Reading the tea leaves of eCommerce is virtually impossible.
But that’s exactly what we’ve asked 6 top experts in the eCommerce space to do.
In our Future of eCommerce series, our CEO, Bob Giovannini, along with Kuba Zwolinski, Aaron Sheehan, Damien Retzinger, Isaiah Bollinger, and Curtis Schrum, shared their perspectives on the exciting up-and-coming developments and potentially significant shakeups poised to transform the eCommerce landscape.
In this post, we’ll share:
Each interviewee covered a lot of ground with IronPlane’s Director of Engagement, Tim Bucciarelli, but six main topics kept cropping up in their interviews. Let’s explore each in a bit more detail.
Word cloud created from the 6 expert interviews
Multiple interviewees talked about how they think the term “eCommerce” will become an outdated term as companies see a demand for increased unification across all their channels. There are already indicators of this trend with buy now, pick up in-store models, local delivery, and in-store kiosks.
Photo by rupixen.com on Unsplash
As Kuba Zwolinski puts it, “There should be a unified shopping experience wherever people are shopping – if it’s online, offline, on-the-go. We don’t know what the next big technology innovation will be in three or four years, but I think it’s all about experiences, and everything else is just a tool to get there.”
One of the most resounding takeaways from these interviews was that consolidation in eCommerce technology is unavoidable.
Damien Retzinger said it best, “Historically, there’ve been a lot of different players. But these days, the ecosystems have stratified: some serve small markets, some serve mid-market, and others serve enterprise.
I would assume there would be some sort of consolidation of a lot of companies…Just like we have Apple, Microsoft, and Linux for operating systems, we’ll see the same kind of thing for eCommerce platforms. There is too much complexity to have so many different ones, and over time, we’ll end up with an oligopoly.”
There were various opinions shared about headless and composable eCommerce solutions, but two elements came out consistently:
Some interviewees were worried that some enterprises may move in the headless direction too quickly.
Isaiah Bollinger says, “Sometimes large companies are not mature in eCommerce, so it’s actually a bad idea for them to headless…I do think headless will make a big difference in eCommerce, but some people have gone headless where maybe they shouldn’t have and gone back because they couldn’t handle it.”
Kuba Zwolinski adds that composable architectures can be very difficult to maintain, “It needs very, very high skills in creating the architecture first, and it takes skills to maintain everything. In theory, [composable] looks great, like ‘We take just different pieces, collect them together, and it just works.’
Unfortunately, it doesn’t work that way. Different technologies are still different technologies, and even if they are using common interfaces, there’s a lot of work synchronizing everything.”
Composable architecture solutions require greater integration standardization to become more approachable in terms of cost and effort of implementation. That said, most interviewers were bullish on the concepts of headless and composable in general.
Bob Giovannini says, “In the world of complex integrations and multi-channel, headless is probably a really good solution because it gives you massive flexibility and separates your backend from your frontend. You're not coupled and tied, and so the whole idea of scalability and flexibility over a three to ten-year period would seem to be stronger in that scenario.”
Others mentioned that headless and composable architectures could potentially alleviate tech debt and streamline the process of making adjustments to a site.
As Aaron Sheehan says, “You can use the best possible systems for each function in your business…and nest them all together to provide an amazing customer experience. And that experience is decoupled enough to where I can take one Jenga block out of the tower, put a better one in, and the whole Jenga tower doesn’t come down.”
Each big eCommerce platform player is going through a particularly interesting transformation.
Shopify
Shopify is dominant in the B2C SMB market and are trying to go up-market with Shopify Plus and their recent efforts to accommodate more B2B functionality launched their B2B suite in June 2022. Overall, it seems like Shopify will continue to build more of its own functionality into its eCommerce framework and will rule the roost of a single platform for most needs.
Photo by Roberto Cortese on Unsplash
However, the core eCommerce functionality they provide is not the primary driver of their revenue. Aaron Sheehan thinks of them almost like a fintech company: “Shopify and everything else they build or buy is really a facilitation engine to get credit cards running through those rails. Because that’s where they make the money. ”
Look for similar value-added Shopify services that take a cut of merchant profits in 2023.
