Every growing e-commerce business faces the same make-or-buy decision across its operational functions: do we build this capability in-house, or do we outsource it to a specialist? The answer is rarely the same across functions, and it changes as the business scales. In our experience, the brands that get this right focus not on which option is theoretically “best” but on which functions are closest to their core competitive advantage — and outsource everything else that can be done adequately by a specialist at lower total cost.
The Framework: Keep vs. Delegate
Two questions determine whether a function should stay in-house:
- Is this function a source of competitive advantage? If yes, keep it in-house. If doing it better than competitors drives growth or retention, you want control over how it’s done.
- Can a specialist do this adequately at lower total cost? If yes, outsource it. “Total cost” includes not just the vendor fee but also the management overhead, opportunity cost of your time, and the risk of underperformance.
Fulfilment and Logistics
Lean toward outsourcing (3PL) when:
- Order volume is under 3,000–5,000 per month
- You don’t have management bandwidth to run a warehouse operation
- Your products are standard and don’t require specialised handling
- Geographic distribution is important and you can’t justify multiple warehouse locations in-house
Lean toward in-house when:
- Your unboxing experience is a core brand differentiator and requires packing precision a 3PL won’t deliver
- You have complex kitting, customisation, or made-to-order requirements
- Your order volume is high enough that in-house fulfilment unit economics beat 3PL rates
Customer Service
Lean toward outsourcing (contractors, BPO, or VA) when:
- Volume doesn’t justify a full-time in-house hire
- You need coverage across time zones you can’t reasonably staff in-house
- Ticket types are largely transactional (order status, returns, basic policy questions)
Lean toward in-house when:
- Your support is a key brand differentiator — personalised, high-touch service is part of your value proposition
- Tickets are complex or require deep product knowledge that takes significant time to transfer
- You’re selling high-value or bespoke products where a wrong answer is costly
Accounting and Finance
Lean toward outsourcing (bookkeeper, fractional CFO) when:
- You don’t have a finance background and lack the time to maintain clean books in-house
- Revenue is under $2–3M where a full-time finance hire isn’t warranted
- You need tax compliance expertise that requires a professional license
Lean toward in-house when:
- Revenue is above $3–5M and the volume of financial transactions justifies a dedicated bookkeeper or controller
- You have complex inventory accounting or multi-entity structures that require deep ongoing attention
Marketing and Content
Lean toward outsourcing (agency, freelancer) when:
- You need specialist expertise (paid search, influencer, PR) that doesn’t justify a full-time specialist in-house
- Work is project-based rather than continuous (website redesign, photo shoot production)
Lean toward in-house when:
- Your content is a primary growth driver and brand asset — in-house teams develop faster, cheaper, and more authentically over time
- You’re spending enough on a channel (e.g., paid social) that an in-house specialist is more cost-effective than agency fees
Technology and IT
Almost always outsourced for small e-commerce brands. Shopify, Zoho, and other SaaS platforms have eliminated most of the traditional IT infrastructure burden. Specialist technical support (custom app development, integrations, Shopify theme work) is typically hired on a project basis via freelancers or boutique agencies — maintaining in-house development capacity is rarely justified below $10M+ revenue.
The Common Mistake: Outsourcing Strategy
The most damaging outsourcing decision is outsourcing strategic functions — product selection, brand positioning, pricing strategy, customer relationship ownership. These functions require deep contextual knowledge, fast iteration, and accountability that external vendors can never fully replicate. Keep strategy in-house. Outsource execution of well-defined, bounded operational functions.
Frequently Asked Questions
What operations should a small e-commerce brand outsource first?
For most small e-commerce brands, the highest-value first outsourcing decisions are: (1) fulfilment to a 3PL once order volume exceeds 200–300 per month, and (2) bookkeeping to a part-time bookkeeper or accounting firm. These free up the most founder time at relatively low cost and risk.
What should I never outsource in e-commerce?
Never outsource the strategic decisions that define your brand: product selection, pricing strategy, brand voice, and customer relationship ownership. External vendors execute against a strategy you provide; they cannot substitute for the strategy itself.
How do I evaluate whether to bring an outsourced function in-house?
Build the business case using total cost comparison: fully-loaded in-house cost vs. fully-loaded outsourcing cost. Also consider strategic value — if the function is becoming central to your competitive advantage, bringing it in-house may be worth a cost premium for the control and capability development it provides.
What is a fractional CFO and when does an e-commerce brand need one?
A fractional CFO works with your business part-time to provide strategic financial oversight. E-commerce brands typically benefit from a fractional CFO when they reach $2–5M revenue and face decisions that require financial sophistication beyond what a bookkeeper provides.
Getting the make-or-buy decision right across your operations functions is one of the most impactful choices a growing e-commerce brand makes. If you’re evaluating your operational structure and want a structured framework for these decisions, OpsStack helps e-commerce brands design the right operating model for their stage and growth trajectory.
Keep reading
- How to Write a Job Description for an E-commerce Operations Manager
- The E-commerce Operations Playbook: From $500K to $5M (2026)
- How to Prepare Your E-commerce Operations for Peak Season
- How to Scale E-commerce Operations from 100 to 1,000 Orders Per Day
Need hands-on help? Explore our Fractional COO →