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Home > Projects > HP

Hewlett-Packard: Defining the Future Ecommerce Architecture for HP Parts

How Elogic helped HP evaluate custom development vs enterprise commerce platforms for its global spare parts store

Hewlett-Packard: Defining the Future Ecommerce Architecture for HP Parts

Overview

Hewlett-Packard operates multiple digital commerce platforms supporting device sales, accessories, and replacement parts across global markets. One of the key digital channels is the HP Parts Store, which enables customers and partners to purchase replacement components and accessories online.

HP initiated a strategic discovery initiative to determine the most sustainable architecture for the next phase of its ecommerce development.

The central question was whether to continue investing in a fully custom ecommerce solution or transition to a modern enterprise commerce platform capable of supporting global scale and faster feature delivery.

To support this initiative, HP partnered with Elogic Commerce, a global ecommerce consulting and development agency with Certified experts in Adobe Commerce (Magento), Shopify Plus, and Salesforce Commerce Cloud.

Key Discovery Outcomes

The discovery phase produced a detailed architectural assessment and platform comparison.

Project highlights included:

These insights enabled HP to make a well-informed strategic decision about the future of its spare parts ecommerce ecosystem.

01

4 ecommerce platforms evaluated

02

60+ functional and technical requirements documented

03

25+ enterprise integrations analyzed

04

3 architecture scenarios modeled (custom, hybrid, platform-based)

05

30–40% potential reduction in long-term development costs identified with platform adoption

The Challenge

HP’s parts ecommerce platform needed to support a highly complex environment that included:

  • Large spare-parts catalogs
  • Advanced product search and compatibility logic
  • Integrations with internal enterprise systems
  • Global ordering workflows for customers and partners

While the existing architecture supported these operations, scaling the platform and delivering new features required increasing development effort.

HP needed a clear understanding of whether continuing with a custom architecture or adopting an enterprise ecommerce platform would provide the most sustainable long-term solution.

Discovery Approach

Elogic conducted a structured ecommerce discovery process designed to evaluate both technical feasibility and business impact.

The engagement focused on three core areas.

Requirements and System Analysis

The first phase focused on understanding HP’s ecommerce ecosystem and defining the technical requirements for the future platform.

Our team analyzed:

  • spare parts catalog structure and data management
  • product search and ordering workflows
  • integrations with internal systems and services
  • scalability requirements for global ecommerce operations

This stage resulted in a comprehensive requirements framework that guided the platform evaluation process.

Custom vs Platform Architecture Comparison

A key deliverable of the discovery phase was a detailed side-by-side comparison of custom and platform-based approaches.

The analysis evaluated:

  • total cost of ownership (TCO)
  • development velocity and time-to-market
  • infrastructure and maintenance requirements
  • long-term scalability and platform flexibility

This comparison provided HP with a clear view of the trade-offs between continuing custom development and adopting an enterprise commerce platform.

Strategic Impact

At the conclusion of the discovery phase, Elogic delivered a comprehensive platform strategy package that included:

  • a detailed platform comparison report
  • architecture recommendations for the future ecommerce environment
  • implementation roadmap scenarios
  • projected development and operational cost models

These insights helped HP reduce architectural risk and establish a clear strategic direction for the future of its ecommerce platform.