E-Commerce Blog

The Top 100 E-Commerce Abbreviations

E-Commerce Blog

The Top 100 E-Commerce Abbreviations

The Top 100 E-Commerce Abbreviations

Nico Kotsapanajotou

3. Juli 2021

14 min

There are numerous abbreviations in e-commerce, so it's easy to lose track of them all. If you think CTA is a computer game or 3P is a boy band, you should read this article.

The choice is yours!


1) Just keep scrolling and take a quick look at all the abbreviations,

2) or jump to our glossary and read the explanations,

3) or experience our interactive quiz and test your buzzword knowledge! (~10-12 min)


TOP 100 E-Commerce Abbreviations


3P Third Party

AI Artificial Intelligence

AMP Accelerated Mobile Pages

AOV Average Order Value

API Application Programming Interface

AR Augmented Reality

ASO App Store Optimisation

AWS Amazon Web Service

B2B Business To Business

B2C Business To Consumer

B2E Business To Employee

BI Business Intelligence

BR Bounce Rate

CAC        Customer Acquisition Cost

CAGR Compound Annual Growth Rate

CCR         Customer Churn Rate

CDN Content Delivery Network

CDO Chief Digital Officer

CEO  Chief Executive Officer

CFO Chief Financial Officer

CIO Chief Intelligence Office

CLV Customer Lifetime Value

CMO Chief Marketing Officer

CMS Content Management System

COD Cash On Delivery

COO Chief Operating Officer

CPA Cost Per Acquisition

CPC Cost Per Click

CPL Cost Per Lead

CPM Cost Per Mille

CR Conversion Rate

CRM Customer Relationship Mgmt.

CRO Conversion Rate Optimisation

CSS Cascading Style Sheets

CTA Call To Action

CTO Chief Technical Officer

CTR Click Through Rate

CX Customer Experience

D2C Direct To Consumer

DAM Data Asset Management

DNS Domain Name System

DOM Document Object Model

DWH Data Warhouse

EBIT Earnings Before Interes And Taxes

EDI Electronic Data Interchange

ERP Enterprise Resource Planning

FAQ Frequently Asked Questions

FCMG Fast Moving Consumer Goods

FTP File Transfer Protocol

FUD Fear, Uncertainty & Doubt

GCP Google Cloud Platform

GM General Manager

IPO Initial Public Offering

ISP Internet Service Provider

KPI Key Performance Indicator

LPO Landing Page Optimisation

LOI Letter Of Intent

M&A Mergers And Acquisitions

MACH Microservice API Cloud Headless

MAM Media Asset Management

MD Managing Director

MOM Month Over Month

MVP Minimum Viable Product

NDA None Disclosure Agreement

NPS Net Promoter Score

OKR Objectives And Key Results

OMS Order Management System

OS Operating System

P&L   Profit And Loss

PAAS Platform As A Service

PCI Payment Card Industry

PDP Product Detail Page

PIM Product Information Management

PLP Product Landing Page

POC Proof Of Concept

POS Point Of Sale

PSD2 Payment Services Directive 2

QOQ Quarter Over Quarter

RFI Request For Information

RFID Radio Frequency Identification

RFP Request For Proposal

ROAS Return On Ad Spend

ROI Return On Investment

RPU Revenue Per User

RTB Real Time Bidding

SAAS Software As A Service

SEA Search Engine Advertisement

SEM Search Engine Marketing

SEO Search Engine Optimisation

SERP Search Engine Result Page

SI System Integrator

SLA Service Level Agreement

SMB Small And Medium Sized Business

SMM Social Media Marketing

SSL Secure Sockets Layer

TCO Total Cost Of Ownership

TLD Top Level Domain

TOS Terms Of Service

UI User Interface

UGC User Generated Content

URL Uniform Resource Locator

USP Unique Selling Point

UX User Experience

VAT Value Added Tax

VP Vice President

VR Virtual Reality

WOW Week Over Week

YOY Year Over Year

YTD Year To Date



Got 'Em all? :) Then go for the quiz! (~10-12 min)


E-Commerce Glossary


Our glossary includes the TOP 100 of the common English abbreviations in e-commerce. These include:


System terms - Terms for systems of an e-commerce architecture

Marketing terms - Terms from the field of online marketing

Business terms - Terms from the strategic e-commerce sector

Technical terms - Terms from the tech sector

Job titles - Terms for job titles in e-commerce


System Terms


BI


Business Intelligence refers to company department in which data from all business areas is brought together and processed into analyses and dashboards. BI-Tools supply managers with important information regarding strategical decisions.


