Shopify Plus Migration Best Practices

Table of Contents

The Complete Shopify Plus Migration Guide

Rapid technological advancements, the rise of AI, and the escalating costs of skill development and cybersecurity have made eCommerce replatforming in 2025 more appealing than ever — especially for enterprise and high-growth brands looking to scale efficiently.

Many of these businesses are choosing Shopify Plus migration for its robust feature set, enterprise scalability, and consistent, transparent costing — a welcome contrast to the variable expenses often associated with legacy platforms.

At Aware, we’ve spent over two-decades building and managing complex eCommerce systems on Magento, OpenCart, and WooCommerce. These platforms have served brands well, but in today’s environment — where speed, security, and maintenance transparency are critical — they’re increasingly difficult to maintain without significant overhead. For many of our clients, the move to Shopify Plus isn’t just a convenience; it’s a strategic transformation that enables faster innovation, reduced total cost of ownership (TCO), and cleaner scalability.

This Shopify Plus Migration Guide is built to be the definitive resource for eCommerce brands in Thailand and across Southeast Asia, preparing to replatform. From pre-migration audits to post-launch optimization, we’ll walk through each phase in depth — backed by real-world case studies, checklists, and templates you can apply immediately.

We’ll also highlight brands already thriving on Shopify Plus — and the tangible results they’ve seen in conversion rates, load speeds, and operational efficiency since the switch.

Migration Case Study: Slinger

Over the past few years, we’ve seen an undeniable shift in how enterprise eCommerce brands think about their technology stacks. The priorities have evolved — from owning every piece of infrastructure to prioritizing speed, scalability, and predictable costs. Shopify Plus has emerged as the platform of choice for growing brands who want to move faster without sacrificing performance or flexibility.

Traditional platforms like Magento or WooCommerce often demand significant ongoing investment — from server maintenance and plugin updates to security patches and developer hours. Shopify Plus flips that model on its head.

Because it’s fully hosted, Shopify Plus eliminates the need for expensive server management or third-party security tools. Your team can focus on sales, campaigns, and innovation — not firefighting.

  • Faster page load times = higher conversions
  • Automatic scaling = no downtime on flash sales or peak season
  • Lower TCO = no surprise infrastructure bills or developer retainers

For many enterprise teams, the move to Shopify Plus is as much a financial decision as a technical one.

Shopify Plus now offers robust headless commerce capabilities, meaning you can decouple your front end (storefront) from the back end. Brands can run custom storefronts — like React, Next.js, or Hydrogen — while still leveraging Shopify’s powerful APIs for checkout, product data, and inventory.

Combine that with an ecosystem of over 8,000 apps and integrations — from ERP connectors to marketing automation — and Shopify Plus quickly becomes a platform that can grow with your business, not against it.

Security is non-negotiable for enterprise commerce. Shopify Plus offers Level 1 PCI DSS compliance, automatic SSL certificates, and continuous monitoring. It handles billions in global transactions annually, so reliability is proven, not promised.

With 99.99% uptime and globally distributed infrastructure, Shopify Plus ensures that your store stays online — even during flash sales, regional holidays, or viral marketing spikes.

Combine that with an ecosystem of over 8,000 apps and integrations — from ERP connectors to marketing automation — and Shopify Plus quickly becomes a platform that can grow with your business, not against it.

In Thailand and Southeast Asia, Shopify Plus has built a strong partner ecosystem. From local payment gateways like Omise and 2C2P, to Thai-language customer service, and shipping integrations with carriers such as Flash Express and Kerry, the ecosystem is mature and ready for enterprise use.

Shopify’s growing agency network in the region — including certified Plus partners — also makes it easier for brands to find local expertise for migration, customization, and ongoing optimization

Before diving into a Shopify Plus migration, proper planning is everything. Many brands rush to export data or redesign their store before truly understanding what needs to be migrated — and what should be left behind. The goal of this phase is simple: prevent chaos later by auditing and aligning your team now.

A smooth migration begins long before any CSV files are touched. This is your opportunity to clean up legacy systems, eliminate redundancies, and establish a clear migration roadmap that reduces errors, preserves SEO, and ensures your new Shopify Plus site launches flawlessly.

Platform Cost Comparison

Platform Cost Comparison

Shopify Plus Magento Commerce
Subscription Costs Starting from $2,300/month or a variable platform fee for more complex business structures. $22,000 to $125,000 per year, depending on company size and customisation. [source]

The Magento Commerce Cloud version starts at $40,000 annually and also scales with revenue.

