
eCommerce Development for People Who Actually Sell Stuff
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Setting up a store is easy. Making it handle Black Friday without crashing? That's different.
We build eCommerce platforms (WooCommerce, Shopify, custom solutions) for businesses that sell real volume. Not hobby stores. Real revenue, real integrations, real problems that need fixing at 2 AM.
The Thing Nobody Tells You About eCommerce
Most developers have never run an online store. They've installed WooCommerce or set up a Shopify theme, sure. But they've never:
- Dealt with a payment gateway randomly declining cards
- Debugged why inventory isn't syncing between your warehouse and store
- Fixed a checkout flow that's losing 70% of carts
- Handled a traffic spike that brings your whole site down during a launch
- We have. Multiple times. It's not fun, but it teaches you what matters.
When you hire someone who's only followed tutorials, you get a store that works... until it doesn't. Usually at the worst possible time.
How We Build eCommerce Sites
We pick the right platform
Shopify is great for most D2C brands. It's simple, it scales, and it doesn't require a developer for every little thing. WooCommerce is better if you need custom product types, complex pricing, or tight WordPress integration. BigCommerce works for high-volume B2B or if you hate Shopify's app fees. Headless commerce (separate frontend from backend) makes sense if you're a tech company building a unique experience. We'll tell you which one fits your business. We're not loyalty-bound to any platform they all have pros and cons.
We design checkout flows that don't suck
Most cart abandonment happens because checkout is annoying. Too many steps, unexpected shipping costs, forced account creation, weird payment errors. At Stackiasn our team optimize for conversions: single-page checkout, guest checkout options, clear shipping costs upfront, mobile-friendly forms. Sometimes we A/B test different flows to see what works better.
(Side note: We can't force people to buy. If your product sucks or your prices are bad, no amount of UX will save you. Just being honest.)
We build integrations that actually work
Your store doesn't exist in a vacuum. It needs to talk to: Your CRM (so sales knows who bought what). Your email platform (for abandoned cart emails and order confirmations). Your inventory system (so you don't oversell). Your fulfillment center (so orders actually ship). Your accounting software (so your books don't turn into a nightmare). We build these integrations properly, using APIs and webhooks. And when APIs change (because they will), we fix the integration so your business doesn't stop.
We handle the boring (but critical) stuff
Things like: Making sure your payment gateway is configured correctly so you don't lose money to failed transactions. Setting up proper tax calculations (sales tax in the US is absurdly complicated). Implementing fraud prevention so you don't ship $5K in products to a stolen credit card. Configuring shipping zones and rates so customers aren't surprised at checkout. Optimizing for speed because slow stores lose sales. None of this is sexy. All of it matters.
Why We Don't Suck at This
We've built stores that process real revenue. We've also been called in to fix stores that were falling apart. I'm not saying this to brag. I'm saying it because eCommerce is a business operation, not a web design project. Most developers don't get that. We do.
What You Get
- An eCommerce platform that fits your business model.
- Checkout flows optimized for conversions.
- Integrations with your CRM, email, inventory, fulfillment, accounting. Speed optimization (because slow = dead).
- Security & fraud prevention (because getting scammed sucks).
- White-label options if you're an agency.
- Ongoing support so you're not screwed when something breaks.