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BUILDABILITY.

Cyberport

v1.1.0
cyberport.de

Moat Density · what survives?

64/100

61–67 · high confidence

Buildability Index · surface?

82/100

79–85 · high confidence

SHIP IT

Lovability Fit · translation?

85/100

82–88 · high confidence

Moat Density dimensions

Network effects
4
Brand / community
6
Regulatory / trust
7
Proprietary data
6
Distribution
8
Operational depth
9
Switching costs
5
Buildability Index · 8 dimensions
Logic simplicity
7
Integration surface
5
Visual coherence
8
Auth simplicity
8
Async-friendly
9
Data model commodity
8
Component patterns
9
API accessibility
7
Lovability Fit · 6 dimensions
Edge-case profile
7
Native component fit
9
One-shot efficiency
8
Supabase fit
9
Iteration cost
8
Routing / state / auth
9
Evidence Basislanding page only
Confidence LevelMedium
Frameworkv1.1.0

Independent analysis by Next Level (NXLV) using the Buildable methodology. Not Lovable certification, investment advice, or product endorsement. Scores reflect structural assessment, not company quality or merit.

A scaled consumer electronics retailer blending aggressive promotional cycles with multi-channel fulfillment.

Real moat

The moat is primarily operational and institutional, not digital. Defensibility stems from established supply chain partnerships, high-volume shipping logistics, and physical retail presence in the DACH region. Extensive regulatory trust in financing and consumer protection creates a barrier for pure-software competitors.

Surface anatomy

The UI is a standard high-density e-commerce grid. Recreatable elements include product listing pages (PLPs) with faceted search, product detail pages (PDPs) with energy labels and technical specs, and a countdown-driven deal engine. Commodity CRUD manages the cart and user profiles.

What is actually interesting

Cyberport successfully maintains a high-information density density layouts that usually decrease conversion but here signals 'premium technical depth' to their nerd-leaning demographic. The digital interface is essentially a facade for a heavy logistical machine specialized in fragile high-value electronics.

What Lovable could amplify

Lovable’s architecture is ideal for the 'Deal' engine—using Supabase Realtime for countdowns and stock levels. The TanStack Router allows for seamless, fast navigation between deep category hierarchies which currently feels heavy on the legacy site.

Evidence

Observed · 4
  • ·Standard e-commerce taxonomy (categories, brands, deals)
  • ·High-frequency promotional cycles (Tech Week, CyberDeal)
  • ·Financial service integration (0% financing blocks)
  • ·Hybrid presence (online shop with physical store pickup options)
Inferred · 3
  • ·Complex backend ERP/Stock management across physical and digital inventory
  • ·Sophisticated taxation and energy label regulation compliance logic
  • ·Multi-step checkout with multiple payment provider integrations
Speculated · 2
  • ·Proprietary recommendation engine based on regional user behavior
  • ·Automated dynamic pricing based on competitor scraping

Core flows

  • Faceted search and category filtering
  • Time-limited 'CyberDeal' countdown management
  • Product comparison matrix generation
  • Financing calculator and application flow
  • Order tracking and status updates
  • Store-specific availability checking

Required data

  • ·Product Catalog (External API/ERP)
  • ·Real-time Inventory status (API)
  • ·Pricing including VAT and Shipping (Logic)
  • ·Energy Label metadata (Media Storage)
  • ·Customer Order History (DB)
  • ·Financing rates and terms (JSON/Logic)

Integrations

  • mediumPayment GatewaysPayPal, Credit Card, Klarna processing
  • highFinancing ProviderCheck credit and offer 0% interest terms
  • mediumLogistics APIDHL/UPS tracking and shipping labels

Trust layer

  • Trusted Shops integration
  • Detailed privacy controls (GDPR compliance)
  • Physical store map and contact info
  • Secure auth (RLS driven)

Build difficulty

medium~14 days

The frontend patterns are standard, but the data density and regulatory requirements for German e-commerce add complexity.

Seed prompt

Seed v3· Framework v1.1.0
OBJECTIVE: Create a high-performance consumer electronics e-commerce platform.
SUCCESS CRITERIA: Blitz-fast search, real-time inventory countdowns for 'Daily Deals', and multi-stage checkout.
USER FLOW: User browses 'Tech Week' banners -> Filters products by technical specs (CPU, RAM, Energy Class) -> Views PDP with price history and financing options -> Adds to cart -> Authenticates via social/OTP -> Completes purchase.
USERS & ACCESS: Guest browsers, Registered Customers (order history), Admin Managers (product/promo engine).
PERSISTED DATA: Products (attributes, energy scale, specs), Stock Levels (real-time), Coupons, Orders, User Profiles, Stores (locations for pickup).
VISUAL IDENTITY: Clean white background, technical grey accents, vibrant high-contrast orange for CTA and 'Deal' badges. Dense information layout using sans-serif fonts.

Voice · cyberport.de

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The surface is a textbook candidate for an AI-native rebuild, but the business remains anchored in the physical fulfillment moat.

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