A brief history of e-commerce

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The history of ecommerce fits into a single sentence: someone proved it was safe, others built on that, it crashed, it recovered, and then it went everywhere. But the details behind that sentence explain why online shopping works the way it does today, and why certain decisions still matter when you build a store.

Where did the history of ecommerce begin?

On August 11, 1994, a 21-year-old named Dan Kohn sold a copy of a music album to a friend through a website called NetMarket. The sale was $12.48. The buyer paid by credit card over an encrypted connection. It was the first documented secure retail transaction on the internet. The product barely mattered. What mattered was the proof that payment details could travel across the internet without being stolen. That was the foundation everything else was built on.

How did the 1990s boom shape online shopping?

Within a year of that first transaction, Amazon launched as an online bookstore and eBay launched as a peer-to-peer auction site. Neither looked the way they do now. Amazon sold books. eBay sold secondhand goods between strangers. But both proved that the internet could connect buyers and sellers at a scale no physical store could match. By the late 1990s, investor money was flooding into internet brands. Brands scaled fast, spent heavily on marketing, and chased growth without worrying about profit. It could not last.

What happened after the dot-com crash?

Between 2000 and 2002, hundreds of internet brands shut down. The ones that survived were the ones that had built something real: a loyal customer base, real infrastructure, or a product people genuinely needed. The crash cleared out the speculation and left the substance. By 2004, US e-commerce sales had passed $50 billion annually. The market had not gone away. It had grown up. PayPal, launched in 1998, became a key part of the recovery by letting smaller sellers accept online payments without building their own payment systems from scratch.

How did smartphones change everything?

The iPhone launched in 2007. Within a few years, shopping had moved off the desk and into people's pockets. Customers could browse, compare, and buy from anywhere. By 2022, mobile commerce accounted for over 60% of global e-commerce sales. That shift forced brands to rebuild their stores for small screens, faster load times, and simpler checkout flows. The stores that adapted gained an advantage that compounded over time.

What is social commerce?

The most recent shift came when social feeds became storefronts. Instead of seeing a product on social media and navigating to a separate store, customers can now buy without leaving the feed. The gap between discovery and purchase closed. For brands, this changed how trust is built. Peer recommendations, reviews, and community responses now happen in the same space as the transaction. A product page is no longer the only thing a customer checks before buying.

Where is e-commerce heading?

Online shopping keeps expanding into new surfaces, faster fulfillment, and more personalized experiences. What started with a single encrypted CD sale in 1994 is now the default way hundreds of millions of people shop. For a brand building an online store today, the infrastructure is mature, the customer expectations are high, and the tools are more accessible than at any point in the history of ecommerce. See what e-commerce is for a full breakdown of how the system works, or read about the types of e-commerce to understand which model fits your brand.

How WEMASY fits in

WEMASY's e-commerce system is built into the same subscription as the website builder. A brand can set up a store, manage products, configure checkout, and handle payments from one place. See the plans for what is included.

Frequently asked questions

When did e-commerce officially start?

Why did so many early e-commerce brands fail in the dot-com crash?

What role did PayPal play in the growth of e-commerce?

How important is mobile for an online store today?

What is social commerce?