Skip to Content
Shopify logo
  • By business model
    • B2C for enterprise
    • B2B for enterprise
    • Retail for enterprise
    By ways to build
    • Platform overview
    • Modular commerce
    • Shop Component
    By outcome
    • Growth solutions
    • Shopify
      Platform for entrepreneurs & SMBs
    • Plus
      A commerce solution for growing digital brands
    • Enterprise
      Solutions for the world’s largest brands
  • Customer Stories
    • Everlane
      Shop Pay speeds up checkout and boosts conversions
    • Brooklinen
      Scales their wholesale business
    • ButcherBox
      Goes Headless
    • Arhaus
      Journey from a complex custom build to Shopify
    • Ruggable
      Customizes Headless ecommerce to scale with Shopify
    • Carrier
      Launches ecommerce sites 90% faster at 10% of the cost on Shopify
    • Dollar Shave Club
      Migrates from a homegrown platform and cuts tech spend by 40%
    • Lull
      25% Savings Story
    • Allbirds
      Omnichannel conversion soars
    • Shopify
      Platform for entrepreneurs & SMBs
    • Plus
      A commerce solution for growing digital brands
    • Enterprise
      Solutions for the world’s largest brands
  • Why trust us
    • Leader in the 2024 Forrester Wave™: Commerce Solutions for B2B
    • 2024 Gartner Magic Quadrant for Digital Commerce
    • Leader in the 2024 IDC B2C Commerce MarketScape vendor evaluation
    What we care about
    • Shop Component Guide
    • Shopify TCO Calculator
    • Principals of a Modern Commerce OS
    • Mastering Global Trade: How Integrated Technology Drives Cross-Border Success
    How we support you
    • Premium Support
    • Help Documentation
    • Professional Services
    • Technology Partners
    • Partner Solutions
    • Shopify
      Platform for entrepreneurs & SMBs
    • Plus
      A commerce solution for growing digital brands
    • Enterprise
      Solutions for the world’s largest brands
  • Latest Innovations
    • Editions - June 2024
    Tools & Integrations
    • Integrations
    • Hydrogen
    Support & Resources
    • Shopify Developers
    • Documentation
    • Help Center
    • Changelog
    • Shopify
      Platform for entrepreneurs & SMBs
    • Plus
      A commerce solution for growing digital brands
    • Enterprise
      Solutions for the world’s largest brands
  • Get in touch
  • Get in touch
Shopify logo
  • Blog
  • Enterprise ecommerce
  • Total cost of ownership (TCO)
  • Migrations
  • B2B Ecommerce
    • Headless commerce
    • Announcements
    • Unified Commerce
    • See All topics
Search
Type something you're looking for
Log in
Get in touch

Powering commerce at scale

Speak with our team on how to bring Shopify into your tech stack

Get in touch
blog|Enterprise ecommerce

Enterprise Commerce: A Comprehensive Guide for Business Leaders

Enterprise Commerce is a key strategy for large-scale operations, and with the right enterprise software strategy, companies take advantage of a growing ecommerce market.

by Rich Moy
enterprise commerce

The platform built for future-proofing

Get in touch

The world of enterprise commerce and enterprise software has been rocked in recent decades by successive upheavals, including the rise of cloud computing, the growth of SaaS tools and platforms, and the maturity of a widely differentiated and feature-rich market of ecommerce platforms.

For enterprise leaders, the question has shifted from keeping up to getting ahead. A digital strategy is table stakes, and an ecommerce presence is a baseline expectation. What was once innovation has become a first step toward competitiveness in the modern era. 

To get ahead and stay ahead, the best enterprise leaders have shifted from thinking of software as an additive value to software as a transformative value. Migration, rebuilding, and refactoring aren’t tasks to be taken lightly, but letting enterprise software become stagnant is even riskier.

Click here to talk with sales about Shopify plans for enterprises

According to TrustRadius research, nearly one-half of all traffic hitting ecommerce platform websites is now coming from organizations with more than 1,000 employees. It’s clear that enterprise leaders are reconsidering what their software needs are and rethinking the role of enterprise commerce in their long-term business strategies. 

What is enterprise commerce?