Hosting Included in subscription Separate costs for hosting
Long-Term Costs Additional app and integration costs High ongoing costs for development, hosting, and maintenance
Transaction costs Without Shopify Payments: Additional 0.20% per transaction Only third-party provider expenses

Note: This data is based on the information provided in the comparison table image.

Audit Your Current Setup

Start with a comprehensive audit of your existing eCommerce infrastructure. This helps you understand what’s working, what’s broken, and what needs improvement before moving to Shopify Plus.

Here’s what to include in your audit:

  • Pages & Content: Catalog all key URLs — homepage, product pages, blogs, landing pages, FAQs, etc.
  • Products & Collections: Note your total SKUs, categories, variants, and any hidden products or special pricing rules.
  • URLs & Redirects: Document URL structures and existing redirects. Maintaining SEO continuity is vital post-migration.
  • SEO Metadata: Export titles, meta descriptions, and structured data for key pages.
  • Custom Code: Review any bespoke modules, scripts, or custom checkout logic that may need to be re-created or replaced using Shopify apps or APIs.

Pro Tip: Run a mini SEO crawl using Screaming Frog or Ahrefs before exporting data. This will give you a full picture of all indexed pages, broken links, and redirect chains that could impact your Shopify Plus migration.

Define Your Must-Haves

Next, identify what features and integrations are non-negotiable for your team. This helps avoid scope creep and ensures you’re building the right foundation — not just copying the old setup.

Ask your stakeholders these key questions:

  • What integrations are mission-critical (ERP, CRM, fulfillment, or POS)?
  • What features must be replicated (custom pricing tiers, loyalty points, multilingual support)?
  • What reports or analytics do you rely on daily?
  • What checkout flow or payment logic is essential?

Creating a “must-have” document forces alignment across marketing, operations, and development teams. It also helps your Shopify Plus Partner prioritize configurations and app selections that truly matter.

Backup and Inventory Mapping

Data integrity is everything in a migration. Before you touch anything, back up your entire store database — including product catalogs, customer data, orders, and site content.

Next, build an inventory mapping document to track how your current data will map into Shopify Plus fields. For example:

Field Mapping Table
Legacy Field Shopify Field Notes
SKU_ID Handle Standardize naming conventions
product_title Title Adjust for Shopify's SEO-friendly URL logic
product_image_url Media Reupload to ensure optimal compression

Clean, organized data means fewer surprises when importing. It also prevents common issues like missing variants, broken images, or mismatched SKUs.

Your store’s data — products, customers, and orders — is its lifeblood. Getting this step right means everything else (design, marketing, fulfillment) can build on solid ground.

Key data types to migrate:

  • Products and Collections: Titles, descriptions, SKUs, pricing, inventory levels, tags, and product images.
  • Customers: Names, contact info, order history, loyalty points, account creation dates, and marketing preferences.
  • Orders: Past transactions, statuses, fulfillment data, payment history, and tax records.

Best practices:

  1. Use Shopify’s native import/export tools for small stores or the Shopify Plus Transporter app for large-scale migrations.
  2. Clean and normalize data first. Remove duplicates, fix inconsistent naming, and ensure SKUs match your new system’s format.
  3. Migrate in batches. Don’t dump everything in one go — test 10–20 SKUs, review them, and verify that data types display correctly.
  4. Validate relationships. Ensure products are linked correctly to collections and categories.

Pro Tip: Always test imports on a staging environment — not your live domain. This allows safe debugging and ensures your live launch stays clean.

Assign Responsibilities

A successful Shopify Plus migration requires a clear division of responsibilities. Treat this like a mini project team with defined owners for every phase.

Marketing SEO audit, redirects, and content migration

Developers Data migration scripts, integrations, API testing

Design Theme customization, layout consistency

QA/Testers Validate all product pages, cart, and checkout flows

Shopify Partner / Agency Overall migration oversight, app setup, and troubleshooting

This structure prevents gaps and ensures every stakeholder knows when their part is duereducing launch-day stress.

Shopify X Skullcandy

The Migration Process: Step-by-Step to a Flawless Shopify Plus Launch

After weeks of planning, auditing, and mapping, the real work begins — actually moving your store to Shopify Plus. This is where precision, patience, and strong QA discipline make all the difference.

A single broken redirect or missing data field can have a measurable impact on SEO, sales, and user trust.

