By James Rigg, CEO of Trojan Electronics
Brands are finding themselves increasingly at the mercy of online marketplaces in this current climate, especially after the drive for prioritising convenience. Platforms such as Amazon and other online marketplaces offer access to a vast customer base, yet the cost of participation is high: brands surrender ownership of their customer relationships, their data, and often their very identity.
When operating solely through marketplaces, companies are afforded minimal visibility into customer data. This lack of insight stifles opportunities to personalise experiences, build meaningful loyalty, understand evolving audiences, and inform product strategy. Without direct access to their customers, brands are forced to compete mainly on price, which undermines both their profit margins and long-term brand equity. It also limits their ability to remarket effectively, reducing opportunities to drive repeat purchases, introduce new products, or share seasonal promotions. As a result, brands must continuously invest in acquiring new customers from scratch rather than nurturing existing ones, driving up acquisition costs and making sustainable growth more difficult to achieve.
Direct-to-Consumer: a strategic advantage
Direct-to-consumer (D2C) ecommerce offers a way forward. By establishing their own platforms, brands can reclaim customer data, shape the full purchasing experience, and strengthen loyalty over time. Control of the customer journey allows for tailored engagement and product recommendations, direct communication, and emotional storytelling that extends beyond a transaction. It also enables brands to fully express their identity, from visual merchandising and tone of voice to the overall look and feel of the site, providing a consistent, immersive brand experience across all touchpoints.
Creative content on TikTok and Instagram helps to elevate your brand and drive customers to your site, and traditional channels like email and SMS, which are often unavailable via marketplace sales, can also be leveraged to build stronger customer relationships and nurture long-term engagement. D2C models also unlock higher margins by eliminating marketplace fees and provide avenues for upselling, cross-selling and subscription-based revenue. Another benefit is the ability to send samples of new products to your most loyal customers to stimulate demand or give feedback on a new trial from the intended audience. Brands that embrace this approach can not only differentiate themselves but build long-term relationships that are difficult to replicate through third-party marketplaces.
In addition, gaining access to granular first-party purchase data enables brands to build a deeper understanding of buyer behaviour and transactional trends across time and give real-time access to consumer responses to advertising and promotions. Analysing data points such as average order value, purchase frequency, time-to-repeat purchase, basket composition, and channel attribution allows businesses to construct predictive models and behavioural segments that inform everything from dynamic pricing to subscription models to whole lifecycle marketing strategies.
With this intelligence, brands can personalise offers using data-driven logic, deliver optimised product recommendations through machine learning algorithms, and refine retention campaigns with precision targeting. Ultimately, this level of insight transforms customer engagement from reactive to anticipatory, improving both conversion rates and lifetime value.
The risks of over-reliance
Yet despite these advantages, many brands continue to depend on a narrow set of platforms. This dependence carries clear risks. Marketplaces have the power to alter algorithms, raise fees, change policies and suppress your listings or even sometimes your store, moves that can drastically affect visibility, profitability, and customer reach with little warning. Relying on a single route to market is inherently fragile. Businesses must instead look to diversify.
This is not a theoretical concern. It is a structural weakness in how many ecommerce strategies are built today. Algorithms can suppress listings without warning. Policies can shift without consultation. Fees can rise with no recourse. Brands must ask themselves whether they can afford to keep building in someone else’s ecosystem.
Diversification is not just about managing risk. It is about regaining access to what matters most: your customers. When brands sell exclusively through major marketplaces, they forfeit direct access to customer data and communications. This means no insight into who their customers are, what motivates repeat purchases, or how preferences are shifting over time. Instead, that valuable information stays locked within the marketplace’s ecosystem, used to strengthen the platform rather than the brand. Without access to email addresses, purchase histories or browsing behaviours, businesses lose the ability to build profiles, deliver targeted marketing, or foster loyalty over time. Diversifying beyond marketplaces, particularly by investing in D2C infrastructure, restores this lost visibility and control. It ensures brands can truly understand and engage their audience and future-proof themselves against the unpredictable changes dictated by third-party platforms.
Support to reclaim control
While the strategic shift to D2C and multichannel models is clear, executing it effectively can present operational challenges. Businesses often need support to coordinate fulfilment, integrate ecommerce systems, and manage multiple sales channels without losing focus on their core offer. Looking for an external party to assist in this transition could relieve this pressure, providers provide the underlying infrastructure for seamless ecommerce integration to fulfilment logistics.
Scaling a direct-to-consumer model requires careful coordination across customer acquisition, promotional pricing, fulfilment, product management and customer service. Brands need to be able to introduce new offers, respond to customer behaviour in real time, and maintain a consistent experience from purchase to delivery, including how items are presented and returned. These operational details play a crucial role in maintaining customer satisfaction and ensuring the brand experience is not diluted in the process.
A sustainable path forward
For businesses looking to reduce marketplace dependence, the path forward is clear: take control of customer data, invest in direct-to-consumer capability, diversify sales channels, and invest in long-term brand strategy. While this journey requires commitment, companies don’t have to go it alone.
There is no single formula for success, but brands that are willing to adapt, invest in their customer relationships, and build out resilient ecommerce operations will be better positioned to weather future disruption. As consumer expectations continue to evolve, flexibility, ownership and data insight will become the cornerstones of sustainable growth.
The brands that act now will be the ones that define the next chapter in commerce.






