E-commerce data with local marketplace coverage
The same managed pipeline runs in 6 primary countries — with local marketplaces, local currencies, and local quirks built in. We don't translate one market's playbook into another. Amazon US is not Amazon UK is not Amazon.ae.
Where we have the deepest coverage
These four markets make up the majority of our work, with mature retailer logic, dedicated pipelines and local response windows.
United States
USDThe largest market we serve. Amazon and Walmart dominate, with a long tail of category-specific retailers. Daily and hourly pricing is the norm in competitive categories.
United Kingdom
GBPAmazon UK plus strong traditional retail — Tesco, Sainsbury's, Argos, John Lewis. RRP compliance and grocery-marketplace overlap need careful handling.
India
INRWhere we have the deepest quick-commerce coverage. Flipkart and Amazon dominate marketplace volume; Blinkit, Zepto and Instamart dominate 10-minute delivery — pincode-level depth is essential.
United Arab Emirates
AEDNoon and Amazon.ae lead, with Carrefour for grocery. English and Arabic listings co-exist. We handle multi-language matching and Gulf-region currency conventions.
Also fully covered
Mature retailer logic and the full solution suite available — with slightly smaller dedicated pipelines than our primary markets.
Australia
AUDAmazon AU is growing, but Coles and Woolworths dominate grocery, and Catch holds the discount marketplace position. Local logistics quirks for bulky items.
Canada
CADAmazon.ca and Walmart lead marketplace volume; Loblaws and Best Buy add the rest. Cross-border pricing comparisons with the US are common.
How the countries compare
A direct comparison of coverage depth, refresh cadence and the dominant marketplaces in each market.
| Country | Top 2 marketplaces | Standard refresh | Specialty |
|---|---|---|---|
| 🇺🇸United States | Amazon, Walmart | Daily / hourly | High-velocity electronics & FMCG |
| 🇬🇧United Kingdom | Amazon UK, Tesco | Daily | RRP compliance, grocery overlap |
| 🇮🇳India | Flipkart, Amazon | Hourly + pincode | Blinkit / Zepto / Instamart depth |
| 🇦🇪United Arab Emirates | Noon, Amazon.ae | Daily | Multi-language listings (EN/AR) |
| 🇦🇺Australia | Coles, Woolworths | Daily | Grocery-led marketplace dynamics |
| 🇨🇦Canada | Amazon.ca, Walmart | Daily | Cross-border US price comparison |
A translated pipeline is a broken pipeline.
Three things change market to market — and missing any one of them silently corrupts the data.
Local retailers, local logic
Each country has retailers you must cover, and the way they expose pricing, stock and search differs. A "scrape Amazon" script can't substitute for a Tesco or Noon pipeline.
Currency & tax conventions
VAT-inclusive vs exclusive pricing. AED vs INR rounding. CAD-USD conversion. We capture prices the way each market actually shows them — not normalised away.
Cultural & language signals
UAE has Arabic and English listings of the same product. India has Hindi terms in titles. Quick commerce uses pincodes. We model the signals each market depends on.
Common reasons brands work across markets
You don't always need one country — sometimes the answer lives in comparing two or more.
Cross-border price arbitrage
Track the same SKU across US and Canada (or US and Mexico) to detect price gaps that drive grey-market sourcing.
Global launch parity
Confirm a new SKU is listed, in stock and priced correctly across every primary market in the launch window.
Regional benchmarking
How does our share-of-search look in India vs UAE? Is our content scoring different in UK vs US? Multi-country signals tell category teams the story.
Global MAP enforcement
Some unauthorised sellers operate across borders. Multi-country MAP tracking exposes the pattern, not just one market.
Local response windows
We respond in the working hours that match your market — not just Singapore time.