Examples for BI tools: Microsoft Power BI, Oracel BI, SAP BI, Yellowfin BI, Zoho Analytics, Tableau


CDN


A Content Delivery Network specialises in the hosting and fast delivery of data. The data (mostly image or video data) is hosted on a different server than the actual website and loaded in optimised formats for the user at the moment the page is called up.


Examples for CDN tools: Cloudflare, Fastly, Akamai


CMS


A Content Management System manages data that is used for the content design of websites. These include, for example, blog functions or landing pages. Often, online shops are complemented by content management systems due to their limited content capacities.


Examples for CMS tools: Wordpress, Joomla!, Drupal, Typo3, Graph CMS


CRM


Customer Relationship Management is the term used to describe the management of data relating to a company's customers. The focus here is primarily on the areas of communication, automation and analysis.


Examples for CRM tools: Hubspot, Salesforce


DAM


Digital Asset Management Tools are about managing complex media data around products. This includes, for example, files, images or videos.


Examples for DAM tools: Kontainer, Canto, Pixx.io, Online Media Net


DWH


A Data Warehouse is a database used to store and manage large amounts of current and historical information from various source systems. It often serves as the basis for business intelligence applications.


Examples for DWH tools: Amazon Redshift, Microsoft Azure, Google Big Query, Snowflake


ERP


Enterprise Resource Planning refers to systems that combine many core processes of a company. These usually include order management including invoicing, supply chain management (production, disposition, logistics of goods or information), reporting etc. While the classic ERP systems still tried to unite all information and processes in a monolithic system, today the topic of ERP is increasingly being broken up and divided into subsystems.


Examples for ERP tools: Microsoft Dynamics, Sage 100, Oracle NetSuite, SAP S/4HANA, Odoo


MAM


The distinction between a Media Asset Management Systems and a DAM is rather thin. In the past, MAM systems were more focused on video, but today both abbreviations actually refer to the same systems that are used to manage digital media.


Examples for MAM tools: Kontainer, Canto, Pixx.io, Online Media Net


OMS


Order Management Systeme are an "emancipation" from ERP systems and mostly serve to manage orders and create documents around the processing of an order.


Examples for OMS tools: Salesforce Commerce Cloud, Odoo, SAP Hybris, Adobe Commerce Cloud


PIM


A Product Information Management is a tool for central data storage of all product-relevant information. Often the master data for PIM systems comes from an ERP and is then enriched in the PIM and distributed from there to an online shop and other channels. Many modern PIM systems take over partial functions of DAM and MAM.


Examples for PIM tools: Akeneo, ContentServ, PimCore


Marketing Terms


AOV


The Average-order-value describes the average shopping basket size in an online shop. It indicates how much a user spends on an average order. The AOV is one of the central elements in the analysis of web shops.


ASO


App-Store-Optimisation is the optimisation of entries in the popular app stores of Apple and Google.


BR


The Bounce-Rate indicates how many users leave a website without having interacted with it. Not to be confused with the exit rate, which is measured individually for each sub-page and indicates the percentage of visitors who leave the website on which page. In contrast to the BR, a user can also have interacted with the page.


CCR


The Customer Churn Rate refers to the churn of customers. It is the opposite of customer acquisition and a natural process. The dissatisfaction with the products or services of a company is a factor that promotes customer churn. Therefore, nowadays, attempts are made to retain and reactivate customers in the long term in order to increase their lifetime value.


CLV


The Customer Lifetime Value refers to the total revenue that a customer will generate from all past and future orders. The determination of the customer lifetime value is a central element for the planning of marketing budgets.


CPA


The term Cost-per-acquisition comes from online marketing and refers to the average cost of acquiring a new customer through a marketing activity. CPA models are the most seller-friendly models, as costs are only charged if an order is placed.


CPC


The term Cost-per-click (also called PPC, "pay-per-click") also comes from online marketing and usually refers to the average cost of a click on an advertising asset such as a Google ad. CPC models are riskier than CPA models because the conversion is not yet certain and costs are still charged. Nevertheless, they are an important column of online marketing.