Enterprise commerce is a term used to describe a large, enterprise-level business that sells its services and products to individuals and other organizations. Typically, companies that fall under this umbrella generate hundreds of millions to billions of dollars in revenue. They also tend to have expansive product lines and a large global brand presence.

When companies reach this level of maturity, they take a closer look at their ecommerce solutions and ask themselves critical questions. How can you build checkout features that are reliable despite massive user fluctuations across holidays and regions? How can you maintain security systems that protect your customers’ privacy? How can you acquire all the customers they need to survive and build a retention strategy that measures lifetime account value, conversion rates, and average order value?

In many cases, enterprise-level merchants ultimately decide to migrate to a solution that gives them new growth levers to drive incremental scale across different areas of their business. While this sounds like a logical next step, many companies struggle to find the right enterprise commerce solution for their specific needs—and the process often stalls before the selection process even begins.

Enterprise commerce solutions

The search for the right enterprise commerce solution is not an easy one. A commerce solution is both central and pivotal, where central means many stakeholders will want to advise on the decision, and pivotal means leaders will need to draw out the implications and consequences of choosing one solution and not another. 

Making this all the more complex is that commerce solutions don’t merely vary feature by feature, and enterprise leaders can’t simply draw a list of pros and cons. Different solutions pose very different strategies, and a perfect solution that doesn’t match an enterprise’s strategy won’t work. 

Before the selection process even begins, enterprises will have to answer a range of questions to inform their search.

How should the solution be hosted and delivered? 

Many legacy commerce solutions are on-premises, but modern solutions tend to be cloud-based. But cloud-based solutions vary. Some are delivered as a service, meaning most, if not all, of the cloud management is taken care of by the vendor. Others require more infrastructure management (but potentially more flexibility) on the part of the enterprise. 

How should the solution be architected?

Many legacy tech stacks are monolithic, meaning the entire application is housed inside a single application. Modern ecommerce solutions provide a range of different approaches. Some provide a headless architecture that splits the front end and back end, some provide a web of microservices that separates all components into distinct services, and some provide a platform that provides most or all of the features an enterprise might need out of the box. 

Read more: Monolithic to Microservices: Advantages, Disadvantages, and the Real Reason Companies Migrate

Will the solution enable innovation or create lock-in? 

Many of the enterprises searching for a new commerce solution are doing so because they’re tired of tech debt and tired of spending more time and resources on less innovative progress than their competitors. Modern commerce solutions recognize the need to innovate, but each will pose different limitations. 

For example, an all-in-one solution might allow an enterprise to catch up to the competition but limit further innovation if those competitors keep innovating. A composable solution might have a similar effect, depending on what a given enterprise can actually support. And many microservices-based solutions promise flexibility, but enterprises can struggle under the weight of the resulting complexity and end up less flexible than before. 

With these questions in mind, the search for the right enterprise ecommerce platform is less about listing every commerce solution and more about determining what the enterprise’s current needs are and what business goals they’ll have to find which solution best aligns with those goals. 

Some of the leading enterprise commerce solutions include:

  • Shopify, a headless enterprise ecommerce SaaS platform that provides core functionality via a robust platform as well as extensibility via Commerce Components.

  • Salesforce Commerce Cloud (formerly known as Demandware), an enterprise commerce solution that offers a headless option and focuses on omnichannel options. 

  • BigCommerce Enterprise, a SaaS ecommerce solution that started as an online sales platform and offers a headless structure and a range of open APIs for front-end customization.

  • Adobe Commerce (formerly known as Magento), an enterprise commerce solution that can be hosted in the cloud or on-premises and offers a variety of third-party integrations. 

  • Oracle Commerce Cloud, an enterprise commerce solution with a multilayered architecture shadowed by recent criticism. 

As enterprises search, they’ll have to carefully evaluate trade-offs—including the possibility that the right solution for a particular enterprise might impose few, if any, trade-offs compared to another solution. 

For example, when MZ Wallace migrated from Salesforce Commerce Cloud to Shopify, COO and CFO Kevin Mogyoros reported, “We’re spending less and driving sales more efficiently. It’s the best of both worlds.” When enterprises fit software to strategy well enough, benefits can far outstrip any would-be trade-offs. 

The role of enterprise software in enterprise commerce

For decades, enterprises have faced the challenge of digital transformation. 

