When your business connects with retailers, distributors, or 3PL partners, the big question isn’t if you should integrate, it's how. Two primary technologies dominate the landscape: EDI (Electronic Data Interchange) and APIs (Application Programming Interfaces). While both move data between systems, they serve very different purposes depending on the partner, workflow, and level of automation required.
Here’s how to determine which one fits each relationship.
When EDI Makes the Most Sense
EDI has been the retail industry's backbone for decades. Major trading partners, especially big-box retailers, still depend on strict EDI compliance.
Best Use Cases:
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Retailers with Mandated Standards
Companies like Walmart, Target, Costco, Macy’s, Dillard’s, Nordstrom, Home Depot, and Best Buy require EDI for documents like:-
852 (Inventory Advice)
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Distributors and Wholesalers
Many B2B channels, especially in apparel, consumer goods, electronics, and industrial supply, still rely on EDI workflows. -
3PL Compliance with Retail Shipping
When a 3PL is shipping to a retailer that uses EDI, you need EDI to transmit ASNs, labels, and fulfillment updates through the retailer’s compliance portal or VAN.
Why EDI Works Well:
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Standardized data formats
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Proven compliance structures
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Retailer testing and certification requirements
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Built-in audit trails
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Chargeback risk mitigation
If your partner “speaks EDI,” using anything else can result in delays, fines, or failed onboarding.
When APIs Are the Better Fit
APIs bring real-time connectivity, faster deployments, and flexibility. That matters for modern platforms, high-volume sellers, and data visibility.
Best Use Cases:
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eCommerce Platforms
Shopify, BigCommerce, WooCommerce, Magento, and others use API connections for:-
Order sync
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Inventory updates
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Tracking details
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Product listings
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3PLs & Warehouse Management Systems
Many modern 3PLs prefer APIs over EDI where compliance isn’t required, especially for:-
Drop ship fulfillment
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Real-time inventory status
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Rate shopping and label generation
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Bulk order ingestion
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ERP, CRM, and Marketplace Integrations
APIs allow direct communication with tools like:
Why APIs Work Well:
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Real-time updates
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Faster processing
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More flexible data formatting
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Easier to scale and customize
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Eliminates VAN/portal costs
When You Need Both: The Hybrid Reality
Most growing businesses eventually need both API and EDI, especially when selling through multiple channels.
Examples of Hybrid Scenarios:
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Retail + Shopify
Use EDI for Walmart and Nordstrom, API for Shopify and Amazon Marketplace. -
Brand with 3PL + Distributors
API into the 3PL system for bulk fulfillment and inventory visibility, EDI for orders coming from retail partners. -
Wholesale + Marketplace Sales
EDI for department store retailers, API for marketplaces and B2B portals. -
ERP Centralization
Sync EDI and API workflows into a single ERP like QuickBooks, Sage, or NetSuite.
Integrations don’t have to be either/or, smart architectures unify both.
The Smartest Strategy: Integration That Adapts
Your business shouldn't have to choose one technology forever. The best integrations bridge both so your systems can:
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Meet retailer mandates
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Push/pull data instantly
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Eliminate manual entry
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Avoid chargebacks
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Support growth across channels
A unified layer, like what we deliver through our EDI/API services and Jax dashboards, lets you plug into any partner without reinventing your tech stack.
