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Conversational Commerce Strategy

AI in CX Webinar Recap: Building a Conversational Commerce Strategy that Converts

By Gabrielle Policella
0 min read . By Gabrielle Policella

TL;DR:

  • Implement quickly and optimize continuously. Cornbread's rollout was three phases: audit knowledge base, launch, then refine. Stacy conducts biweekly audits and provides daily AI feedback to ensure responses are accurate and on-brand.
  • Simplify your knowledge base language. Before BFCM, Stacy rephrased all guidance documentation to be concise and straightforward so Shopping Assistant could deliver information quickly without confusion.
  • Use proactive suggested questions. Most of Cornbread's Shopping Assistant engagement comes from Suggested Product Questions that anticipate customer needs before they even ask.
  • Treat AI as another team member. Make sure the tone and language AI uses match what human agents would say to maintain consistent customer relationships.
  • Free up agents for high-value work. With AI handling straightforward inquiries, Cornbread's CX team expanded into social media support, launched a retail pop-up shop, and has more time for relationship-building phone calls.

Customer education has become a critical factor in converting browsers into buyers. For wellness brands like Cornbread Hemp, where customers need to understand ingredients, dosages, and benefits before making a purchase, education has a direct impact on sales. The challenge is scaling personalized education when support teams are stretched thin, especially during peak sales periods.

Katherine Goodman, Senior Director of Customer Experience, and Stacy Williams, Senior Customer Experience Manager, explain how implementing Gorgias's AI Shopping Assistant transformed their customer education strategy into a conversion powerhouse. 

In our second AI in CX episode, we dive into how Cornbread achieved a 30% conversion rate during BFCM, saving their CX team over four days of manual work.

Top learnings from Cornbread's conversational commerce strategy

1. Customer education drives conversions in wellness

Before diving into tactics, understanding why education matters in the wellness space helps contextualize this approach.

Katherine, Senior Director of Customer Experience at Cornbread Hemp, explains:

"Wellness is a very saturated market right now. Getting to the nitty-gritty and getting to the bottom of what our product actually does for people, making sure they're educated on the differences between products to feel comfortable with what they're putting in their body."

The most common pre-purchase questions Cornbread receives center around three areas: ingredients, dosages, and specific benefits. Customers want to know which product will help with their particular symptoms. They need reassurance that they're making the right choice.

What makes this challenging: These questions require nuanced, personalized responses that consider the customer's specific needs and concerns. Traditionally, this meant every customer had to speak with a human agent, creating a bottleneck that slowed conversions and overwhelmed support teams during peak periods.

2. Shopping Assistant provides education that never sleeps

Stacy, Senior Customer Experience Manager at Cornbread, identified the game-changing impact of Shopping Assistant:

"It's had a major impact, especially during non-operating hours. Shopping Assistant is able to answer questions when our CX agents aren't available, so it continues the customer order process."

A customer lands on your site at 11 PM, has questions about dosage or ingredients, and instead of abandoning their cart or waiting until morning for a response, they get immediate, accurate answers that move them toward purchase.

The real impact happens in how the tool anticipates customer needs. Cornbread uses suggested product questions that pop up as customers browse product pages. Stacy notes:

"Most of our Shopping Assistant engagement comes from those suggested product features. It almost anticipates what the customer is asking or needing to know."

Actionable takeaway: Don't wait for customers to ask questions. Surface the most common concerns proactively. When you anticipate hesitation and address it immediately, you remove friction from the buying journey.

3. Implementation follows a clear three-phase approach

One of the biggest myths about AI is that implementation is complicated. Stacy explains how Cornbread’s rollout was a straightforward three-step process: audit your knowledge base, flip the switch, then optimize.

"It was literally the flip of a switch and just making sure that our data and information in Gorgias was up to date and accurate." 

Here's Cornbread’s three-phase approach:

  1. Preparation. Before launching, Cornbread conducted a comprehensive audit of their knowledge base to ensure accuracy and completeness. This groundwork is critical because your AI is only as good as the information it has access to.
  2. Launch and training. After going live, the team met weekly with their Gorgias representative for three to four weeks. They analyzed engagements, reviewed tickets, and provided extensive AI feedback to teach Shopping Assistant which responses were appropriate and how to pull from the knowledge base effectively.
  3. Ongoing optimization. Now, Stacy conducts audits biweekly and continuously updates the knowledge base with new products, promotions, and internal changes. She also provides daily AI feedback, ensuring responses stay accurate and on-brand.

Actionable takeaway: Block out time for that initial knowledge base audit. Then commit to regular check-ins because your business evolves, and your AI should evolve with it.

Read more: AI in CX Webinar Recap: Turning AI Implementation into Team Alignment

4. Simple, concise language converts better

Here's something most brands miss: the way you write your knowledge base articles directly impacts conversion rates.

Before BFCM, Stacy reviewed all of Cornbread's Guidance and rephrased the language to make it easier for AI Agent to understand. 

"The language in the Guidance had to be simple, concise, very straightforward so that Shopping Assistant could deliver that information without being confused or getting too complicated," Stacy explains. When your AI can quickly parse and deliver information, customers get faster, more accurate answers. And faster answers mean more conversions.

Katherine adds another crucial element: tone consistency.

"We treat AI as another team member. Making sure that the tone and the language that AI used were very similar to the tone and the language that our human agents use was crucial in creating and maintaining a customer relationship."

As a result, customers often don't realize they're talking to AI. Some even leave reviews saying they loved chatting with "Ally" (Cornbread's AI agent name), not realizing Ally isn't human.

Actionable takeaway: Review your knowledge base with fresh eyes. Can you simplify without losing meaning? Does it sound like your brand? Would a customer be satisfied with this interaction? If not, time for a rewrite.

