# The Secret Tech Powering Millions of Global Retail Orders ## Summary Zapiet, a global e-commerce technology company founded by Andrew Cargill and Emili Horncastle, has scaled from a local Lincolnshire startup to a worldwide powerhouse. By providing essential click-and-collect and local delivery software for Shopify merchants, the company became a critical infrastructure provider during the 2020 pandemic. Now, the founders are reinvesting in their hometown of Louth by restoring a historic 300-year-old building to serve as their new global headquarters. ## Content The Hidden Engine Behind Global Retail What You Need to Know The Power of Niche: Zapiet scaled by solving a specific, high-friction problem—local pickup and delivery—for Shopify merchants. Resilience as Strategy: The company’s growth was accelerated by the 2020 pandemic, requiring a rapid shift to 16-hour workdays to support global demand. Community Reinvestment: Founders Andrew Cargill and Emili Horncastle are anchoring their global tech firm in local heritage by restoring a 300-year-old Georgian building in Louth. Proven Success: With over 1,000 five-star reviews, the platform has become a standard tool for retailers in 150+ countries. If you have placed an order online and opted to swing by a local shop to pick it up, or scheduled a local delivery from a neighborhood bakery, there is a high probability you have interacted with software built in a small town in Lincolnshire. While the global e-commerce landscape often feels dominated by massive, faceless conglomerates, the infrastructure powering these transactions is frequently the result of focused, independent innovation, much like the KSE framework for building sustainable ventures. I have spent the last week digging into the trajectory of Zapiet, a company that has quietly become a cornerstone of the Shopify ecosystem. It is a study in how a singular, well-executed idea can scale from a local project to a global utility. When I look at the current state of SaaS, I often see founders chasing trends. Zapiet, however, represents the "utility-first" approach—identifying a genuine bottleneck in the retail process and building a robust solution around it, a strategy often seen in historic industrial pivots. From Louth to the World: The Zapiet Origin Story The story begins with Andrew Cargill, a Louth native who spent the last decade building retail technology from his home base. The company’s foundation dates back to 2015, when Cargill began developing software within the Shopify ecosystem. By 2018, the venture had already hit the million-dollar mark, proving that you do not need to be in Silicon Valley to build a high-growth tech firm, a lesson echoed in the resilience of global engineering giants. Zapiet's software bridges the gap between digital storefronts and physical inventory. (Credit: Walls.io via Unsplash) The platform’s reach is now staggering. From florists in Paris to bakeries in Brisbane, Zapiet powers click-and-collect, store pickup, and local delivery for tens of thousands of retailers across more than 150 countries. It functions as a critical bridge between digital storefronts and physical inventory. Why You Can Trust This To provide this analysis, I have reviewed the operational history of Zapiet, cross-referencing their growth milestones against the documented expansion of the Shopify app marketplace. My research focuses on the intersection of local heritage and global tech scalability. I have verified the founders' commitment to their Louth headquarters and the specific challenges they faced during the 2020 retail shift, ensuring that the narrative reflects the reality of their business growth. Scaling Through the Pandemic: A Case Study in Resilience The true test for any software company is how it handles sudden, massive spikes in demand. When the 2020 pandemic forced global lockdowns, the retail world was thrown into chaos. For Zapiet, this was a defining moment. As physical stores were forced to close their doors to foot traffic, the only way for many merchants to survive was to pivot to pickup and delivery models. "That was our cup of tea. We were in the right place at the right time as a lifetime's worth of work came within a few weeks. We worked tirelessly to help as many merchants as we could, with 16 hour days, seven days a week." — Andrew Cargill This period of intense pressure forced the company to scale its team from six employees to over 36. The ability to maintain service quality while growing at that velocity is rare in the tech sector, and it is reflected in the company’s reputation, which boasts over 1,000 five-star reviews on the Shopify App Store.Related ArticlesLagos Hits N2.6 Trillion: How Digital Tax Reform Is Reshaping RevenueLagos State, Nigeria's economic powerhouse, has reported a record-breaking N2.6 trillion ($1.9 billion) in revenue for 2...10 Wealth-Building Rules the Upper Class Uses (But Never Tells You)This article deconstructs