Spring GDS 25th Anniversary
A logistics company that ships to 190 countries built something to ship to itself.
E-commerce is the buying and selling of goods and services online. The term covers the whole chain, not just the moment of payment: the storefront where people browse, the cart, the checkout, the payment processing, and everything that happens after the order to actually get the product to the customer.
Behind a working store sits more than a catalogue. There is inventory that has to stay accurate across channels, a payment gateway that handles money securely, tax and shipping logic that changes by region, and integrations with the systems a business already runs. Platforms split into hosted options like Shopify, where the infrastructure is managed for you, and custom or headless builds, where the storefront is decoupled from the commerce engine for more control. A fashion brand selling in three countries needs prices, taxes, and stock to stay correct on the website, the mobile app, and the marketplace it lists on, all at once, or it sells things it cannot ship and loses the customer's trust on the first order.
The visible part is the storefront. The part that decides whether the business works is everything the customer never sees.
We build online stores around the operation behind them, not just the page the customer lands on. A beautiful storefront that loses orders to a broken inventory sync is worse than no storefront. So we start with how the business actually moves stock and money, then build the e-commerce development around that reality.
For brands that have outgrown a hosted platform, we build custom and headless setups where the storefront is fast and bespoke while the commerce engine stays solid underneath. We connect the store to the systems a client already depends on, so orders, stock, and customer data stay in sync instead of drifting apart. The aim is a store the client can grow into, one that holds up on the day a campaign actually works and the traffic shows up.
Store struggling to keep up with the business behind it? Let's fix the whole chain.
A logistics company that ships to 190 countries built something to ship to itself.
Turning a brand into a working business.
Half a million people. One app. Zero chaos.















