Data flows iWeb integrates
How this mid-market ERP fits the operational estate.
Questions we get asked.
What gets integrated between this ERP and ecommerce?
Pricing, stock, accounts, orders, invoices, dispatch confirmations, credit notes, customers and contacts. Exact scope is sized to how the operation actually runs the ERP.
Is the integration real-time?
Mixed. Stock and pricing are read on demand and cached at storefront read time. Orders post asynchronously through monitored queues. Reference data refreshes on a defined schedule. Cadence is tuned to ERP load.
Which commerce platforms has iWeb integrated this ERP with?
iWeb has 31 years of ERP integration experience across complex commerce estates. The integration pattern is platform-agnostic and applies wherever the architecture and integration surface support it.
Does iWeb claim a vendor partnership with this ERP?
No. iWeb is a capability provider rather than a vendor partner. The integration is built against the public surface and any agreed connectors, not against a partner badge.
Can a PIM sit alongside this ERP?
Yes. The ERP owns commercial data (price, stock, accounts). A PIM such as Akeneo owns enriched product data and channel rules. Commerce reads from both through their own connectors.
How is the integration monitored in production?
Queues, retries, dead-letter handling, alerts and reconciliation reports across storefront, middleware and ERP, with a written runbook the on-call team can act on.
What happens if the ERP is upgraded or its version changes?
The integration contract is versioned. Upgrades are scoped against the contract first; storefront-side changes follow only where the upgrade actually changes the boundary.
How does iWeb scope an ERP integration?
Discovery against the actual operational data flow, not the brochure. The integration surface, message contract, ownership and failure modes are written down before any build work begins.
Can iWeb take over an existing integration with this ERP?
Yes. The team reads the existing integration, message contracts and incident history first, then writes down what to fix first and what is safe to defer. The first month on support is deliberately conservative on change.
How are failures and dead-letter messages handled?
Every queue has an error budget, retry policy and dead-letter destination. Dead-letter items raise alerts and are triaged against the runbook rather than silently re-queued or dropped.
How is hosting and release governed?
Hosting, monitoring and the release process are tied to live trading. A named senior owner sits on both sides of the boundary so incidents have a route to resolution.
Can iWeb support multi-company or multi-territory estates?
Yes. Multi-company, multi-currency and multi-territory estates are wired against the actual ERP ledger rather than approximated, with the contract written down per company and per territory.