Adobe Commerce & Magento Open Source
Each of our interviewers felt that Magento Open Source and Adobe Commerce remain solid options for mid-sized to enterprise companies that need greater customizability for their design, integration, or custom functionality.
Interviewees also agreed Adobe’s priority is moving merchants to their cloud offerings by communicating the value integrating their Adobe Commerce Cloud platform with other cloud offerings like Adobe Experience Cloud and Adobe Sensei.
While Adobe has professed the value of the Magento community, the long-term future of Magento Open Source was viewed unanimously as unclear. The open source community has been the engine of Magento innovation for many years and have recently struggled to reach the desired pace of development with Adobe’s more limited community support.
Damien Retzinger says, “It takes one and a half years on average for me to fix a bug in Magento, give it to Adobe, and have it show up in the merchant’s codebase. So that makes a developer annoyed.”
Mage-OS is a recent fork of the Magento Open Source platform that may provide merchants with another open source alternative in the near future.
BigCommerce
BigCommerce is emerging as the ideal middle-ground between Shopify's all-in-one solution and Magento's full custom alternative. With a more open architecture and faster API throughput than Shopify, and with a more intuitive, template-driven design, this SaaS eCommerce platform has made great strides into the mid to enterprise level of businesses. They recently launched their B2B edition, which offers extensive B2B functionality, and they are pushing their commerce engine as a strong contender in the headless architecture space.
Curtis Schrum says, “BigCommerce is bigger than people think it is. They’re having a market year compared to other platforms on the list. And really, two words sum up why: Open SaaS…[BigCommerce] doesn’t want to make decisions for clients, they want clients to make decisions for themselves and give them the toolbox.”
BigCommerce is also well-positioned to be useful in the composable space. Aaron Sheehan says, “[BigCommerce] has more headless builds than any other platform.”
Just as Europe has led the way in privacy (GDPR) and accessibility (WCAG) efforts, they continue to lead the way with headless and composable. Some of our guests theorized that this is because many more merchants in Europe have developers on staff who can learn about and adopt new technologies quicker than merchants in other markets who don’t have technical experts on staff.
Photo by S O C I A L . C U T on Unsplash
Many headless and composable vendors are headquartered in Europe (Vue Storefront, Storyblok, Front Commerce, CommerceTools to name a few), as is the MACH Alliance, a group that “represents and advocates for an open and best-of-breed enterprise technology ecosystem.”
MACH stands for Microservices-based, API-first, Cloud-native SaaS, and Headless. Many headless and composable vendors are a part of this Alliance and are working to help "future-proof” enterprise technology and enable companies to take advantage of the most innovative and flexible enterprise technologies available.
Several of our Future of eCommerce guests mentioned some technologies and trends that will uniquely shape the customer experience moving forward, including:
While we can’t know if all these predictions will come true, our main takeaway for merchants is that hundreds of excellent eCommerce platforms are available today.
Many of them will meet your needs, but some won’t. Take time to analyze each platform and select the one that makes the most sense for your business. Calculating the total cost of ownership is a good first step. Don’t forget to include costs associated with customizations, hosting, accessibility, privacy, and design.
But choosing an eCommerce platform is only the first step. There are also hundreds of ancillary applications that can take your online store to the next level.
Consider working with an agency partner to ensure that your eCommerce platform is part of a reliable and scalable tech stack. This guidance is a must-have before and during consolidation — experts can help you navigate the waters as some businesses get absorbed or go away altogether.
Agencies can also help you determine whether composable commerce is right for your business. Currently, it’s best applied to a limited set of use cases for companies with a substantial resource commitment to eCommerce.
While leaning into new trends can be tempting, it’s unclear what the impact might be. For now, it’s safe to say that a solid eCommerce platform and tech stack will help merchants ride out the potentially choppy waves ahead.
Struggling to make sense of the eCommerce landscape? Reach out to the experts at IronPlane, we’re happy and eager to chat.
In the meantime, check out our Future of eCommerce series on our YouTube channel or follow along on LinkedIn.