Below, we’ll break down each step of a smooth, enterprise-grade Shopify Plus migration process — from importing your data to going live with full confidence.

This implementation is actually mission-critical to the entire project, it’s essential you align all your pages and redirect the broken pages, retaining your website’s organic search value and make the transition as seamless as possible fo your customers.

Step 1: Data Migration – The Backbone of Your Store

Your store’s data — products, customers, and orders — is its lifeblood. Getting this step right means everything else (design, marketing, fulfillment) can build on solid ground.

Key data types to migrate:

  • Products and Collections: Titles, descriptions, SKUs, pricing, inventory levels, tags, and product images.
  • Customers: Names, contact info, order history, loyalty points, account creation dates, and marketing preferences.
  • Orders: Past transactions, statuses, fulfillment data, payment history, and tax records.

Best practices:

  1. Use Shopify’s native import/export tools for small stores or the Shopify Plus Transporter app for large-scale migrations.
  2. Clean and normalize data first. Remove duplicates, fix inconsistent naming, and ensure SKUs match your new system’s format.
  3. Migrate in batches. Don’t dump everything in one go — test 10–20 SKUs, review them, and verify that data types display correctly.
  4. Validate relationships. Ensure products are linked correctly to collections and categories.

Pro Tip: Always test imports on a staging environment — not your live domain. This allows safe debugging and ensures your live launch stays clean.

Step 2: Design Migration – Rebuild or Refresh?

Your site’s visual identity is what users recognize first, so design migration deserves special care.

You have two main paths here:

Option A: Rebuild on a New Shopify Plus Theme

Most brands take this opportunity to reimagine UX with Shopify 2.0 themes (e.g., Dawn, Prestige, or custom builds).

  • Faster performance and modular sections
  • Flexible drag-and-drop content areas
  • Easier long-term maintenance

If you’re coming from Magento or WooCommerce, a rebuild can cut technical debt by up to 40%, while improving conversion rates through modern UX standards.

Option B: Replicate Existing Design

If your design is already optimized and aligns with your brand, you can replicate it using Shopify’s Liquid and JSON templates.

This approach prioritizes continuity, especially if your audience is used to your current layout and navigation.

Design tip: Create a UI/UX mood board before migration to identify what stays, what improves, and what’s no longer needed.

Step 3: Feature Parity Check – Apps, APIs, and Integrations

Your old platform likely uses custom plugins or extensions for discounts, search, loyalty, or analytics.

To maintain full functionality, run a feature parity checklist that maps each existing feature to its Shopify Plus equivalent.

Old Platform FeatureShopify Plus ReplacementNotes

Custom checkout logic Shopify Scripts / Checkout Extensibility Built-in flexibility for tiered pricing or wholesale

Loyalty & rewards Smile.io, LoyaltyLion Easy plug-and-play integrations

Advanced search Searchanise, Algolia AI-powered search and filtering

ERP / CRM Shopify API or Flow Custom integration via app or middleware

Once you’ve identified gaps, your Shopify Plus Partner can recommend whether to use a prebuilt app or custom development via Shopify’s API.

Pro Tip: Don’t try to migrate every feature 1:1 — many old plugins are redundant or can be replaced with Shopify-native workflows.

Step 4: SEO Preservation – Don’t Lose Your Rankings

One of the biggest fears during migration is losing organic traffic. Fortunately, with the right SEO hygiene, you can preserve your hard-earned authority.

Checklist for SEO continuity:

  • 301 Redirects: Map every old URL to its new Shopify equivalent. For large stores, use a CSV upload or an app likeMatrixify.”
  • Canonical Tags: Ensure all pages point to the correct canonical URL, avoiding duplication.
  • Meta Data Transfer: Retain page titles, meta descriptions, and alt tags from your legacy site.
  • Sitemap & Robots.txt: Regenerate and submit your new sitemap in Google Search Console.
  • Analytics & Tagging: Reinstall Google Analytics, GA4, Meta Pixel, and Tag Manager before launch.

Pro Tip: Crawl your site before and after launch to confirm all redirects resolve with 200 OK status codes — no 404 errors hiding in the shadows.

Step 5: Payments, Taxes, and Shipping – Localize for Thailand

Shopify Plus supports a wide range of global and Thai-specific integrations, but localization can make or break user experience.

Payments:

  • Enable trusted local gateways like Omise, 2C2P, GB Prime Pay, or international ones like Stripe and PayPal.
  • Test multi-currency checkout if you serve ASEAN customers.

