Replace 10 to 20 tools with one platform.
Most operators are running OMS plus warehouse plus ERP plus product info plus CRM plus helpdesk plus reviews plus replenishment plus attribution plus integration tools. CCEN replaces the stack. We've mapped every category, built the importers, and run the playbook hundreds of times.
Every operations category, mapped to one platform.
12 categories, 50+ vendors imported, hundreds of consolidations completed.
The actual problem, grounded in reality.
You did not plan for the stack you have. It accreted. ShipStation got added when fulfillment got serious. Loop when returns got serious. Gorgias when CX got serious. Inventory Planner when replenishment got serious. Klaviyo when email got serious. Northbeam when attribution got serious. Yotpo when reviews got serious. Recharge when subscriptions got serious. Each addition was rational. The aggregate is irrational.
The bill is one symptom. $8K to $25K a month in software. The deeper symptom is the integration tax: every tool is the source of truth for something, none of them agree, and your team spends a real fraction of their week reconciling. The chargeback you ate last quarter, the oversell that hit Reddit, the customer who got two refunds for one order, all are integration-failure stories in disguise.
CCEN is the consolidation. We've replaced the 10 to 20 tool stack hundreds of times. We have importers for the top 50 vendors. The migration playbook is real. The cost reduction is consistent: 60 to 80 percent of monthly software spend, the first month after cutover. The integration tax goes to zero because the integrations are gone.
What changes on CCEN
What stack consolidation looks like when one platform actually covers the surface area, not just claims to.
One platform, every category
Order Management, Warehouse, ERP, Product Info, CRM, Helpdesk, Replenishment, Attribution, Returns, Reviews, Subscriptions, Integration. All native surfaces. We have mapped every category to the CCEN surface that replaces it.
Importers for the top 50 vendors
Shopify, Amazon, NetSuite, Brightpearl, Cin7, Stord, ShipStation, Gorgias, Loop, Klaviyo, and 40+ more. The importers are real, tested, and run on live customer data weekly. Long-tail tools go through the migration playbook.
Software cost down 60 to 80 percent
Every consolidation customer we work with sees this range. Volume-based pricing scales with orders, not seats. The migration pays for itself in year one.
Integration tax goes to zero
When the platform is the source of truth, there is no reconciliation. The chargebacks, oversells, double refunds, all stop. Your team gets the time back.
Migration help, not a sales pitch
Our solutions team builds importers for your top three tools, runs the parallel-run, and decommissions the old stack. We do this because we want you up, not because we want a deck.
What the consolidation actually looks like.
$14,200 / mo to $3,800 / mo
Real numbers from a $25M brand. 14 tools collapse to 4 (CCEN, Shopify, Klaviyo kept, QuickBooks kept). 73% reduction in software spend, month one.
1.5 ops FTE back to your team
Reconciliation work that used to consume a real fraction of your week disappears. The integration tax goes to zero because the integrations are gone.
10 weeks, staged cutover
Heavy data tools (OMS, warehouse, ERP) cut over earlier. Lighter tools (reviews, attribution) cut over later. Your team is never in two places at once.
App screenshot · Consolidation calculator
Drop in your stack. See your projected CCEN spend, line by line. Placeholder image.
Calculate your consolidation savings.
Drop in your current tools and your monthly spend. We'll model the consolidated CCEN spend against your real volume.
Categories you'd consolidate
The standard mid-market commerce stack mapped to its CCEN replacement. Most operators replace 10 to 20 tools, depending on how thick the stack got.
Reference consolidation
A $25M brand pre- and post-CCEN consolidation.
We were on 14 vendors and three project managers full-time keeping them in sync. Six weeks after the CCEN cutover we'd shut down 11. Our software spend dropped 73 percent. Our reconciliation work went to roughly zero.
Common questions about consolidation
- What if my tool is not in your importer list?
- Our solutions team builds importers for the top 50 vendors. The long tail (50 to 200) goes through the migration playbook: schema mapping, dual-run, sample validation, full cutover. We have done this for hundreds of tools.
- What about my custom internal tools?
- Custom internal tools become apps on the platform. Your team can fork an existing app, modify it, and keep it private. Same data layer, same identity, same audit trail.
- How long is a 14-tool consolidation?
- Typical 8 to 16 weeks. Heavy data tools (Order Management, Warehouse, ERP) cut over earlier. Lighter tools (reviews, attribution) cut over later. Staged migration is the default.
- What if a tool is contractually locked?
- We sequence the migration around your contracts. Some tools we wait out (annual contracts ending). Some tools we replace at month one and run dual-bill until contract end. Your call.
- Will we save the predicted 60 to 80 percent?
- Almost always, yes. The cases where we land below 60 percent are usually when an operator keeps Klaviyo (significant retained spend) or when their existing stack was already cheap (under $4K a month combined).
Built for stack consolidation. See it run.
A 30-minute call with a real engineer. We connect a sandbox to your Shopify, Amazon, or EDI partner and walk through the workflow you care about. No slides. No discovery deck. The product, on data that looks like yours.