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The North American Enterprise Ecommerce Race: What SFCC Merchants Must Do to Stay Ahead

In 2028, US ecommerce will pass one point six trillion dollar for the first time. That sounds like growth without end. Growth rates are sliding though. What started as double digit expansion is normalizing into single digits. For SFCC customers in North America that means a simple truth. Market share will be increasingly contested. Differentiation is no longer a bonus, it is the prerequisite. This post lays out what SFCC merchants must do concretely to stay ahead in this race.

What the market data really says

Three data points tell the story of North American ecommerce in the coming years.

First. Absolute size keeps growing. From about one point three trillion dollar in 2025 to one point six trillion in 2028. Three hundred billion dollars of additional online revenue.

Second. Growth rates fall. From nine point zero percent in 2025 to about eight point five percent in 2028. The slowdown looks small, but it means passive growth through market expansion contributes less.

Third. Share of total retail rises. From seventeen percent in 2025 to twenty percent in 2028. More share also means more competition, especially from DTC brands that build their approach online from day one.

What those three points say together is clear. SFCC merchants can no longer count on a rising tide lifting every boat. They have to actively win market share rather than merely grow with the market.

Four strategic challenges for SFCC customers

Four topics show up consistently in 2026 strategy discussions with SFCC customers in North America.

First. Competition from digital native brands. DTC brands run on modern stacks and deliver customer experience at a level enterprise setups reach only with effort. The gap is not random, it is structural.

Second. Tightening customer expectations. Mobile first, same day delivery, transparent shipping costs, easy returns, localized payment methods. All of that is now standard, not premium feature.

Third. Margin pressure. Marketing costs rise, logistics costs rise, platform licenses rise with GMV. Without operational efficiency, margins shrink.

Fourth. The need to differentiate. Offering what everybody else offers loses. Brand DNA must be tangible in the customer experience, not only in advertising.

What SFCC merchants must do concretely

Four strategic levers have the biggest impact on competitive position in the US market.

Lever 1: frontend modernization

Most DTC advantages live in the frontend. Performance, UX, personalization. Modernizing the SFCC frontend closes the gap to the fastest competitors.

Lever 2: mobile first customer experience

Over seventy percent of sessions arrive on mobile. SFCC setups that treat mobile as a second priority lose structurally. Mobile first architecture is not a design decision, it is a business decision.

Lever 3: personalization as an experience layer

Generic storefront experiences are no longer enough in the US market. Customers expect contextual content, personalized recommendations and curated journeys. That layer has to be standalone, not buried inside a platform.

Lever 4: speed to iterate

Whoever iterates faster wins. Time to market for new funnel tests, A B tests and campaigns is the decisive lever in the US market. SFCC setups with quarterly releases are structurally disadvantaged.

Why a frontend first strategy works

In each of these four levers, the frontend is the primary point of impact. A frontend first strategy therefore delivers the highest leverage for SFCC customers in North America.

Backend modernization would take years, carry high risk and not directly improve the customer experience. Frontend modernization, in contrast, delivers visible effects within months, with manageable risk, and with direct impact on conversion and customer loyalty.

A Frontend as a Service platform plugs in exactly here. SFCC stays as the backbone, the frontend becomes a dedicated layer for performance, personalization and time to market. Marketing teams gain autonomy, engineering works on platform stewardship instead of maintenance.

What to avoid

Three strategies we see repeatedly fail in North America.

First. Full replatforming. Eighteen to thirty months without visible customer improvements. You lose market share to faster competitors during that window.

Second. Point optimization without structural change. A B tests on a legacy platform deliver only marginal effects. They scratch the surface without addressing structural limits.

Third. Pure marketing investment without platform modernization. More performance marketing without better conversion is burned capital.

Bottom line

The US ecommerce market keeps growing but the pace is slowing. Market share will be increasingly contested, especially between enterprise setups and digital native brands. SFCC customers have the tools to stay ahead in this race. Frontend modernization, mobile first architecture, personalization layer and speed to iterate are the four levers with the biggest effect. A frontend first strategy delivers all of them without replacing the backend.

If you want a competitive assessment for your North American market, reach out. We know the SFCC reality and the DTC dynamic firsthand.

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