McKinsey research shows that nearly two-thirds of companies have invested in SaaS products or other modern software products. Many more companies have invested in on-premises software that’s often deemed “legacy” but still shows a commitment to digital technologies. 

Digital transformation has come and gone.

As enterprises evaluate the role and impact of enterprise software, the framework has to shift from having or not having the technology to the longer, more sustained work of iterating, migrating, and evolving that technology. 

According to further McKinsey research, almost 70% of top economic performers use software to differentiate them from their competitors. The authors of the research explain that many enterprises “still tend to look at software as a capability that they can bolt onto their existing business” and that those companies are missing out on the still-growing benefits of software innovation. 

In these companies, enterprise software exists but has a diminished role. As a result, legacy enterprise software can create a dangerous downward spiral as tech debt grows, software developers become disengaged, and enterprises fall further and further behind a growing ecommerce market. 

McKinsey research shows that tech debt accounts for about 40% of IT balance sheets, and IEEE research shows that maintaining and managing technical debt wastes 42% of developers' time. 

With those figures in mind, it’s no surprise that tech debt has become a big drag on developers. Stripe research shows that 52% of developers believe tech debt hinders developer productivity, and 76% believe tech debt damages personal morale. 

The result is that even enterprises that nominally embraced digital transformation are frequently stuck with legacy software systems loaded with tech debt that discourages innovation, which includes experimenting with ecommerce in concert with more traditional commerce channels such as B2C, retail, and B2B. As a result, the greatest cost of this isn’t yet on the balance sheet. 

Morgan Stanley research shows that the ecommerce market is still growing, and the firm predicts the market will grow from $3.3 trillion (as measured in 2022) to $5.4 trillion in 2026. And this isn’t merely an armchair prediction.

When the pandemic swept the world, many new customers tried ecommerce, and the industry received a bump. New research is showing that this bump wasn’t a fluke. Forrester predicted that online retail sales will reach $1.6 trillion by 2027—in just the United States.

Together, these results show that the ecommerce market is on track to grow rapidly in the coming years and that there are millions of high-potential customers ready to be gained. But because ecommerce is a growth opportunity, enterprises will have to rethink the role of enterprise software in their organizations and figure out a process for continuous improvement. 

The needs and expectations of enterprise customers

Finding and choosing enterprise-grade software isn’t an easy task. At the enterprise scale, security and reliability risks are greater, and there are many more parties and stakeholders involved in every decision. 

These are baseline features that apply almost universally across companies at the enterprise level. Many vendors with otherwise interesting products are eliminated at this early point in the vendor selection stage, leaving enterprises with a limited pool of vendors and products to choose from. 

Beyond these baseline features, enterprises are expecting platforms to be both dependable and flexible. Enterprise commerce tools need to be scalable enough for usage fluctuations, secure enough to protect high volumes of high-value data, and comprehensive enough to provide the many features an enterprise needs to serve a vast variety of needs. They also need to be flexible enough so that enterprise customers can adapt the software to their specific context and use cases, and extendable so that enterprise customers can build on top of the tool as needs change.

These are just a few reasons why Shopify recently launched Commerce Components by Shopify (CCS), which gives enterprise retailers a unique combination of development flexibility and access to world-class commerce components that are ready to use out of the box.

Commerce Components by Shopify gives enterprise retailers a unique combination of connectivity, optionality, and innovation, including:

  • Access to high-performing commerce components, including our checkout, cart, search, and internationalization. 

  • Flexibility to integrate existing services with Shopify’s modular components via an API layer, giving you a clearer path to building unique customer experiences across all devices and touch points. 

  • Unmatched scale and support from hundreds of Shopify production engineers, who work hard to ensure you have the fastest, most resilient online stores on the planet, giving you the freedom to focus on your innovation roadmap. 

Commerce Components by Shopify also offers a unique level of pre and post-launch support from a combination of world-class client success managers, solutions engineers, and architects. Merchants can also tap into our partnership ecosystem and system integrators to build ecommerce solutions that are are agile, performant, and ultimately increase conversion.

Want to learn more about how Shopify can supercharge your enterprise ecommerce experiences?

