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Embracing Platform Thinking: From Brand Owner to Marketplace Operator

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Author
Editor
Sharad Kabra
Published
June 9, 2025
Last Updated
June 30, 2025

Table Of Contents

Table of Contents

TL;DR (too long; didn't read)

Perfect for founders who want to move from single product selling to ecosystem enablers.

  • Product thinking focuses on solving user problems with a tightly controlled experience—great for D2C brands, but limited in scale.
  • Platform thinking empowers others (vendors, creators, sellers) to create value within your platform ecosystem—unlocking network effects and exponential growth.
  • Marketplace founders like those behind Dusaan, The Saffron Souk, or Bear's Club use platform thinking to grow beyond inventory limitations and serve diverse customer needs.
  • This translates to building an ecosystem by giving sellers tools, visibility, and infrastructure (like order management, payouts, etc.), while you focus on growth, experience, and strategy.
  • Tools like Shipturtle make it easy to launch, automate, and scale multivendor marketplaces—no code required, with full control over commissions, vendor roles, and fulfillment.

Marketplace founders and e-commerce entrepreneurs are faced with a critical decision: should they focus on building a great product, or a thriving platform?

While the two approaches may appear similar on the surface, they diverge significantly in mindset, execution, and long-term impact. One optimizes for user experience through internal control; the other scales impact through external enablement.

If you're building a multivendor marketplace or scaling your e-commerce venture, this shift in thinking—from product to platform—can be the difference between growing incrementally and achieving exponential scale. Giants like Shopify, Airbnb, Amazon, and Uber didn't just build great products—they built powerful platform-based ecosystems.

This article dives deep into product thinking vs. platform thinking, why the latter is key to future-proofing your e-commerce business, and how tools like Shipturtle can help you make the leap.

What is Product Thinking?

Product thinking is a user-first approach that emphasizes solving specific problems with tightly controlled features and experiences. You build, design, and optimize for your end user’s direct needs.

Core principles of Product Thinking:

  • Problem-Solution Fit: Focuses on identifying user pain points and building features to address them.
  • End-to-End Control: The business controls the user experience, the interface, and how users interact with the product.
  • Incremental Improvement: Iteration is centered around improving product usability and performance over time.

For example, an e-commerce brand selling skincare products might launch a sleek, intuitive website to help users browse and buy their line efficiently. The team optimizes for product pages, checkout flow, and delivery experience. Everything revolves around their own catalog and their own customer journey.

But what happens when growth stalls? When you’ve hit a ceiling on your customer base or product line? That’s where platform thinking comes in.

Over 60% of Amazon’s retail sales now come from third-party sellers, not Amazon’s own inventory.

That’s the power of platform thinking.

What is Platform Thinking?

Platform thinking shifts the focus from delivering value through a product to enabling others to create and deliver value within a shared infrastructure. It’s about building an ecosystem.

Core principles of Platform Thinking:

  • Enablement -> Ownership: The goal is not to serve all customer needs directly but to empower third parties—vendors, partners, creators—to do so.
  • Two-Sided or Multi-Sided Networks: Success depends on facilitating interactions between users, vendors, suppliers, or service providers.
  • Network Effects: More participants create more value, attracting even more users in a virtuous cycle.

Take Amazon: it started as a product-centric online bookstore. But it exploded into dominance when it transitioned to a platform, inviting third-party sellers onto its marketplace. Today, over 60% of items sold on Amazon are from these sellers. Amazon didn’t just build an e-commerce site—it built a platform that others build on.

From Product Thinking to Platform Thinking: Unlocking Business Innovation

Transitioning from a product to a platform mindset is not just a tech pivot—it’s a business model digital transformation.

Why make the shift?

  • Scale Beyond Internal Resources: You no longer have to create all the value. Your vendors, partners, and collaborators do it for you.
  • Faster Market Expansion: Onboard local and global sellers to reach new audiences without building new inventory.
  • Diversify Revenue Streams: Platforms can generate revenue through commissions, subscriptions, ads, or data insights.

How to begin the transition:

  • Think in Systems, Not Features: Rather than building a better cart or wishlist, ask: How can others plug into my ecosystem?
  • Prioritize Network Design: Define who the producers and consumers are on your platform—and how they interact.
  • Invest in Governance: Build rules, reputation systems, and data tools to keep the marketplace fair, trustworthy, and high-quality.

Artikate – From Single-Brand to Marketplace for Art Supplies

Product Phase: Artikate began as a single storefront offering curated art materials.

Platform Shift:

  • Onboarded 25+ vendors and 17,500+ products, transforming into a multivendor platform.
  • Allowed vendors to manage listings, inventory, and logistics through Shipturtle’s dashboard.
  • Implemented quality control, multi-courier shipping, and automated payouts to streamline operations.

Result: Scalable vendor base, real-time stock sync, and efficiency for both sellers and the platform.

Read full case study here.

