Learn about the digital shelf, including strategies for winning sales.
How (and How Much) Will AI Change Shopping
Rob Gonzalez, Salsify co-founder & CMO, explains the shift to chat-based discovery and how brands can prepare.
Learn MorePIM
Manage all product content in one central system of record.
Syndication
Easily syndicate product content to every consumer touch point.
Enhanced Content
Enrich product pages with below-the-fold content and rich media.
Intelligence Suite
Bring AI-powered capabilities directly into your Salsify workflows.
Grocery Accelerator
Leverage the first-ever category-wide PXM accelerator in the grocery industry.
GDSN Data Pool
Synchronize standard supply chain, marketing, and ecommerce attributes globally.
Digital Shelf Analytics
Continuously optimize your organization’s product content syndication.
Catalog Sites
Share secure, on-brand, and always up-to-date digital product catalogs.
Automation and AI
Automate business processes and enhance Salsify workflows with AI.
PXM Platform, Integrations, and APIs
Integrate the PXM platform with the rest of your enterprise systems architecture.
Resources
Resource Library
Explore our ecommerce resources to get everything you need to win on the digital shelf.
Blog
Read our blog to get actionable insights for navigating changing markets and industry demands.
Webinars
Watch our on-demand ecommerce webinars to gain expert advice and tips from our community of industry leaders.
Customer Blog
Gain the latest tips, industry trends, and actionable ecommerce insights.
Knowledge Base
Investigate our knowledge base to build your Salsify skills and understanding.
API
Examine our comprehensive API and webhook guides to start working with Salsify quickly.
2026 Consumer Research
Our latest report shares shoppers' fresh insights on buying behavior, loyalty, AI trust, and more.
DownloadAn application programming interface (API) is a type of software code that enables two programs or applications to communicate with each other.
At the surface, application programming interfaces (APIs) help two programs or applications communicate with each other by providing a set of rules that each program follows. Beneath the surface, there’s a much more complex set of steps taking place.
When a person uses an app on their phone, for example, they’re activating an application programming interface (API). In this case, it connects and sends data to an internet server. The server interprets the data and sends it back to the application, using APIs as the connective tissue.
By connecting otherwise disparate programs, application programming interfaces help drive digital innovation and enable businesses and consumers to use multiple programs at once and at scale.
Many of today’s APIs are custom-built for specific usages, providing users with connected tools and resources tailored to meet their business needs. They’ve become essential to many organizations’ data and operational infrastructure.