hits 0. Default: Do not allow.
Sold individuallyInventory tabNoLimits each customer to one unit per order.
WeightShipping tabNoProduct weight in your store's configured unit (kg or lb).
DimensionsShipping tabNoLength × Width × Height. Used for shipping rate calculation.
Shipping classShipping tabNoGroups products with similar shipping rates.
ThumbnailSidebarNoMain product image — hero on the public page and store listing card.
CategoriesSidebarNoWhich category archive pages the product appears on.
Sort orderSidebarNoDisplay order on /products. 1 = first. 0 = creation-date order.
Page TitleSEO cardNoSearch-result headline. Keep under 60 characters.
Meta DescriptionSEO cardNoSearch-result summary. Keep under 160 characters.
Featured ALTSEO cardNoAlt text for your thumbnail. Describe the image, not the product.
StatusStatus cardYesPublish = live on /products. Draft = hidden until you're ready.

What NOT to use this for

  • Do not use this flow for products with size or color pickers. Those are variable products — they get their own create flow with attributes and a variant matrix. See Create a variable product.
  • Do not treat Description as a specifications page. The Description is the narrative pitch — what the product is and why someone would want it. For spec tables (weight, dimensions, materials), use the Advanced tab's Purchase Note field, or add a content block in the rich-text editor.
  • Do not leave SEO blank on a flagship product. The Page Title and Meta Description you write here are what Google shows in search results. A blank SEO Title falls back to the product name only — which is rarely enough to win a search click.
  • Do not set Sort order to 0. Sort order 1 is highest priority; 0 is treated as "no priority set" and the product slots in by creation date. Use 15 for hero products, higher numbers for long-tail SKUs.
  • Do not use this form for bulk catalog updates. This form writes one product at a time. For a 50-row price refresh, edit each row through the Products list's Quick Edit instead, or reach for an import flow when one is wired up for your store.

How this connects to other features

  • Products list — after you click Create Product, you're redirected to the new product's edit page. Going back to Products → All Products shows the newly created row in the list.
  • Categories — the Categories dropdown in the sidebar pulls from Products → Categories. If you type a new category name that doesn't exist, you can create it on the fly from this screen.
  • Media Library — the Thumbnail picker opens your Media Library modal. Images you've already uploaded show up to pick from; you can also upload fresh images from here without leaving the form.
  • Ecommerce → Configuration — the currency symbol on the Price fields, weight units on the Shipping tab, and default tax behavior all come from your store configuration. Set those before you seed your catalog.
  • SEO → SEO Manager — the SEO card on this form flows into the site-wide SEO Manager. After you save the product, you'll see its SEO values in the SEO Manager grid alongside your pages and blog posts.
  • Quick Edit on the Products list — once a product is saved, the Products list row exposes a Quick Edit panel for fast title / slug / status / sort changes without re-opening this full form. Reach for it when only a metadata field needs a tweak.

Before you start

  • You are signed in to SGEN as an admin.
  • You've set your store currency under Ecommerce → Configuration.
  • You've created at least one category under Products → Categories (or you'll create one on the fly during this flow).
  • You've uploaded your product image to the Media Library (or you'll upload during this flow).
  • You have your product's title, description, price, and SKU ready to type in.

Where to go

  1. Open the left navigation.
  2. Click Store Management → Products → Add New (or from the Products list, click + Add New in the top right).
  3. The Add New Product form loads.

Steps — Fill the product

1. Write the title and slug

Creating a simple product in the SGEN admin

The Title field is the name your product has on the cart, on the public product page, in order receipts, and in every email your site sends about that product. Write what a customer would recognize; avoid cryptic SKUs.

The Slug field is the URL path — whatever you set here becomes part of the public URL /product/. It auto-fills from your Title but you can overwrite it. Use lowercase letters, numbers, and hyphens. Don't change the slug after visitors have bookmarked the page — you'll break those bookmarks.

2. Write the description

The Description field is the rich-text pitch on the product's public page. One or two paragraphs about what the product is, who it's for, and what makes it worth buying. Use the formatting toolbar to bold key phrases, add bullet lists for specs, or add section headings for longer descriptions.

3. Pick the product type

Below the Description you'll see the Product data panel with a type selector in its header. Leave it on Simple for this guide. If your product has variants (different sizes, different colors), stop here and read Create a variable product instead.

Next to the Simple / Variable selector are two checkboxes:

  • Virtual — tick for anything that doesn't ship (downloadable PDFs, digital products, services). Virtual products skip shipping calculations at checkout.
  • Downloadable — tick if the product gives the customer a file to download after purchase. The delivery flow for downloadable files is managed separately by your store operator — the checkbox itself doesn't prompt for a file here.

Steps — General tab (pricing)

4. Set the regular price

The Regular price ($) field is the standard price — what customers pay when nothing else is going on. Type a number with up to two decimals — the field accepts values like 30.00, 12.50, 100.

5. Optionally set a sale price

The Sale price ($) field is the discounted price — leave it blank for a product not on sale. If you fill it, it must be less than the regular price; the form will reject equal-or-higher sale prices.

