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Question 1 of 7
I’m Alton Peques. I’ve worked in ecommerce since my teens, across brand, agency, and platform roles at Clorox, Amazon, Apple, and LinkedIn, and I’ve run 200+ DTC projects as a Shopify services partner. I’m a builder who likes problems where the gap isn’t ideas. It’s execution. The brands I care about most are doing real revenue on Shopify but can’t afford a full team to turn store data into shipped work: better pages, sharper copy, fixes that actually go live. I like turning that messy middle into a system that runs every day without the merchant having to prompt it.
Question 2 of 7
Nexus Commerce, an autonomous commerce operator for Shopify brands. A merchant connects their store, Nexus reads the data, finds where they’re losing sales, and ships the fix into the live theme with a human approving every delivery. It’s live with paying clients at nexuscommerce.co.
Question 3 of 7
The same pattern kept showing up everywhere I worked. Brands between roughly $250K and $1M in revenue have validated demand and good products, but they can’t justify a strategist, developer, designer, and email marketer on payroll. Agencies and freelancers fill the gap, but they’re slow, expensive, and nothing compounds. When AI tools arrived, they made advice cheap but left the merchant to figure out what to fix and how to build it. I was already doing the full loop manually for clients: pull the data, diagnose the leak, scope the project, write the copy, build the page, ship it. Nexus started as me trying to productize that operator workflow instead of selling hours.
Question 4 of 7
I started thinking the product was better recommendations. The real unlock is shipping work into the live store. Merchants don’t pay for another dashboard of suggestions. They pay when a page, section, or campaign actually lands in Shopify and they can preview it in one click. That shift changed everything: how we scope the agent, what counts as a deliverable, and why human review on every delivery is a feature, not a bottleneck. I also learned the hard way that authoring custom theme code from scratch was the wrong default. The better move is composing what the merchant already owns in their theme so the output looks native and doesn’t break their apps.
Question 5 of 7
It clicked when I stopped doing everything manually and started running the same work through agents. Operators on client teams started giving feedback that wasn’t polite encouragement. They called out the quality and the speed, and said it freed them up to focus on operations instead of chasing freelancers, reviewing drafts, and coordinating handoffs. That mattered because for smaller brands the hidden cost isn’t just slow growth. It’s the constant spend on services just to keep the store moving. When Nexus could ship revenue-driving work and cut that labor at the same time, the gain felt real on both sides: more sales, less overhead, and more capacity for the team to run the business.
Question 6 of 7
I’m stuck on figuring out which actions give merchants the most value when the agent runs them autonomously. The system can do a wide range of work across the store, but not every action lands the same way for every brand. I need a clearer read on which ones actually move revenue, save labor, or unlock growth so I can prioritize those in autopilot and roll execution out with confidence.
Question 7 of 7
Optimize for one paying customer with a real constraint, not a perfect demo. I spent years doing client work before Nexus, and the only feedback that changed the product came from merchants who were paying and waiting on deliverables. Advice from people who aren’t in that loop sounds smart but rarely tells you what to cut. If your thing touches other people’s businesses, ship something small end to end early: connect the data, produce one outcome, put it where they can see it. You’ll learn faster from one honest “this isn’t good enough yet” than from six months of architecture.