Important team and business changes

Team –

We are changing the shape of Shopify significantly today to pay unshared attention to our mission. There are a number of consequences to this, and I don’t want to bury the lede: after today Shopify will be smaller by about 20% and Flexport will buy Shopify Logistics; this means some of you will leave Shopify today. I recognized the crushing impact this decision had on some of you, and did not make this decision lightly.

In the next 5 minutes you’ll get a follow up that tells you if you are affected. There’s no way to make this good news, but we designed a package that will try to make it the best possible version of a bad day. I’ve included details below on how we will support you.

Our main quests

Shopify finds it useful to talk about the difference between main quests and side quests internally. The main quest of the company is its mission, the reason for the company to exist. Side quests are everything else. Side quests are always distracting because the company has split focus. Sometimes this can be worth it, especially when engaging in side quests creates conditions by which the main quest can become more successful.

In the beginning, as a small startup, companies are intensely focused. It’s often said that larger companies are more sluggish but this is not because of their size, it’s because of all the side quests and distractions they accumulate along the way. This happens because larger companies can afford to be somewhat inefficient, especially during stable economic boom times. But once they need to adapt to some new paradigm they can’t. They will get replaced by more focused competitors, or collapse outright.

For the past year we’ve been subtracting everything that’s in the way of making the best possible product. This is extremely important, because we are heading into a decade of high velocity and massive change. We will require speed, agility, and a great deal of innovation.

Shopify’s main quest is to make commerce simpler, easier, more democratized, more participatory, and more common. I think that we have built the best commerce platform in the world for that. Technological progress always arcs towards simplicity, and entrepreneurs succeed more when we simplify. But now we are at the dawn of the AI ​​era and the new capabilities that are unlocked by that are unprecedented. Shopify has the privilege of being among the companies with the best chances of using AI to help our customers. A copilot for entrepreneurship is now possible. Our main quest demands from us to build the best thing that is now possible, and that has just changed entirely.

Shopify Logistics

Building logistics infrastructure is a side quest every e-commerce entrepreneur is eventually pulled into because of the way the logistics industry works: a series of disparate players, all focused on different aspects. To run your store you work with extremely carefully designed software. To run logistics, you will use a lot of pen, paper, and phone calls. And most of the time your service providers don’t talk to each other. Coordinating them to act together is your burden.

Instead of each merchant individually taking on their own side quest, Shopify decided to accept it on their behalf. We set to work building addressable logistics software that didn’t exist before.

Logistics was clearly a worthwhile side quest for us, and started to create the conditions for our main quest to succeed. From the beginning, we worked with lots of partners on all aspects of this same problem: warehouses, robotics, transportation, crossdock, freight. We iteratively built a solution, step by step, through software, leases, and M&A deals, that could become an independent company one day. Shopify is the perfect place to bootstrap this effort from 0 to 1 and we have done this. The next step is to take what we have and take it from 1 to N as a main quest.

Today we are announcing that Flexport will buy Shopify Logistics, becoming the preferred logistics partner for Shopify. Flexport, led by CEO Dave Clark and Founder Ryan Petersen, is the best builder and operator in the world of logistics. Contributing our work to Flexport, under the leadership of Harish Abbott, allows everything about Shopify Logistics to be more ambitious and global in nature. Making global supply chains efficient and software addressable is Flexport’s main quest and so this is the perfect home for this part of Shopify.

Managers and Crafters

Shopify thinks of itself as a crafter-centric vocational company. It’s the crafters that cause the words, bytes, pixels, and floating point weights which allow millions of entrepreneurs to build their businesses and hundreds of millions of buyers transacting on the platform. Crafters are experts in their domains and are trusted to be self-motivated. We don’t rely on management to be the task masters. The role of a crafter is to bring everything they uniquely have to build something wonderful.

The roles of managers are different. Great managers take individuals and turn them into teams, snowplow obstacles, remove ambiguity, help crafters do their best and most creative work and, most importantly, ensure that the wonderful work of crafters aligns with the roadmap and is of impact for merchants.

Management tracks and crafter tracks are held separately at Shopify. The balance of crafter to manager numbers is a tricky one to strike. Too few and you risk misalignment on the most important things, too many and you add heavy layers of processes, approvals, meetings and… side quests. Our numbers were unhealthy, just like it is in much of the tech industry. One of the insidious consequences of this is that it leads to the company increasingly celebrating activities rather than crafter driven outcomes. With the right numbers we’ll fully focus on outcomes and impact.

A more fit for purpose Shopify centered on its main quest has less scope creep, fewer meetings, and more shipping great features for our merchants.

To those leaving today

Everyone will process this in their own way, and it’s hard for everyone, affected or not.

For those leaving us today, you will receive a minimum of 16 weeks severance plus a week for each year of tenure at Shopify. Medical benefits and access to our employee assistance program (EAP) will be covered during this same period. We’ll also offer outplacement services if you want them, all the office furniture we provide is yours to keep. We legally need the working laptop back, but we’ll help pay for a new one to replace it. You’ll have continued free access to the advanced Shopify plan should you opt to take an entrepreneurial path in the future.

You’ll have a chance to talk more about this when you meet a leader later today. We will also keep Slack and internal email open today for everyone so we can share farewells. My sincere thanks go out to each of you for everything you’ve done for Shopify and our merchants.

Fit for purpose

This is a consequential and hard week. It’s the right thing for Shopify but it negatively affects the many team members we admire and love working with. This is one of those times where both right and hard are true at the same time. My belief is that any enduring company makes a habit of doing the right thing, even if it’s easy out present themselves. Yet it doesn’t get easier to make a decision like this, and I hope it never does.

Shopify is stacked with exceptionally talented, merchant obsessed people. Crafters thrive in the best environment, given the best technology and tools with which to grow and develop their skills. Managers are deeply committed to the craft of management, all in on building incredible teams. Inspired tooling and systems will reduce the coordination tax. And everyone at Shopify is pursuing a singular, focused main quest – our ambition is greater than ever.

– toby
​Shopify CEO

“The most important thing is to keep the most important thing the most important thing”