Course Content
M2: Headless Commerce
The world of eCommerce is changing. You might even say that it has lost its head. With consumers getting used to consuming content and making purchases through various touch points — from IoT devices to progressive web apps — legacy eCommerce platforms are struggling to keep up with the demands of the customer.
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M4: B2B eCommerce Platform Features
Business-to-business (B2B) eCommerce platforms cater to companies that sell their own products or services to other businesses. B2B eCommerce platforms are popular with companies looking to diversify their revenue streams.
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M5: Adobe Magento Commerce
Adobe commerce (formerly Magento Commerce) has proven to be a popular choice for enterprise eCommerce brands. According to Salmon, Magento accounts for 31.4% of top 100,000 eCommerce sites.
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M6: Adobe Magento 2 Migration
Adobe Magento powers around 9 percent of the world’s eCommerce sites — and a great number of those users are at a crossroads: Should we go through the process of migrating to Magento 2, or should we explore pastures anew?
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M7: Speed Up Your Website and Applications
Site speed is critical for a successful website. Speed affects everything from a website's visibility on SERPs to conversion rates, engagement, and overall customer satisfaction. Needless to say, optimizing your website's speed is a necessity, but that doesn't make figuring out how to do it any easier.
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M8: Panama Papers: 2 Key Breaching Open Source Platforms
The hacking of Mossack Fonseca’s client portal leaked over 11.5 million documents, 4.8 million emails and 2.6TB of data - the largest leak in history. Prime ministers have resigned, business people are being scrutinized and over 30 countries have launched investigations against individuals and companies.
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M9: Contentstack
Deciding on your next content management system can depend on several factors, including your current tech stack, the requirements of different departments, your current priorities and where you see your business heading in the future.
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Case Study 1: Did You Start Up a New Media Behemoth in 2005? These Guys Did…
Does the year 2005 feel like yesterday to you? Can you believe we’re now laying on the nostalgia about the events of just over 10 years ago?!
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Case Study 2: What Does Adobe Acquiring Magento Mean For..?
“Adobe to Acquire Magento Commerce” was the straightforward headline of the press release that popped up in my news alert. Just five simple words. And yet, their impact could be tremendous. An impact that will be felt differently, depending on your role and relationship with these two software companies.
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Case Study 3: Music Streaming No Longer Just For Men on Pirate Ships
You know it’s an election year when every face on your TV is suddenly an expert in human psychology.
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Case Study 4: Core dna vs BigCommerce vs Shopify Plus: Platform Standoff
This lesson will analyze BigCommerce, Shopify Plus, and Core dna to see which platform best suits forward-thinking online retailers looking to provide experiences, not just products.
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Case Study 5: Acquia Acquired For $1B: What Does It Mean For Their Future?
The acquisition (or should we say, Acquiasition) may not come as a surprise to those who have followed Acquia’s story closely over the past few years. In a 2018 article for Xconomy, CEO of Acquia, Michael Sullivan, hinted that the company might end up selling “to accelerate (growth) even faster.”
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Case Study 6: The Amazon Survival Guide: Thriving in The Age of Amazon
Amazon’s dominance over the eCommerce market is almost scary. 44% of all product searches, in fact, start with Amazon. They own 43% of all U.S. online retail sales. That’s almost half the market!
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Case Study 7: Ascedia – Providing A Headless Solution For Standard Process (Case Study)
How Ascedia helped nutritional supplement giant, Standard Process, rewrite the way they engaged with their customers.
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Assessment + Professional Diploma Certificate
eCommerce Platform Strategist

Music Streaming No Longer Just For Men on Pirate Ships

You know it’s an election year when every face on your TV is suddenly an expert in human psychology.

Clearly we’re there again, as Trump v Clinton starts to heat up and we’re all trying to work out what the heck to make of that. It’s a different election year we want to talk about here, however.

Back in 2008, two whole election cycles ago, President Obama won the race to The White House ahead of the Republican odd couple John McCain and Sarah Palin (can you believe Palin-Mania was a whole 8 years ago!?).

Meanwhile in sports, the Olympics made their way to China for the very first time and Eli Manning led the New York Giants to their first Superbowl win since 1990 over Tom Brady’s New England Patriots (we’re really sorry for bringing that up Boston).

In music news, Beyonce was again topping the charts, driving a viral dance video smash with Single Ladies, since replicated by way too many oversized men in leotards on YouTube.

Still on music and Queen Bey. Many years before she and Jay-Z started their own music streaming service, Tidal. 2008 saw the launch of the seminal player in that format, Spotify.

2008 was clearly a leap year for new tech-based startups because we also saw the rise of entertainment media giants Hulu, cloud storage standard bearer Dropbox, the Airbnb of the travel sharing economy… um… Airbnb, and pioneers of online group buying Groupon.

Prior to the year 2008, a sentence featuring the words music and online would usually also include the words pirate or piracy.

To that point, Napster had become the global, soon illegal, standard for downloading and sharing music online, and after launching in 1999 became the fastest growing business ever.

Lawsuits for copyright violations eventually crushed the service only 2 years after it was founded and attempts to legally and legitimately stream music online followed with MusicNet (2001) and Pandora (2004) paving the way.

In 2008 however, it was the launch of Spotify in Sweden, originally by invitation only, that really changed the game with its Freemium business model, improved audio quality, and an ability for users to download music and listen offline.

It wasn’t until July 2011 that the service launched in the US but today Spotify boasts over 30m subscribers in 50+ languages listening to over 20m different songs.

Although business is showing no sign of slowing, the 2015 launch of Apple Music, along with the rise of smaller competitors such as Deezer and Tidal has made it a tougher challenge.

Meanwhile, debate continues to rage within the industry about the slice of the revenue pie going back to the artists with struggling indie musician Taylor Swift penning a little note to the world about her reasons for holding back her smash album 1999 from Apple Music (thought by many suspicious conspiracy theorists to be an Apple Music paid initiative given the public peace process between Swift and Apple that followed).

Taytay

Source: Time

It’s hard to imagine a time when the term Spotify was merely a misheard word shouted by co-founder Martin Lorentzon to his other co-founder Daniel Elk but it’s fast become the generic term for streaming music.

It is now a huge global corporation valued at $8.4b but not so long ago Spotify was just a “Newbie” trying to disrupt a music industry going through a turbulent period and ripe for disruption.