Friedrich Schwandt: From Statista to ECDB in the age of data
The global economy is undergoing a profound shift as companies race to transform raw information into strategic advantage. At the center of this emerging landscape stand data entrepreneurs like Friedrich Schwandt, whose journey from a leading role at Statista to founding ECDB illustrates how the so‑called data gold rush is reshaping business intelligence, market research and digital strategy.
In a recent conversation featured by EU-Startups, Friedrich Schwandt outlined why structured, high‑quality market data has become one of the most valuable assets for corporations, investors and innovators worldwide. His new venture, ECDB (E‑Commerce Database), aims to map the global online retail landscape with unprecedented granularity, offering decision‑makers a real‑time view of who sells what, where and how fast they are growing.
From Statista’s data empire to a focused e‑commerce intelligence play
Statista grew into one of the world’s most recognized platforms for statistics and market insights, aggregating millions of data points across industries. As a senior executive and co‑builder of that platform, Friedrich Schwandt witnessed first‑hand how the demand for trusted, easy‑to‑use data products exploded among corporates, consultancies and media organizations.
However, he also saw a gap: while horizontal platforms cover many sectors at a high level, decision‑makers in fast‑moving verticals increasingly require depth rather than breadth. This realization set the foundation for ECDB, a company dedicated specifically to e‑commerce analytics and retail intelligence.
Instead of offering broad snapshots, ECDB focuses on building a structured, comparable view of online shops and marketplaces across countries and categories. That means going beyond headline numbers to understand traffic patterns, category shares, revenue estimates, and competitive positioning for thousands of digital retailers.
The data gold rush: why structured insight is the new oil
The expression “data is the new oil” has been used for years, but the current phase more closely resembles a gold rush. Vast amounts of raw information are available, yet only a fraction is refined and standardized into decision‑ready products. According to Friedrich Schwandt, this is where companies like ECDB see their opportunity.
From raw signals to decision‑grade information
Modern businesses are surrounded by digital signals: website visits, transaction data, price changes, product listings, consumer reviews and more. But without robust data engineering and AI algorithms, these signals remain noisy and fragmented.
ECDB positions itself as a refiner. The company aggregates public and proprietary sources, applies machine learning models to estimate revenues and growth, and normalizes data across regions and verticals. The result is a coherent, comparable dataset that investors, brands and marketplaces can use to benchmark performance, identify acquisition targets or plan market entries.
Why e‑commerce data is especially valuable
Online retail has become a leading indicator for broader consumer trends. Changes in e‑commerce market share, category dynamics or cross‑border trade often foreshadow shifts in offline retail and even in macroeconomic sentiment. For that reason, high‑resolution e‑commerce intelligence is now sought after by:
- Private equity funds and venture capital firms scouting digital brands and marketplaces
- Consumer goods manufacturers optimizing their omni‑channel strategies
- Logistics and payment providers targeting high‑growth merchants
- Consultancies advising on digital transformation and market entry
By concentrating on this high‑value vertical, ECDB aims to become a go‑to reference for anyone needing a clear picture of the global online retail landscape.
Building ECDB: product, methodology and differentiation
What distinguishes ECDB from generic data vendors is its commitment to methodological transparency and vertical specialization. Drawing on experience gained at Statista, Friedrich Schwandt emphasizes that credibility is built not only on the size of a database, but on how each figure is generated and updated.
Methodology as a core product feature
ECDB relies on a combination of web crawling, panel data, third‑party integrations and proprietary estimation models. The company documents its data methodology so that clients understand the origin and limitations of each metric. This approach mirrors best practices in professional market research, where methodological notes are integral to every chart.
For corporate users, this transparency matters. Strategic decisions—such as entering a new market, acquiring a competitor or reallocating marketing budgets—depend on the reliability of underlying figures. By making methodology a visible part of the product, ECDB seeks to differentiate itself from opaque “black box” data providers.
Productization of data for business users
Another lesson carried over from Statista is that data must be productized for non‑technical users. ECDB therefore focuses on intuitive dashboards, standardized KPIs and export options that integrate with existing business intelligence tools.
Instead of forcing clients to build their own models on raw feeds, the platform offers ready‑made views: top players by category, market shares by country, growth rankings, and historical trend lines. This aligns with the growing expectation that data platforms should deliver insight, not just numbers.
Europe’s role in the global data economy
The story of Friedrich Schwandt and ECDB also reflects a broader trend: Europe’s emergence as a serious contender in the global data economy. While U.S. and Asian firms dominate many consumer‑facing platforms, European entrepreneurs are carving out strong positions in B2B data services, analytics and regulation‑compliant infrastructure.
With regulations such as the GDPR and the upcoming Data Act, Europe is shaping what a responsible, privacy‑aware data ecosystem looks like. Companies like ECDB must navigate strict rules on data protection and compliance, while still delivering granular intelligence. For sophisticated clients, this combination of insight and compliance can be a competitive advantage.
Challenges and future directions for ECDB
Despite the opportunities, the path ahead is not without challenges. The volume of available information is growing faster than many data firms can process. Ensuring data quality, preventing bias in AI algorithms and keeping pace with new e‑commerce business models will test the resilience of every player in this space.
Friedrich Schwandt has indicated that continuous investment in data engineering, machine learning and domain expertise is essential. As retail evolves—from direct‑to‑consumer brands and social commerce to live shopping and marketplace consolidation—ECDB will need to expand its taxonomy and measurement frameworks.
At the same time, the company is likely to deepen its relationships with financial institutions, strategic buyers and corporates that require longitudinal views of digital markets. In an environment where timing and information asymmetry can define investment outcomes, platforms that reduce uncertainty will command growing attention.
Why the data gold rush is far from over
The trajectory from Statista to ECDB encapsulates a broader shift in how organizations value and consume information. What began as a demand for accessible statistics has evolved into a need for specialized, always‑on market intelligence that can guide high‑stakes decisions.
As more sectors digitize and as competition intensifies in every market, the race to capture, structure and interpret data will only accelerate. Entrepreneurs like Friedrich Schwandt, and platforms such as ECDB, are positioning themselves at the center of this transformation—turning the raw material of the digital age into the strategic gold that businesses now depend on.

