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DTC Ecommerce Systems & Martech · Platform Ownership

How ecommerce platform ownership turned Shopify, Klaviyo, and analytics into a cleaner growth system.

A systems-focused case study showing how ecommerce growth improves when Shopify, lifecycle, analytics, and support tools work from a clear operating map instead of running independently.

Real-time insights
Reliable retention and attribution data
One source of truth
Consistent data across marketing, ops, and support
Scalable stack
Documented, governed, and easier to improve

The problem.

The approach.

The execution.

The results.

"Growth gets easier when the ecommerce stack stops being a pile of tools and starts working like one connected operating system."

Common questions.

What does ecommerce platform ownership actually mean? +
Platform ownership means understanding how your tools connect, what data flows between them, and who is responsible for each piece. It means your Shopify events fire correctly into Klaviyo, your GA4 attribution is based on clean event logic, and your support team is not working from different customer data than your marketing team.
How do you know which ecommerce systems problems to fix first? +
The highest-priority fixes are the ones causing revenue errors: broken lifecycle triggers, misfiring attribution, incomplete purchase events, and data gaps that make CAC and CLTV calculations unreliable. After those, systems that waste team time without direct revenue impact come next.
Do you build or just advise on ecommerce systems? +
Both. I can audit the existing stack and produce a clear systems map with prioritized recommendations. I can also build automations using n8n or Make, configure GA4 event tracking, and set up Klaviyo data flows — depending on what level of hands-on involvement the engagement requires.

If your Shopify stack feels messy, let's map it.

EcommerceCure can audit what is happening in your stack and show what to fix first — before a broken trigger costs you a month of lifecycle revenue.