Taxes:

  • Configure VAT logic for B2B/B2C sales.
  • Automate tax invoices with apps like Sufio or Simple Invoice (especially for Thai compliance).

Shipping:

  • Integrate with Thai couriers (Kerry Express, Flash, SCG Yamato, J&T) through ShippyPro or EasyShip.
  • Offer free delivery thresholds and clear tracking options.

Localization not only improves trust but also reduces checkout abandonment rates by up to 22% in Thai markets.

Step 6: UAT (User Acceptance Testing) – The Final Gate Before Go-Live

No matter how confident you feel, never skip User Acceptance Testing.

UAT ensures your migrated data, design, and integrations work flawlessly under real-world conditions.

What to test:

  • Add-to-cart and checkout flow (all payment methods)
  • Discounts, vouchers, and coupon codes
  • Mobile vs desktop performance
  • Form submissions (contact, signup, newsletter)
  • Fulfillment process (order creation to shipping label)

Testing tips:

  • Use a sandbox payment gateway to simulate transactions.
  • Have your QA, marketing, and customer service teams run through test orders.
  • Test on both desktop and mobile — most Shopify Plus traffic in SEA comes from mobile users.

 

Redirection Example - Old to New Site

Post-Migration Optimization: Turning Stability into Scalability

You’ve migrated. The new Shopify Plus store is live. Orders are flowing, and your team can finally breathe.
But the work doesn’t stop here — this phase determines whether your migration becomes a growth engine or just a cosmetic facelift.

Post-migration optimization is about monitoring performance, refining user experience, and validating that your SEO and conversion metrics remain strong (or improve). Think of it as your 30-day fine-tuning window — where small optimizations deliver big returns.

Monitor Search Console & Analytics for Crawl and Indexing Health

The first 2–4 weeks post-launch are critical for search visibility. Google needs to re-crawl and re-index your new URLs — and any missteps here can cause temporary ranking dips.

Your monitoring checklist:

  • Google Search Console (GSC):
    • Check “Coverage” for errors like 404 Not Found or Redirect Errors.
    • Monitor “Page Indexing” → look for “Crawled – currently not indexed” issues.
    • Validate sitemaps to ensure all URLs are discoverable.
  • Google Analytics / GA4:
    • Compare traffic vs pre-migration benchmarks.
    • Segment by device and geography to identify early UX or tracking issues.

You can also use the new and improved Shopify Analytics.

Fine-Tune Speed: Image Compression, App Cleanup & Lazy Loading

Even though Shopify Plus is optimized for performance, migrations often bring over bloated assets — oversized images, redundant apps, or unnecessary scripts.
Use tools like PageSpeed Insights or GTmetrix to run diagnostics, then address common culprits:

  • Compress media: Use apps like TinyIMG or Crush.pics to automatically compress large images.

  • Remove app bloat: Audit your installed apps — many stores run 20+ but only use 8–10 actively. Each one adds load time.

  • Lazy load content: Defer below-the-fold images or videos until users scroll.

Optimize Content for Conversions

With the new platform live, revisit your high-traffic pages — product pages, landing pages, and blog posts.
Ensure your content isn’t just ranking, but converting.

Tactical tweaks:

  • Add clear CTAs above the fold (“Buy Now,” “Book a Demo,” “Start Your Trial”).

  • Use social proof — reviews, UGC, or trust badges.

  • Refine product descriptions with benefit-led copy and real product imagery.

  • A/B test key sections like headlines or CTA buttons using Shopify’s native experiments or Google Optimize alternatives.

Shopify Plus’s analytics integrations (like Hotjar or Lucky Orange) make it easy to identify where users drop off and what keeps them engaged.

  • Compress media: Use apps like TinyIMG or Crush.pics to automatically compress large images.

  • Remove app bloat: Audit your installed apps — many stores run 20+ but only use 8–10 actively. Each one adds load time.

  • Lazy load content: Defer below-the-fold images or videos until users scroll.

 

Review UX + CRO (Session Recordings & Heatmaps)

Post-launch is the perfect time to validate assumptions about user behavior.

Add session recordings and heatmaps to see how real visitors interact with your site.

Recommended tools:

  • Hotjar or Microsoft Clarity for heatmaps and session replays.
  • Crazy Egg for scroll depth and click maps.
  • FullStory for enterprise-grade behavioral analysis.

