
For a long time, online stores used “monolithic” platforms (Shopify, Prestashop, Magento): front-end, back-end, catalog, payment and CMS in a single block.
This model works well at the beginning, but quickly becomes rigid, slow, and limited as soon as you want:
✔ personalize the customer experience,
✔ integrate new channels (mobile app, social commerce, PWA),
✔ scale internationally,
✔ automate or connect the business to other tools.
This is where two modern approaches appear: The headless And the Composable Commerce, which are transforming the way e-commerce is built.
Everything is integrated into a single platform.
The front-end (interface) is separate from the back-end (data, business logic).
Connect via API.
Each e-commerce brick is a independent micro-service :
🎯 Result: Total Flexibility + Extreme Scalability.
Composable is the “enterprise” version of headless:
✅ 100% modular
✅ API-first
✅ Microservices
✅ MACH (Microservices, API-First, Cloud-Native, Headless)
Beginner level -> small e-merchant -> Shopify/WooCommerce
New intermediary -> Solid Crossne -> Shopify + Headless Front (Hydrogen/Next)
Advanced Level -> DTC brand, scale-up -> Composable Commerce (API-first + microservices)
Enterprise Level -> Multi-country, omnichannel -> MACH architecture + tailor-made system
The headless/composable trap?
👉 The management complexity : scattered data, multiple tools, fragmented financial flows.
This is EXACTLY where Klark steps in suchlike center cockpit :
✔ Importing products/CRM from Shopify or Prestashop
✔ Aggregation of payments and cash flow
✔ Real-time business KPI monitoring
✔ Tool management (perks, integrated SaaS)
✔ Standardization of processes
🎯 Same complex architecture → Clear vision + Simplified management.
Headless and especially composable commerce are not a trend: these are the architectures that already dominate ambitious brands.
✅ More performance
✅ Customized customer experience
✅ Flexibility + innovation
✅ International scalability
But to succeed, you have to master its data and its management.
💡 Practical advice
If you're not ready for full headless/composable yet, start with Separate your front-end or add microservices in stages. It's a transition, not a brutal revolution.
Headless separates front-end and back-end. Composable goes further by separating ALL the bricks into autonomous microservices connected via API.
Not mandatory, but essential if you want an advanced customer experience, international growth or real scalability.
Initially yes (implementation), but over the long term you gain in performance, flexibility and ROI (less total redesign, more continuous optimization).
Klark becomes the central management cockpit: treasury, CRM, customer data, products and tools, even if your architecture is divided into microservices.