Bazaa – Crafting a Vintage Furniture Marketplace

Product Phase: Initially focused on sustainable interiors via its own catalog.

Platform Shift:

  • Scaled to 1,570+ vendors and 14,245+ listings, becoming a full-fledged multivendor marketplace.
  • Offered vendor logins, independent inventory management, and a custom “make-an-offer” system.
  • Integrated multi-platform sync (Shopify, WooCommerce, Squarespace), and automated orders, logistics, and payouts.

Result: Empowered vendors with autonomy while maintaining a seamless customer experience.

Read full case study here.

Founders who embrace platform thinking unlock far more than scalability—they build ecosystems, empower communities, and future-proof their business. While product thinking helps launch your idea, platform thinking helps you grow beyond it.

The next Amazon, Airbnb, or Faire won’t be built with product features alone. It’ll be built by those who understand how to orchestrate networks, empower partners, and design with the platform mindset.

And with tools like Shipturtle, the leap from product to platform is no longer out of reach.

Applying Platform Thinking to Build a Digital Ecosystem of Multivendor Marketplaces

Whether you're launching a fashion marketplace or a hyperlocal delivery platform, platform thinking lets you grow through collaboration, not just effort.

Steps to build a marketplace platform:

1. Define the sides of the marketplace

  • Sellers: Who brings the supply? Are they brands, artisans, retailers, or resellers?
  • Buyers: What motivates users to join? Price, variety, niche focus, or curated experience?
  • Admins: What roles do you (the platform owner) play? Logistics, moderation, integrations?

2. Build tools for participants

Don’t just serve buyers—enable sellers.

Offer dashboards, analytics, payment integrations, and inventory sync tools to make their lives easier.

3. Create a win-win incentive model

Commission-based pricing, performance-based exposure, or loyalty perks can motivate sellers to grow with your platform.

4. Focus on trust & scalability

Build features like:

  • Rating & review systems
  • Dispute resolution workflows
  • Custom shipping logic
  • Real-time inventory sync
  • Tax, compliance, and payout infrastructure

If you're already running an online store, you're halfway there. The next step? Invite others to sell with you.

Use tools that make onboarding, syncing, and fulfillment easy—without code or custom development.

Introducing Shipturtle: A Platform to Transform Your Ecommerce Business

Making the leap to platform thinking may feel complex—but it doesn’t have to be.

Shipturtle is purpose-built to help founders launch, scale, and automate multivendor marketplaces without writing code or building custom tools from scratch.

What makes Shipturtle a platform enabler:

eNDE Project (Sportswear Marketplace)

Product Phase: Originally a brand-driven store, focusing on quality activewear.

Platform Shift:

  • Onboarded 80+ vendors and 646+ listings, embracing both B2C and C2C models.
  • Enabled individual sellers to list both new and pre-loved items alongside professional brands.
  • Centralized vendor onboarding, order tracking, shipping, returns, payouts, and reviews—all automated.

Result: A thriving, scalable marketplace blending commerce types, while significantly reducing manual overhead.

Read full case study here.

BearsClub (Apparel & Fashion Marketplace)

Product Phase: Started as an in-house fashion label selling private collections through a direct-to-consumer model.

Platform Shift:

  • Onboarded 60+ vendors and 3,500+ SKUs, expanding into a multivendor fashion marketplace.
  • Enabled partners to manage their own product catalogs, pricing, and fulfillment via a centralized dashboard.
  • Integrated shipping, payouts, vendor ratings, and catalog control to streamline backend operations.

Result: A curated fashion marketplace offering variety and scale, without expanding internal teams.


Read full case study here.

1,500+

Shipturtle customers like Bazaa and Artikate have scaled to 1,500+ vendors and 17,000+ SKUs with minimal operational overhead.

Whether you're running a B2C marketplace, a B2B wholesale network, or a hybrid retail model, Shipturtle lets you act like a platform from day one.

Book a demo to align its use cases with your business requirements.

FAQs

Is platform thinking right for my business if I’m just starting out?

Yes. Starting small with a platform mindset means you can build a scalable foundation—inviting collaborators, vendors, or partners as you grow.

How does Shipturtle handle payouts and commissions?

You can define custom commission models (flat, tiered, category-based), and integrate with Stripe, PayPal, or manual payout systems. Shipturtle automates invoicing, tax reports, and transaction breakdowns.

What types of marketplaces are best suited for platform thinking?

You can quickly build multivendor marketplaces in the following niche to take full potential of platform thinking:

How is a marketplace different from a typical online store?

A marketplace connects buyers with multiple sellers, each managing their own products, pricing, and fulfillment. A typical store sells only its own products.

Get advanced functionalities like C2C, reverse bidding, booking & scheduling options along with advanced shipping, configurable vendor management, payment features, and more. Install Shipturtle today from the Shopify App Store and enjoy a free trial to experience its benefits firsthand.

Want to learn more about how Shipturtle can benefit your business? Book a personalized demo with our sales team.

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