Automation
+ Integrations.
Most of the cost of running a digital business is not the storefront, it is the manual work around it: re-keying orders into an ERP, reconciling stock across channels, exporting catalogues by hand, copy-pasting between tools nobody integrated. We build the integration layer and the automation that removes that work. Magento and Shopify connected to the systems of record (Sage, SAP, a PIM, a 3PL), event-driven pipelines that react instead of polling, and small internal tools that give an ops team a button instead of a spreadsheet.
What we deliver
- ERP / PIM / 3PL integrations (Sage, SAP, Akeneo, custom)
- Order, stock and catalogue sync across channels
- Event-driven workflows (webhooks, queues, Shopify Next Gen Events)
- Payment and shipping gateway integration
- Internal admin tools and ops dashboards
- Scheduled jobs, ETL and data pipelines
Stack we reach for
How we engage
- Integration audit + data-flow map (1–2 weeks)
- Build + cutover sprints (3–8 weeks)
- Ongoing automation and ops support (retainer)
FAQ
- What does e-commerce automation actually cover?
- Anything an ops team does by hand that a system could do reliably: syncing orders to an ERP, keeping stock in step across channels, pushing catalogue updates from a PIM, triggering shipping and accounting workflows. We map the manual work first, then automate the parts that pay for themselves.
- Can you connect Magento or Shopify to our ERP?
- Yes. We have shipped ERP integrations like Sage on Magento and have built REST and SOAP integrations against third-party systems. We connect the storefront to the systems of record (ERP, PIM, 3PL, accounting) so data flows once, in one direction, without re-keying.
- Do we need a big platform migration to automate, or can you work on what we have?
- We work on what you have. Automation is usually additive: an integration layer and a set of workflows that sit alongside the current stack. We only recommend a migration when the existing platform is the actual bottleneck, and we say so honestly.
- How do you decide what is worth automating?
- By the hours it gives back and the errors it removes. A task done daily by a person, or one where a manual mistake costs real money, is worth automating. A one-off or a task that changes shape every week usually is not. We scope against that, not against what is technically possible.
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