CPL


Cost-per-lead is a type of billing model between a company (in this case an advertiser) and an external service provider for the acquisition of new customers. In this model each lead, i.e. a customer who expresses a qualified interest (e.g. by subscribing to a newsletter), is billed.


CPM


Cost-per-Mille refers to the average cost of contacting 1000 customers within a marketing campaign. CPM models are very risky, as costs are already incurred even if no clicks are made. This already suggests a poor conversion rate. However, if the price is significantly lower, this can be used wisely, less for direct conversions but more for the topic of awareness or brand building, for example


CR


The Conversion Rate indicates the percentage of visitors to a website who reach a predefined goal. Mostly, the ratio of visitors to buyers is measured, but it can also be the submission of a form on a landing page. In e-commerce, the conversion rate is very strongly dependent on traffic quality, usability, the product/service itself and the price.


CRO


Conversion Rate Optimization is a marketing discipline for optimising the rates of customers who reach a predefined goal (e.g. a sale). It involves identifying and eliminating all obstacles that revent users from reaching their goal. An important element of CRO is the optimisation of the usability of websites. To measure the efficiency, so-called A/B testing tools are often used.


CTA


A Call-to-action is nothing more than a request for an acitivty of a customer and is usually represented by a button. It is intended to make the next most obvious action on a website clear and visible to the customer.


CTR


The Click-through-rate refers to the ratio between users who have seen an element and those who have clicked on it. It can be seen as a conversion rate for e.g. the click on an advertisement. The CTR serves as an important measuring instrument for the quality of an advertisement or the environment in which it is embedded.


CX


The Customer-Experience describes the experience of a customer with a company across the entire value chain. While the user experience looks at the usability of software or websites in a very technical way, the CX describes, for example, the entire shopping experience including support services.


KUR


KUR ist a German abbreviation (Kosten-Umsatz-Relation) and refers to the cost-turnover-ratio. It is used to measure the success of marketing activities and is calculated as the share of costs in turnover. A low KUR is desirable: KUR = costs / turnover (in percent).


LPO


Landing-Page-Optimization is the optimisation of target pages that usually present a very specific topic. So-called landing pages are usually very strongly conversion-optimised and serve a specific goal such as the registration for a newsletter for example.


M&A


The term Mergers-and-Acquisitions refers to a group of actions in which companies are merged or sold.


NPS


The Net-Promoter-Score is an indicator of the likelihood that a customer would recommend a product or service to others. It is a central element for customer-centric measurement of satisfaction in order to boost customer loyalty through feedback and to prevent churn.


ROAS


ROAS refers to the Return-on-ad-spend. The ratio describes the relationship between marketing expenses and turnover. Unlike the KUR (cost-revenue-ratio), ROAS does not describe the share of marketing costs in turnover, but the multiple of turnover compared to marketing costs: ROAS = (turnover / marketing costs) * 100 in percent.


RPU


Revenue-per-User is the turnover per customer. RPU = total revenue / number of customers.


RTB


THe term Real-Time-Bidding describes the allocation of advertising space in real time. Advertisers use platforms such as Google Ads and bid on keywords to fill advertising spaces. In real time it is calculated who will win the auction and thus the best position when the respective page is called up.


SEA


The tern SEA means Search Engine Advertisement and refers to the use of marketing tools on search engines. The best-known tool for this is Google Ads (formerly "Google Adwords") and it is actually impossible to imagine any digital business model without it.


SEM


Search Engine Marketing is the use of all marketing opportunities related to search engines. SEM is a discipline of online marketing and the umbrella term for the sub-disciplines SEA and SEO.


SEO


The Search Enginge Optimization refers to the optimisation of the editorial, non-advertising part of a search engine. The disciplines are divided into on-page optimisation (technical factors, content), off-page (backlinks, social signals) and analysis. Tools for analysing SEO activities are Sistrix, Ahrefs or Ryte. The Google Search Console is also important in this context.


SMM


Social Media Marketing refers to the commercial and promotional use of social media. In the process, attempts are often made to place advertising content as subtly and naturally as possible in seemingly private postings by influencers with a wide reach. In recent years, however, the legislator has increasingly obliged influencers to label advertising content.


