AWS for E-commerce
How AWS fits into a production e-commerce data platform, when it's the right choice, and where to draw the line.
Why e-commerce data platforms need AWS
E-commerce data infrastructure runs on velocity and unit economics. Every click, transaction, and delivery generates events; insights delivered hours late mean campaigns optimized too late, inventory restocked too late, fraud caught too late. AWS fits when it can sustain hundreds of millions of daily events without compute costs scaling linearly with traffic.
How AWS fits
AWS is the foundation for the majority of data platforms I build. I design architectures spanning S3 data lakes, Glue ETL, Lambda serverless processing, Kinesis real-time streaming, and Redshift warehousing — always with cost optimization and security as first-class concerns. From startups needing their first data lake to enterprises migrating legacy on-prem systems, I deliver AWS solutions that scale with the business while keeping cloud bills predictable. In a e-commerce context, that capability matters because compute costs scale with event volume; a poorly architected pipeline can take a 10x traffic increase and turn it into a 30x bill. Effective AWS deployments in e-commerce aren't generic — they reflect the specific data shapes, latency requirements, and compliance expectations of the sector.
Common e-commerce use cases
Real-time transaction processing
Hundreds of millions of daily order, click, and inventory events flowing through a unified pipeline with sub-second latency on critical paths.
Marketing attribution at scale
Multi-touch attribution across paid, organic, email, and referral channels — surviving privacy changes (iOS 14.5, third-party cookie deprecation).
Cost-optimized analytics
Per-event compute cost reduction strategies — moving heavy transforms off interactive warehouses, materializing only what's actually queried.
Inventory and supply chain analytics
Real-time visibility across warehouses, vendors, and last-mile delivery — feeding both operational dashboards and ML restock models.
E-commerce data engineering challenges
Frequently asked questions
Why use AWS for E-commerce specifically?
E-commerce workloads tend to share specific characteristics: compute costs scale with event volume; a poorly architected pipeline can take a 10x traffic increase and turn it into a 30x bill.. AWS addresses this directly through aws is the foundation for the majority of data platforms i build. The combination works best when the engagement team understands both the e-commerce domain (regulatory expectations, data quality requirements) and the operational specifics of AWS in production — not just the marketing-page bullet points.
Have you actually shipped AWS for E-commerce clients?
Not in this exact combination, but AWS is a core tool I've shipped to production for clients in other industries, and E-commerce is a sector I've delivered for using adjacent tools. The decision framework is the same; the implementation details vary. Happy to share what I would do for E-commerce + AWS based on adjacent experience during a consultation.
What does a AWS build for a e-commerce company typically cost?
For a mid-market e-commerce company, a full AWS-based platform build typically runs $40,000-150,000 across 3-6 months depending on scope. A diagnostic engagement (architecture review, cost audit, prioritized recommendations) is 2-4 weeks and starts around $10,000. Ongoing fractional Lead Data Engineer arrangements use AWS where appropriate and run $8,000-20,000 monthly.
How does AWS compare to alternatives for e-commerce workloads?
AWS isn't always the right answer for e-commerce — the right tool depends on workload shape, team skill, and existing infrastructure. AWS, cloud, S3 are the strongest reasons to choose it; common reasons to choose something else include team skill mismatch, existing investment in a competing platform, or specific constraints (regulatory, sovereignty) that favor on-premise or different cloud vendors. The honest answer comes from understanding your specific context.
What are the biggest risks of using AWS in e-commerce?
The top risk is misjudging total cost — AWS's pricing model behaves differently at scale than at proof-of-concept. The second risk is governance gaps: e-commerce typically has compliance and audit requirements that AWS can satisfy but doesn't enforce automatically. Mitigation is straightforward: model costs against realistic 12-24 month workload projections, and design governance into the platform from day one rather than retrofitting later.
AWS for other industries
Other technologies for e-commerce
Need AWS expertise for e-commerce?
Diagnostic engagements (2-4 weeks, from $10k), full platform builds (3-6 months), or fractional Lead Data Engineer arrangements. Always senior-level delivery, no offshore handoff.