Not long ago, marketplace growth conversations were dominated by one issue: product data. Brands struggled with inconsistent titles, missing attributes, weak categorization, scattered workflows, and the constant challenge of keeping product information aligned across channels.
For a long time, that was the bottleneck. Now the problem has shifted.
Enterprise brands have become much more mature in how they manage product data. In many cases, a Product Information Management system is no longer a differentiator. It is standard infrastructure. That matters because it changes the conversation from data readiness to execution readiness. As one industry perspective puts it, basically every enterprise brand is using a PIM. The question is no longer whether a business can organize product content. The question is whether it can operationalize that content across increasingly complex marketplace environments.
This is an important shift because it reflects how digital commerce has evolved. Product data is still essential, but for many large brands, it is no longer the primary barrier to growth. The real friction now appears after the data is prepared, when brands try to expand into more regions, support more marketplaces, and maintain consistent performance across far more operational variables.