Commerce architecture for scalability vs. growth | Acro Commerce
Mike Hubbard

Author

Mike Hubbard

, Front End Lead, Developer

Posted in Digital Commerce, Software & Development

January 29, 2019

Commerce architecture for scalability vs. growth

What do the largest and most successful technology and online retail companies have in common? They work with a business model that is built on scalability, not growth.

Small and mid-market companies should seek to understand how they can operate with scalability in mind. This is key to financial and operational business success.

Scalability vs. growth

Growth is when the resources that run a business grow at the same rate as its revenue.

A business model built for growth is something from the pre-internet age where business operators literally needed to add more people (managers, cashiers, accountants, lawyers, marketers, etc.) in order to manage their physical operations. If the business is successful in one location, it could be replicated in another. Rinse and repeat for business growth.

Actual profit will grow slowly as the business expands, but the resources needed to grow the business are significant and cut into additional profits. This is how the old-school business worked.

Scale is a business model that was born through technology. Instead of adding people, a business focused on scale will look for ways to increase the gap between revenue and overhead resources, finding ways to do more business with minimal growth in staff and resources. Any business that can scale like this will become much more profitable and outperform any competing business built on growth.

The following image is a visual representation of growth vs. scale business models. The green lines showing gross revenue are the same for both, but increased operating expenses for growth directly impact the overall net revenue of this model, resulting in less realized profit vs. scale.

Growth vs Scale representation charts

Properties of a scalable business model

A scalable business model will vary for different industries, however, some constants that will always remain the same are as follows:

  • Efficient — A business built to scale will constantly be trying to find better and more efficient ways to do anything repeatable. Whether it’s integrating their ecommerce platform with other business systems (i.e. accounting, inventory management, CRM, etc.), making processes as efficient as possible is the goal.
  • Integration — As mentioned above, integrating your business systems so that they ‘talk’ to one another is important for scalable growth. The less you have to manually do is important, and the software of today was built to talk to each other. You want to take as much manual work out of the picture as possible and let system integrations take a front-and-center role.
  • Automation — If you suffer from swivel chair processes, manually entering the same data into multiple places, then you need to find ways to automate those processes instead. Like integrations, take the human element out of as much data entry as you can and let the software do it instead. This saves a huge amount of time and resources and eliminates any chance of costly mistakes.

The benefits of scaling

A business that can scale is in a great position to take charge in its sector. Positioning for scale not only increases profitability, but it allows operational staff to focus on the business instead of simply working within it. This means more time and resources available to perfect areas of the business that have the most impact on its customers and customer retention. Some benefits to this are:

Lower bottom line means an ability to adapt to change

The lower a business's bottom line is, the more capital it has available to adapt to change and invest in its own success.

Increased focus on brand and marketing

With more time and resources available, a business can focus more on its brand elements and how it’s positioned in its market.

Creating a better customer experience

Customer experience is key to reducing support requests, retaining happy customers and gaining new ones. Efficient businesses can spend more time making sure their customers have the best experience possible.

Providing better customer support

This goes hand-in-hand with customer experience. If a business has an exceptional customer experience, fewer customers will require support requests. If fewer customers require support, more time and resources can be put into the customers that do need it.

Better employee retention and benefits

With an increase in profit, more resources can be put back into the employee experience. Higher wages, better benefits and more team-building exercises are just some examples of how businesses can retain their employees.

Recession-proof

Having more cash-flow lets businesses better prepare for downturns in the economy. Not only is there a greater chance of survival if and when economic downturns happen, but, by being efficient, a business focused on scale will also be able to responsibly retain employees instead of requiring mass layoffs to cut costs.

Commerce architecture is the cornerstone of successful scaling

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While there are a lot of important pieces needed to complete the puzzle, the most important part that is central to any scalable business is its overall commerce architecture.

Commerce architecture determines how all of the individual software components that make up the business align. Choosing the right type of architecture is essential for scalable growth. If the business gets this part wrong, its ability to be efficient, integrate and automate can be greatly restricted. Not only that, but it’s almost inevitable that at some point in the future, typically 3-5 years, a replatforming exercise will be needed as the limitations of the less-than-ideal architecture start to surface.

Depending on the type of business, the ideal commerce architecture, in our opinion, is either “Content and Commerce” or “Headless”.

Content and Commerce is an architecture that is focused on the customer experience, with an integration-friendly content management system and ecommerce platform at the forefront.

Headless is an architecture designed to support maximum agility and adaptability. It gives businesses the freedom to piece together all of the individual components at will, and can then swap out pieces later as needed.

When we engage with new clients, we often advise them to “focus on your commerce architecture, not your platform.” Shopify is a common platform where we see businesses hitting limitations. While this platform is great for many small businesses, once you hit the mid-market range (roughly $10+ million in sales), the fees and limitations of the platform really start to hinder the business's ability to adapt. Businesses end up working around the platform instead of forging their own path forward.

Mastering digital commerce is a new competitive edge

Implementing and understanding the right commerce architecture as part of a business's digital commerce strategy is almost guaranteed to give the business a competitive edge over the competition. Why, because most businesses struggle with even the basics.

In a recent Gartner report conducted from a survey sample size of 88 organizations, Gartner concluded that

"Organizations that can master the basics of site performance and maintenance are clearly ahead of the pack. Not only are they best positioned to deliver great customer experiences, they also possess a foundational component required to build trust and will ultimately be viewed as more trustworthy by their customers."1

Imagine that. While most of this post is around scaling a business, the benefits of the right commerce architecture are much more than that. The right commerce architecture will improve all aspects of the business, including customer experience. For many businesses, customer experience is the main differentiator between them and their competition. Gaining an edge here will be a driver for business growth.

I hope that this article gets you excited about your own digital commerce strategy. If you'd like to talk about it with us, we're always here to help you in whatever capacity you need, whether it's consultation and guidance or implementation and development. Click the link below to get started.

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1 - Gartner, "Survey Analysis: Organizations Need to Improve the Customer Experience to Fully Exploit Digital Commerce," 4 February 2019, Penny Gillespie