UGC


User Generated Content is the use of media created by users to be displayed on company websites. Users are often encouraged to use certain hashtags in social media and special tools are used to identify, qualify and display this data on the web across different front ends. The pioneer for such technologies is the fashion industry.


WOW - MOM - QOQ - YOY


The terms Week-over-week, Month-over-month, Quarter-over-quarter and Year-over-year come from analytics and are used to analyse certain data sets over comparable time periods.


YTD


Year-to-date is the period from the beginning of a year until today. This can also be a fiscal year, which does not necessarily begin on January 1st.


Business Terms


3P


Third-Party means the outsourcing of business processes to third-party providers. The most common use of this concept is certainly 3PL ("third-party logistics"), where all logistics processes are outsourced to an external service provider.


B2B


The term Business-to-Business refers to a business model in which one company enters into a relationship with another company.


B2C


Business-to-Consumer is a business model in which a company sells to end customers.


C&C


The term Click-and-Collect refers to the digital ordering and physical collection of items. Consumers can buy and pay for their desired goods online and then pick them up on site.


D2C


The term Direct-to-Consumer refers to a business model in which a manufacturer or brand sells directly to end customers and does not use retailers.


EBIT - EBITDA


Unter Earnings-before-interest-and-taxes is a key figure for measuring the profitability of a company. It describes the difference between revenue and costs before interest and taxes. EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation) describes the profitability of a company and is EBIT supplemented by depreciation on tangible and intangible assets.


FMCG


The term Fast-moving-consumer-goods refers to everyday consumer goods that are characterised by a high turnover rate and a low price point.


P&L


P&L is the profit-and-loss account of a company in which expenses and income are compared.



IPO


An Initial-Public-Offering refers to the initial listing of a company at a stock exchange. German companies that are listed on the stock exchange must have one of the following legal forms: AG, KGaA or SE.


SMB


The term Small-and-medium-sized-businesses is a description for the size of a company with less than 1000 employees. A distinction is made between small enterprises (under 100 employees) and medium-sized enterprises (under 1000 employees). The German equivalent is KMU ("Kleine-und-mittelständische-Unternehmen"), but here the size specifications vary (Tiny < 10 empl., Small < 50 empl., Medium < 250 empl.).


KPI


A Key-Performance-Indicator is an indicator that represents company figures from various areas and is used to measure the degree of achievement of strategic goals.


OKR


The term Objectives-and-key-results is a management system for staff leadership. It involves matching qualitative goals with measurable results.


POS


Point-of-sale is the physical presence of a company where customers have direct contact with goods or services. The POS is the counterpart to online retail. Both sales strategies can have an extremely beneficial effect on each other if they interact seamlessly in wisely designed multichannel strategies.


RFP


A Request-for-Proposal is a document that describes an upcoming project of a company. It serves to communicate the framework conditions to service providers, who can then submit qualified offers. In highly complex e-commerce projects, this procedure is increasingly being replaced by agile methods such as MVPs (Minimum Viable Product) and rapid prototyping.


ROI


The Return-on-Investment describes the capital profitability of a company. Here, invested capital is set in relation to profit. ROI = return on sales * capital turnover.


TCO


Total-cost-of-ownership  is a method from cost accounting in which capital goods (e.g. software or hardware) are assigned not only the acquisition costs, but also future costs over the entire life span. The TCO makes it possible to compare capital goods with different cost structures, e.g. high acquisition costs vs. rising running costs.


USP


The Unique-Selling-Point (often also called Unique Value Proposition) is the main distinguishing feature of a company, a service or a product compared to its competitors. Especially in saturated markets, the USP gains in importance.


Technical Terms


AMP


Accelerated-Mobile-Pages are pages of a website that are not hosted by the actual hosting provider of the website, but are cached by a Google server and delivered at high speed. This technology is mostly used for news portals or newspapers, as their content contains few dynamic elements.


API


An Application-Programming-Interface is an interface between two digital systems. It allows the two systems to communicate with each other and exchange data.


AWS


The term Amazon-Web-Services refers to Amazon's own cloud. Various hosting models and services related to cloud computing are offered on it.


CSS


Als Cascading-Style-Sheets is a programming language used primarily for the visual modification of web pages. Together with HTML and Java, CSS forms the basic framework for programming pages in the World Wide Web.


DNS


The Domain-Name-System translates the IP addresses of websites into names. Thus, readable page names assigned during registration (e.g. "www.Zalando.de") can be used by individuals to find websites.


