The Need for Speed: What Shopify’s Acquisition of Deliverr Means for Ecommerce Brands
Shopify has been making waves.
Earlier this month, the company announced its acquisition of Deliverr, an e-commerce fulfillment startup based in San Francisco, California. It is the largest acquisition in Shopify’s history, and aims to create an “end-to-end logistics platform” that simplifies the fulfillment process for millions of merchants.
"Our goal is to not only level the playing field for independent businesses, but tilt it in their favor—turning their size and agility into their superpower,” said Tobi Lütke, founder and CEO of Shopify, in a blog post announcing the acquisition.
Deliverr, whose goal is to “democratize fulfillment”, integrates with marketplaces such as eBay, Etsy, and Walmart. Deliverr’s smart fulfillment platform uses machine learning and optimization technology to predict where product demand will be the highest, and positions inventory near those areas for quick order fulfillment.
“Together with Deliverr, Shopify Fulfillment Network will give millions of growing businesses access to a simple, powerful logistics platform that will allow them to make their customers happy over and over again,” Lütke said.
What does the acquisition mean for e-commerce brands? By combining their strengths, Shopify and Deliverr power a platform that allows brands to:
- Manage inventory across multiple sales channels, including a brand’s brick-and mortar stores, marketplaces, and social media platforms.
- Create a logistics system tailored to their business with new services for storage, inventory preparation, and returns.
- Offer two-day and next-day delivery for orders in the US, a capability already powered by Deliverr.
What’s the deal?
The acquisition represents the importance of fast and reliable shipping for e-commerce brands. Shopify has in the past worked to improve and expand its fulfillment capabilities; back in 2019, it acquired 6 River Systems, a robotics company that automates the process of warehouse fulfillment.

The move was critical to the Shopify Fulfillment Network’s (SFN) growth, and now with Deliverr, Shopify can help brands shorten the distance from warehouse to house with a highly anticipated service: Shop Promise.
With Shop Promise, SFN brands can offer two-day and next-day delivery, and it comes at no additional cost to sellers or membership fees to customers. Up until now, Amazon Prime has been the only service that guaranteed such quick delivery, and it has raised customer expectations immensely.
Prime has become synonymous with fast shipping, and Shopify seems to be creating its own association effect in naming Shop Promise. However, there is more to Shop Promise than ensuring trust between brands and their customers—it also promises brands full ownership of customer data.
This is pretty groundbreaking, given the essentiality of customer data to brand strategy and Amazon’s restrictions on giving third-party sellers that information.
With these promises, Shopify’s fulfillment platform is setting a new bar in logistics.