Watch for friction points: confusing navigation, long checkout forms, or underperforming CTAs. Fix these quickly before they impact sales.

Pro Tip: Don’t assume all user journeys are the same — watch both mobile and desktop behavior separately.

SEO Reindexing & Page Performance Tracking

Finally, confirm that your SEO equity has safely carried over.

Run follow-up crawls at Day 7, Day 30, and Day 60 post-launch to validate:

  • All redirects resolve with 200 OK
  • No orphaned pages or broken internal links
  • Title tags and meta descriptions remain optimized
  • Organic impressions and clicks are trending upward

If you’ve migrated from Magento or WooCommerce, you may notice Shopify URLs are shorter and cleaner — great for both SEO and CTRs.

Use Ahrefs, Screaming Frog, or Google Search Console Performance Reports to track which pages are recovering fastest, and re-optimize any that lag.

Common Mistakes to Avoid During Shopify Plus Migration

Even the most well-planned Shopify Plus migrations can go sideways if you overlook the small things.

From lost SEO rankings to missing product data or messy app integrations — these mistakes can cost weeks of cleanup and thousands in lost traffic.

Here are the five most common pitfalls we’ve seen in real migrations (and how to avoid them).

1. Forgetting to Preserve SEO Structure

The #1 mistake brands make is failing to protect their URL structure and SEO equity.

When URLs change without proper 301 redirects, Google treats your new pages as completely new content — meaning you lose all historical rankings.

How to avoid it:

  • Map every old URL to its new destination before launch.
  • Crawl your legacy site with Screaming Frog and export a redirect mapping sheet.
  • Double-check canonicals and sitemaps post-launch to confirm all pages are indexed.

2. Migrating Low-Quality Data or Broken URLs

Migrating everything “just in case” is tempting — but it’s also how you carry technical debt into your new platform.

Duplicate SKUs, outdated product info, or broken media links will only slow down your site and confuse your customers.

Fix it first:

Clean your database before importing. Remove discontinued products, fix image links, and standardize SKUs and tags.

3. Overloading the Site with Unnecessary Apps

Shopify’s app ecosystem is incredible — but too many apps can quickly become a liability.

Each app adds JavaScript weight, potential conflicts, and recurring costs.

Do this instead:

  • Audit all apps quarterly.
  • Keep only mission-critical ones.
  • Consolidate overlapping features using Shopify Flow, native discounts, or scripts.

4. No Content Hierarchy (Collections → Products → Pages)

Flat architecture makes it difficult for users (and Google) to navigate your store.

Every Shopify Plus store needs a logical hierarchy that mirrors customer intent.

Best practice:

Collections should group products under meaningful categories, supported by content pages (like buying guides or FAQs) that improve topical authority.

5. Ignoring Localization (Currency, Language, Logistics)

In markets like Thailand or SEA, localization isn’t optional — it’s essential.

If you don’t adapt currency, language, or shipping options, customers bounce before checkout.

Quick wins:

  • Enable local currency and auto-detection by IP.
  • Translate essential pages and checkout steps.
  • Offer local shipping and payment gateways (Omise, 2C2P, or bank transfer).

Advanced Best Practices for Shopify Plus Migration

Once your new store is live and stable, the next step is to scale smartly. Advanced Shopify Plus merchants leverage integrations, automation, and data visibility to transform a store from “functional” to “frictionless.” Here’s how to take your migration further.

Integrate with ERP, CRM, or OMS

Shopify Plus becomes far more powerful when connected to your backend systems. Syncing your ERP (like SAP or NetSuite), CRM (like HubSpot or Salesforce), or Order Management System ensures real-time visibility across inventory, orders, and customer data.

The key is to use Shopify’s robust API layer and middleware like Celigo or Mulesoft to manage data flow efficiently. This prevents duplication, reduces manual errors, and improves fulfillment accuracy — all essential for scaling operations.

Go Headless with Hydrogen

For brands pushing performance boundaries, Shopify’s Hydrogen framework allows you to build custom, headless storefronts that load faster and scale globally.

By separating the front-end experience from the back-end logic, you gain complete design freedom while maintaining Shopify’s commerce engine. This is ideal for businesses that prioritize speed, personalization, and flexibility across devices.

Multi-Region Storefronts

If you sell across countries, leverage Shopify Plus features like multi-currency, multi-language, and localized domains. A region-specific approach — backed by localized content and logistics partners — improves conversion rates and SEO relevance in each market.

