AI Browser for Ecommerce Teams: Candidate Sourcing

How ecommerce teams run candidate sourcing in Strawberry. Surfaces, signals, real output, and tradeoffs for ecommerce teams.

This guide is for ecommerce teams that run candidate sourcing. It names the surfaces a ecommerce team typically uses, where the friction sits, and how an AI browser like Strawberry runs the workflow without forcing the team to learn a new stack.

How ecommerce teams approach candidate sourcing

A ecommerce team runs this work in a specific way: run direct-to-consumer or B2B online retail with a stack of Shopify (or similar), ads, fulfillment, and customer support. The current pain is concrete - margins are tight; creative quality determines CAC; competitive pricing requires constant monitoring. The reason an AI browser helps here is that ecommerce teams already touch many surfaces (Shopify or BigCommerce, Klaviyo or Mailchimp, Meta Ads, Google Ads, Recharge or similar), and the bottleneck is the human moving data and context between them.

What a good candidate sourcing run looks like for ecommerce teams

The goal is to build a shortlist of 10-30 candidates who match the role and have at least one signal of openness. Success metric: 30% reply rate to first outreach, 5+ first-call conversions per 30 sourced. In an industry context that means: ad creative iteration plus weekly competitive scan plus customer support response queue all in one place.

Buying signals candidate sourcing should react to

The signals that should trigger candidate sourcing for a ecommerce team include: competitor product launch, platform algorithm update, supply chain disruption. Strawberry watches the public web (LinkedIn, news, job boards, the company's own site) for these and pairs them with whatever lives in the team's existing tools.

How Strawberry runs candidate sourcing for ecommerce teams

  1. Connect the existing stack (Gmail, CRM, sheets, Slack, etc) so Strawberry can read in-place.
  2. Define one sentence of what 'done' looks like for candidate sourcing in your specific ecommerce team setup.
  3. Ask Strawberry to read the relevant context, then research the gaps via the browser.
  4. Strawberry produces the candidate sourcing output in the shape your team can use immediately.
  5. A human reviews before any external action (send, update, post) goes out.
  6. The approved output gets logged back into your system of record so the next person sees it.

A real candidate sourcing output for ecommerce teams

This is an example of the shape, not your literal team's output - swap the specifics for your context:

  • Role: Founding Engineer (Stockholm or remote EU)
  • Candidate: Marek Novak - Senior Engineer @ Klarna, 4 years
  • Fit: 5/5 (worked on payment systems, contributed to Rust open source, recent talk on type-safe APIs)
  • Opening line: noticed his RustConf talk on type-safe API contracts and our backend lead's tweet about Marek's library
  • Contact: LinkedIn DM + GitHub email

When this is right for ecommerce teams, and when it is not

This workflow is right when ecommerce teams have multiple recurring instances of candidate sourcing to run each week, and when the existing stack is mostly online and connectable. It is the wrong fit when candidate sourcing happens once a quarter or requires deep domain expertise the agent does not have. In that case, the ecommerce team should run it manually and capture the playbook for the next iteration.

Three mistakes to avoid

  • Spray-and-pray DMs that mention nothing specific
  • Missing the obvious signals (someone just posted 'thinking about a change')
  • No quality bar - putting 200 names on the list to look productive

Caveats

Strawberry holds back on sending email, updating CRM records, or changing shared systems until a human approves the action. Treat the agent as a fast first-draft author, not an autopilot.

Ecommerce Teams + Strawberry running candidate sourcing

1 Inputs

Stack

Typical ecommerce team surfaces: Shopify or BigCommerce, Klaviyo or Mailchimp, Meta Ads.

2 Triggers

Signals

Watch: competitor product launch, platform algorithm update.

3 Output

Compose

Synthesise into the candidate sourcing shape.

4 Review

Human

Approve before external actions; log to system of record.

FAQ

Does this work for small ecommerce teams?

Yes - the workflow scales down to a 2-person ecommerce team. The smaller the team, the more leverage an AI browser provides because the same person owns multiple surfaces.

Which tools do ecommerce teams need to connect?

The most common stack: Shopify or BigCommerce, Klaviyo or Mailchimp, Meta Ads, Google Ads, Recharge or similar. The browser handles everything else without setup.

What is the biggest mistake to avoid?

Spray-and-pray DMs that mention nothing specific.