DOM


The Document-Object-Model is an interface for HTML and XML documents. With the help of the DOM, documents are logically defined in a tree structure at the ends of which there are nodes that contain objects. The DOM loading time is a key element of website performance optimisation.


EDI


The Electronic-Data-Interchange procedure is a process in which data is exchanged between several companies. In the process, the exchange of paper documents becomes obsolete and various industry associations (e.g.: furniture industry) agree on uniform standards within the framework of EDI. The focus is on fully automatic communication that makes human intervention unnecessary.


FTP


The File-Transfer-Protocol is a standardised network protocol used for the transfer of files. Files are transferred from servers to clients or from clients to servers.


GCP


The Google-Cloud-Platform is Google's own cloud. Various hosting models and services related to cloud computing are offered on it.


MACH


MACH is a modern approach to the orchestration of different software systems. MACH means Microservices-APIs-Cloud-Headless and forms the antithesis to monolithic systems in e-commerce.


OS


An operating system is a system that is required for the use of hardware. It is therefore the software that controls the hardware. The best-known operating systems are Windows (PC), Linux (PC), macOS (PC), iOS (mobile) and Android (mobile).


PAAS


The term Platform-as-a-Service comes from the hosting sector. It describes the provision of an environment in which the hosting is taken over by a service provider, but the customer has access to the development environment. In contrast to an on-premise solution, the customer does not take on any Dev-Ops activities, therefor he has nothing to do with hosting, but can employ in-house developers.


PDP


In online retailing, the product detail page describes the detail page for a product or service. Usually descriptions, images, prices, ratings and potential configuration options can be found here.


PLP


A Product-Listing-Page is an overview page of products or services. The PLP usually results from a category selection or a search query. On the PLP, images, prices, titles and, if applicable, ratings and variants are usually presented very briefly. Often the results can be specified with filters or subcategories.


SAAS


The term Software-as-a-Service describes a modern procedure for software hosting. The service provider not only takes over the hosting, but also the further development of the platform / software. SaaS solutions are always a good choice if you do not have any development know-how in the company.


SERP


Search-Engine-Results-Page refers to the results pages of search engines such as Google. They are the front end of the search engines. Nowadays, not only organic results are found in the SERPs, but also increasingly advertising content.


SLA


A Service-Level-Agreement describes an agreement between two contractual partners (B2C or B2B) in which the framework conditions for a service are defined. Typically SLAs are used in the field of hosting, where availability, response times and contractual penalties are usually specified.


SSL


The term Secure-Sockets-Layer describes a security protocol for authenticating websites. This signals to a consumer that a website uses a so-called SSL certificate and thus maintains a high security standard. Nowadays, SSL is indispensable; some browsers no longer call up websites without SSL.


TLD


A Top-Level-Domain is the last part of a web address. The best-known TLDs are .com, .net and in UK .co.uk - today there are many different top level domains.


UI


A User Interface is the part of a software that is visible to the end user.


UX


The User-Experience describes the experience of a user with a software or a website. A good user experience is usually supported by problem-free usability and clarity.


URL URI


A Uniform-Resource-Locator identifies and locates web pages on the Internet. The URL is the entire part of a web address: https://beispiel.de - whereas the Uniform Resource Identifier describes only the last part: example.de. The difference between a domain and a URL is also quite simple. The domain describes the URL of the start page (https://beispiel.de) while the URL can also address deep links (https://beispiel.de/subpage).


Job Titles


CDO

The Chief Digital Officer is responsible for all digital presences and processes of a company.


CEO

The Chief Executive Officer is the main responsible director of a company.


CIO

The Chief Information Officer  is responsible for all information and data in a company.

CFO

The Chief Financial Officer is responsible for all financial issues.


CMO

The Chief Marketing Officer is responsible for all marketing activities of a company.


COO

The Chief Operating Officer is responsible for the operational business.


CTO

The Chief Technical Officer is responsible for all technologies used in the company.


GM

The General Manager is responsible for a division of a company and reports to the MD..


MD

The Managing Director is responsible for one or more divisions of a company and reports to the Vice President.


VP

The Vice President is ususally located directly below the C-level of a company and reports to the CEO.



Wow, you came a long way! :) Then go for the quiz! (~10-12 min)


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