When Sale price is set, the public product page shows the regular price struck through alongside the sale price in brand color, and a "Sale!" badge appears on the store listing and product cards.

Steps — Inventory tab

Click Inventory in the Product data tab row to open the stock controls.

6. Write the SKU

The SKU field is your internal product code — warehouse reference, supplier code, whatever you use. It's optional for a one-off product but worth filling for any item you'll need to track across systems. A good pattern is --, for example STR-TOTE-NAT (your store, tote, natural).

7. Decide whether to manage stock

The Manage stock? checkbox controls whether this product has a tracked inventory count:

  • Off — the product is always available. No "in stock" label on the public page; customers can always order. Use this for made-to-order items, services, and digital products with unlimited supply.
  • On — a Stock quantity field appears. Type your current inventory. When a customer orders, the count decrements. When it hits zero, the product shows "Out of stock" on the public page and the Add to Cart button disables.

8. Set Sold individually (optional)

The Sold individually checkbox limits each customer to buying exactly one of this product per order. Useful for limited editions, signed copies, giveaways, and ticketed items.

Here is what the Inventory tab looks like filled in for a physical product with tracked stock — SKU set, Manage stock on, quantity entered, and Sold individually off so customers can order as many as they like:

Steps — Images

The right-hand sidebar has a Thumbnail card with a Choose Image button.

9. Attach the main product image

Click Choose Image. Your Media Library opens as a modal. Pick an existing image or drag a new one into the upload area.

The thumbnail is the hero image on the product's public page and the cover on the store listing. Use a high-quality image at roughly 1–2x the size it will render (so it stays sharp on high-DPI screens). A square image (400x400 or 800x800) works well because the public product card is usually square.

Steps — Categories

The sidebar has a Categories card with a type-to-search selector.

10. Pick one or more categories

Click the selector and pick your category. You can pick multiple. If the category you want doesn't exist, type its name and you can create it on the fly without leaving this screen. Categories determine which category archive page your product appears on (for example /product_category/apparel).

Steps — SEO card

Scroll down. Below the Product data panel is the SEO card.

11. Write the Page Title

The Page Title is what Google shows as the bold headline in search results, and what the browser tab shows. A good Page Title includes the product name plus a short qualifier — Canvas Tote Bag — Your Store. Keep it under about 60 characters.

12. Write the Meta Description

The Meta Description is the one-sentence summary under the title in search results. Write one natural sentence describing the product; include a reason to click. Keep it under about 160 characters.

13. Write the Featured Image ALT text

The Featured ALT field is the alt text for your thumbnail. Screen readers read it aloud; search engines use it to understand your image. Describe the image, not the product — "natural canvas tote bag with reinforced straps and an inside pocket" is a good alt text.

Save the product

The sidebar Status card has a dropdown.

14. Pick Publish or Draft

  • Publish — the product is live on /products as soon as you save.
  • Draft — the product is saved but hidden from the public store. Flip to Publish when you're ready.

15. Click Create Product

The Create Product button sits in the sticky sidebar. Click it. The form submits; the page redirects to the new product's edit page where you can keep tweaking. A success message confirms the product was created.

What success looks like

  • After clicking Create Product, you land on the new product's edit page. The header changes from "Create a new product" to "Update a product" and a Permalink link appears under the title.
  • A system note appears in the right sidebar's Logs panel reading "Product has been updated!" with the author and timestamp.
  • Going back to the Products list shows the new row with its title, price, category, and Sort badge.
  • If you picked Publish, opening /product/ in a new tab shows the public page with your image, title, description, and Add to Cart button.
  • The store-archive page at /products shows the new product card in the position your Sort number put it (Sort 1 = first, Sort 5 = fifth, and so on).
  • The category archive at /product_category/ shows the new product card alongside every other product you've assigned to the same category.

What to do if it does not work

  • The Create Product button saves but I land on a form with red errors. One of the required fields is missing or out of range — read the red message. Title must be 2–350 characters. Description must be at least 3 characters. Price is required for a simple product.
  • My Sale price is rejected. Sale price must be strictly less than Regular price. If your sale is the same price as regular (clearance at list price), leave Sale blank.
  • The product saved but isn't on /products. Check Status — Draft products don't appear on the public store. Flip Status to Publish on the edit page and save again.
  • The image I attached isn't showing on the public page. Hard-refresh (Ctrl+Shift+R on Windows, Cmd+Shift+R on Mac). If the image is still missing, go back to the edit page, click Thumbnail Choose Image, confirm an image is selected, click Update Product.
  • The price displays rounded up. If a product you saved at $29.99 shows as $30.00 on the public product page or the cart, contact support — this is being addressed.
  • Stock count is one less than I entered. If you entered Stock Quantity 100 and the edit page shows 99, contact support — this is being addressed. You can increment the count manually to correct it.
  • I checked Virtual or Downloadable but the behavior isn't what I expect. Downloadable product delivery is managed separately. Contact your store operator if digital file delivery needs configuration.
  • The category I want is not in the dropdown. Type the new category name into the Categories selector — pressing Enter creates it on the fly. The new category appears in Products → Categories for editing later.

Next step