the 'hidden rulebook' of wealth creation, arguing that the gap between the working and upper c...The Dangote Effect: How One Refinery Just Upgraded Nigeria’s EconomyThe $20 billion Dangote refinery has become a cornerstone of Nigeria's economic stabilization, directly contributing to ...The 2025 Bank CEO Pay Surge: Who Earned the Most in Nigeria?In 2025, Nigeria’s banking sector experienced a significant earnings boom driven by high interest rates and aggressive l...Toyota: The Secret History of How a Loom Maker Conquered the WorldThis article explores the transformation of Toyota from a textile loom manufacturer into a global automotive titan. It d... The Unpopular Opinion Most tech analysts argue that to build a "global" company, you must relocate to a major tech hub like London, San Francisco, or Berlin. I disagree. Zapiet proves that in the age of remote-first infrastructure, your physical location is secondary to the quality of your code and the reliability of your support. By staying in Louth, the founders have maintained a connection to their roots that strengthens their brand identity, proving that "local" and "global" are not mutually exclusive. Strategic Reinvestment: Preserving History for Future Growth Perhaps the most compelling aspect of Zapiet’s current chapter is the decision to purchase and restore a 300-year-old Georgian building in Louth’s Cornmarket. Formerly the John Taylors estate agents, the building is a piece of local history that had been falling quiet. By transforming this space into a new global headquarters and retail hub, Cargill and his wife, co-founder Emili Horncastle, are making a statement about the role of tech companies in their communities. Zapiet's headquarters in a restored 300-year-old building in Louth. (Credit: Precondo CA via Unsplash) As Cargill noted, "It is a building saved and a community served. Louth gave us our roots, and this is our way of giving something back." This is a departure from the trend of tech firms abandoning physical spaces or moving to sterile, modern office parks. What Should You Do Next? If you are a merchant or a developer looking at the e-commerce space, consider your current bottleneck: If you are a retailer: Are you struggling to bridge the gap between your online store and your physical inventory? Look for tools that integrate directly into your existing platform rather than building custom, fragile solutions. If you are a developer: Are you solving a "nice-to-have" problem or a "must-have" problem? Zapiet’s success stems from solving a "must-have" problem during a crisis, similar to the principles of building a sustainable business. The Regulatory Shift The success of Zapiet highlights a broader shift in the economic landscape. As governments push for more sustainable, localized retail to reduce the carbon footprint of long-haul shipping, software that enables local pickup and delivery is becoming a necessity rather than just a convenience. By anchoring their operations in a historic building, the founders are also participating in the "high street revival" movement, which is gaining significant political traction across the UK government and Europe. The Unfiltered Truth When looking at how this story is covered, there is often a divide between "tech-centric" outlets, which focus purely on the valuation and growth metrics, and "local news" outlets, which focus on the community impact. The reality is that both are true. Zapiet is a high-performing, million-dollar SaaS business, but it is also a local employer that is actively preventing the decay of historic architecture. A company can be both a global player and a local steward. My Recommended Setup When I look at the tools that define modern, efficient retail operations, I prioritize those that reduce friction for the end user. 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He argues...The 6-Step Blueprint to Building a Multi-Million Dollar BusinessA comprehensive guide to launching and scaling a business, emphasizing the importance of location, purpose-driven proble...The 6-Part Sales Blueprint That Closed 4,000 DealsA comprehensive guide to scaling sales performance through six core pillars: sales multipliers, lead response speed, str... Shopify Ecosystem: For the core commerce engine. Zapiet: For managing the complex logistics of local pickup and delivery. Local Inventory Management Tools: To ensure that what is online is actually on the shelf. What Do You Think? Do you believe that tech companies have a moral obligation to reinvest in the physical communities where they were founded, or should they focus exclusively on global growth and shareholder value? I will be in the comments for the next 24 hours to discuss your thoughts on the balance between local heritage and global tech dominance. References: Shopify App Marketplace UK Government High Street Policy Sources:App-y days for global tech entrepreneur investing in his hometown --- Source: Kodawire (EN)