Get in touch

 

RM
by Rich Moy
Updated on Jan 23, 2024
Share article
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
by Rich Moy
Updated on Jan 23, 2024

The latest in commerce

Get news, trends, and strategies for unlocking new growth.

By entering your email, you agree to receive marketing emails from Shopify.

popular posts

Enterprise commerceHow to Choose an Enterprise Ecommerce Platform for Your Scaling StoreTCOHow to Calculate Total Cost of Ownership for Enterprise SoftwareMigrationsEcommerce Replatforming: A Step-by-Step Guide To MigrationB2B EcommerceWhat Is B2B Ecommerce? Types + Examples
start-free-trial

Unified commerce for the world's most ambitious brands

Learn More

popular posts

Direct to consumer (DTC)The Complete Guide to Direct-to-Consumer (DTC) Marketing (2025)Tips and strategiesEcommerce Personalization: Benefits, Examples, and 7 Tactics for 2025Unified commerceHow To Sell on Multiple Channels Without the Logistical Headache (2025)Enterprise ecommerceComposable Commerce: What It Means and Is It Right for You?

popular posts

Enterprise commerce
How to Choose an Enterprise Ecommerce Platform for Your Scaling Store

TCO
How to Calculate Total Cost of Ownership for Enterprise Software

Migrations
Ecommerce Replatforming: A Step-by-Step Guide To Migration

B2B Ecommerce
What Is B2B Ecommerce? Types + Examples

Direct to consumer (DTC)
The Complete Guide to Direct-to-Consumer (DTC) Marketing (2025)

Tips and strategies
Ecommerce Personalization: Benefits, Examples, and 7 Tactics for 2025

Unified commerce
How To Sell on Multiple Channels Without the Logistical Headache (2025)

Enterprise ecommerce
Composable Commerce: What It Means and Is It Right for You?

subscription banner
The latest in commerce

Get news, trends, and strategies for unlocking unprecedented growth.

Unsubscribe anytime. By entering your email, you agree to receive marketing emails from Shopify.

Popular

Headless commerce
What Is Headless Commerce: A Complete Guide for 2025

Aug 29, 2023

Growth strategies
How To Increase Conversion Rate: 14 Tactics for 2025

Oct 5, 2023

Growth strategies
7 Effective Discount Pricing Strategies to Increase Sales (2025)

Ecommerce Operations Logistics
What Is a 3PL? How To Choose a Provider in 2025

Ecommerce Operations Logistics
Ecommerce Returns: Average Return Rate and How to Reduce It

Industry Insights and Trends
Global Ecommerce Statistics: Trends to Guide Your Store in 2025

Customer Experience
Fashion Brand Storytelling Examples to Inspire You

Mar 24, 2023

Growth strategies
SEO Product Descriptions: 7 Tips To Optimize Your Product Pages

Powering commerce at scale

Speak with our team on how to bring Shopify into your tech stack.

Get in touch
Shopify logo

Shopify

  • About
  • Careers
  • Investors
  • Press and Media
  • Partners
  • Affiliates
  • Legal
  • Service status

Support

  • Merchant Support
  • Shopify Help Center
  • Hire a Partner
  • Shopify Academy
  • Shopify Community

Developers

  • Shopify.dev
  • API Documentation
  • Dev Degree

Products

  • Shop
  • Shop Pay
  • Shopify Plus
  • Shopify Fulfillment Network
  • Linkpop
  • Shopify for Enterprise

Global Impact

  • Sustainability
  • Build Black
  • Research

Solutions

  • Online Store Builder
  • Website Builder
  • Ecommerce Website
  • Australia
    English
  • Canada
    English
  • Hong Kong SAR
    English
  • Indonesia
    English
  • Ireland
    English
  • Malaysia
    English
  • New Zealand
    English
  • Nigeria
    English
  • Philippines
    English
  • Singapore
    English
  • South Africa
    English
  • UK
    English

Choose a region & language

  • Australia
    English
  • Canada
    English
  • Hong Kong SAR
    English
  • Indonesia
    English
  • Ireland
    English
  • Malaysia
    English
  • New Zealand
    English
  • Nigeria
    English
  • Philippines
    English
  • Singapore
    English
  • South Africa
    English
  • UK
    English
  • Terms of service
  • Privacy policy
  • Sitemap
  • Privacy Choices