Use Shopify Markets to centralize management while ensuring customers see the right prices, currencies, and payment methods automatically.

Automate with Shopify Flow

Shopify Flow allows you to automate repetitive workflows without code. From tagging high-value customers and flagging risky orders to syncing data between apps, Flow helps teams save time and reduce human error.
Pair it with Launchpad for automated product drops, discounts, or campaigns — perfect for seasonal sales or flash promotions.

Build Custom Dashboards

Post-migration, data visibility is everything. Create custom dashboards in tools like Looker Studio or Power BI to track KPIs — sales velocity, inventory turns, and site performance. Shopify Plus APIs make it easy to stream real-time metrics for proactive decision-making.

Shopify Plus for Thailand: Building Locally, Scaling Globally

Thailand’s eCommerce ecosystem is growing fast — but scaling successfully requires more than just a great store. It’s about adapting your Shopify Plus setup to local infrastructure: payments, logistics, compliance, and culture. Here’s how Thai brands can get it right.

Local Payment Gateways

While Shopify Payments isn’t available in Thailand yet, merchants can easily integrate trusted local gateways like Omise, 2C2P, SCB Easy, or Krungsri Payment Gateway. These options support Thai baht (THB), QR PromptPay, and local debit cards — giving customers a frictionless checkout experience.
For international sales, combine them with PayPal, Stripe Atlas, or Checkout.com to support multi-currency transactions.

Thai Address Formatting & Shipping Rules

Thai address structures can be tricky for global templates. Ensure your checkout and shipping integrations support Thai province, amphoe (district), and tambon (subdistrict) data layers for accurate delivery.

Partnering with local couriers like Flash, Kerry, J&T Express, or Thailand Post via Shippo or Shippit integrations helps streamline fulfillment while supporting cash-on-delivery (COD) — still a key expectation for many Thai consumers.

Local Partner Ecosystem

Thailand’s Shopify Plus ecosystem is rapidly expanding. There are specialized agencies, app developers, and ERP integrators familiar with local challenges — from omnichannel POS integration to Thai-language UX design.

Working with a Shopify Plus Partner in Thailand ensures your store stays compliant, optimized for local search, and aligned with customer expectations.

Tax & Compliance Considerations

Ensure your Shopify Plus configuration accounts for 7% VAT, with invoices generated per Thai Revenue Department standards. For cross-border stores, use Shopify’s custom tax overrides to manage varying regional requirements.

If you sell to both B2C and B2B, consider integrating PEPPOL-ready invoicing and automatic VAT reconciliation tools for smoother accounting.

Shopify Plus Migration Timeline & Template

A successful Shopify Plus migration doesn’t happen overnight — but with a structured roadmap, it stays predictable and stress-free. Most enterprise migrations take 6–8 weeks, depending on data complexity, design rebuilds, and third-party integrations.

Sample 8-Week Migration Timeline

Week 1–2: Pre-migration audit, data backup, and feature mapping
Week 3–4: Theme setup, data import (products, collections, customers, orders)
Week 5–6: Integration testing (apps, ERP, payment gateways, shipping)
Week 7: SEO redirects, final QA, and User Acceptance Testing (UAT)
Week 8: Launch, monitor analytics, and run 30-day post-migration audit

Every phase builds on the last — keeping your data clean, SEO intact, and customers happy.

Your Shopify Migration Made Easy

Migrating your e-commerce store doesn’t have to be risky or overwhelming. By following a clear, proven path—audit → migrate → optimize—you can move your store to Shopify with confidence. The audit uncovers hidden opportunities and risks, the migration ensures a smooth, secure transition, and optimization fine-tunes performance for maximum sales and customer satisfaction.

Doing it right the first time isn’t just smart—it’s profitable. Every hour saved, every avoided error, and every conversion preserved adds directly to your ROI. A professional migration transforms what could be a headache into a growth opportunity, setting your store up for long-term success.

Don’t leave your migration to chance. Book your free migration assessment with Aware’s Shopify team now and get expert guidance from day one. We’ll make sure your store launches smoothly, runs efficiently, and delivers results—so you can focus on growing your business, not fixing problems.

Related articles

Contact us

Let's Talk Solutions

Don’t face obstacles alone – tell us about your needs. We’ll listen, suggest options, and together build technology to accomplish your goals.

Guaranteed Follow-Up — Within One Business Day

No chasing. No hassle. It’s easy.

Schedule a Free Consultation
General Form