Read more: How to Write Guidance with the “When, If, Then” Framework

5. Black Friday results proved the strategy works under pressure

The real test of any CX strategy is how it performs under pressure. For Cornbread, Black Friday Cyber Monday 2025 proved that their conversational commerce strategy wasn't just working, it was thriving.

Over the peak season, Cornbread saw: 

  • Shopping Assistant conversion rate jumped from a 20% baseline to 30% during BFCM
  • First response time dropped from over two minutes in 2024 to just 21 seconds in 2025
  • Attributed revenue grew by 75%
  • Tickets doubled, but AI handled 400% more tickets compared to the previous year
  • CSAT scores stayed exactly in line with the previous year, despite the massive volume increase

Katherine breaks down what made the difference:

"Shopping Assistant popping up, answering those questions with the correct promo information helps customers get from point A to point B before the deal ends."

During high-stakes sales events, customers are in a hurry. They're comparing options, checking out competitors, and making quick decisions. If you can't answer their questions immediately, they're gone. Shopping Assistant kept customers engaged and moving toward purchase, even when human agents were swamped.

Actionable takeaway: Peak periods require a fail-safe CX strategy. The brands that win are the ones that prepare their AI tools in advance.

6. Strategic work replaces reactive tasks

One of the most transformative impacts of conversational commerce goes beyond conversion rates. What your team can do with their newfound bandwidth matters just as much.

With AI handling straightforward inquiries, Cornbread's CX team has evolved into a strategic problem-solving team. They've expanded into social media support, provided real-time service during a retail pop-up, and have time for the high-value interactions that actually build customer relationships.

Katherine describes phone calls as their highest value touchpoint, where agents can build genuine relationships with customers. “We have an older demographic, especially with CBD. We received a lot of customer calls requesting orders and asking questions. And sometimes we end up just yapping,” Katherine shares. “I was yapping with a customer last week, and we'd been on the call for about 15 minutes. This really helps build those long-term relationships that keep customers coming back."

That's the kind of experience that builds loyalty, and becomes possible only when your team isn't stuck answering repetitive tickets.

Stacy adds that agents now focus on "higher-level tickets or customer issues that they need to resolve. AI handles straightforward things, and our agents now really are more engaged in more complicated, higher-level resolutions."

Actionable takeaway: Stop thinking about AI only as a cost-cutting tool and start seeing it as an impact multiplier. The goal is to free your team to work on conversations that actually move the needle on customer lifetime value.

7. Continuous optimization for January and beyond

Cornbread isn't resting on their BFCM success. They're already optimizing for January, traditionally the biggest month for wellness brands as customers commit to New Year's resolutions.

Their focus areas include optimizing their product quiz to provide better data to both AI and human agents, educating customers on realistic expectations with CBD use, and using Shopping Assistant to spotlight new products launching in Q1.

Build your conversational commerce strategy now

The brands winning at conversational commerce aren't the ones with the biggest budgets or the largest teams. They're the ones who understand that customer education drives conversions, and they've built systems to deliver that education at scale.

Cornbread Hemp's success comes down to three core principles: investing time upfront to train AI properly, maintaining consistent optimization, and treating AI as a team member that deserves the same attention to tone and quality as human agents.

As Katherine puts it:

"The more time that you put into training and optimizing AI, the less time you're going to have to babysit it later. Then, it's actually going to give your customers that really amazing experience."

Watch the replay of the whole conversation with Katherine and Stacy to learn how Gorgias’s Shopping Assistant helps them turn browsers into buyers. 

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min read.
Make AI Sound More Human

Make AI Sound More Human: How to Avoid Robotic Replies in Customer Support

Learn how small tweaks can make AI sound human and build trust in customer support.
By Gorgias Team
0 min read . By Gorgias Team

TL;DR:

  • Train your AI on your brand voice. A clear voice guide that covers tone, style, and formality helps your AI sound more natural and aligned with your brand.
  • Add short delays before AI responds. A one- or two-second pause can make AI responses seem more thoughtful.
  • Avoid generic phrases. Swap out formal responses for on-brand language that sounds like a real person on your team.
  • Mention customer context in replies. Referencing order history or previous conversations makes AI sound more human and builds trust.
  • Balance automation with human support. Let customers know when they are speaking to AI and escalate to a human when needed to avoid frustration.

Your AI sounds like a robot, and your customers can tell.

Sure, the answer is right, but something feels off. The tone of voice is stiff. The phrases are predictable and generic. At most, it sounds copy-pasted. This may not be a big deal from your side of support. In reality, it’s costing you more than you think.

Recent data shows that 45% of U.S. adults find customer service chatbots unfavorable, up from 43% in 2022. As awareness of chatbots has increased, so have negative opinions of them. Only 19% of people say chatbots are helpful or beneficial in addressing their queries. The gap isn't just about capability. It's about trust. When AI sounds impersonal, customers disengage or leave frustrated.

Luckily, you don't need to choose between automation and the human touch. 

In this guide, we'll show you six practical ways to train your AI to sound natural, build trust, and deliver the kind of support your customers actually like.

1. Train your AI on your brand voice

The fastest way to make your AI sound more human is to teach it to sound like you. AI is only as good as the input you give it, so the more detailed your brand voice training, the more natural and on-brand your responses will be.

Start by building a brand voice guide. It doesn't need to be complicated, but it should clearly define how your brand communicates with customers. At minimum, include:

  • Tone: Is your brand warm and empathetic? Confident and cheeky? Straightforward and helpful?
  • Style: How does your brand write? What is your personality? Short or long sentences, contractions or not, punctuation choices, and overall rhythm.
  • Formality: Do you use slang? Emojis? Address customers as “you,” “y’all,” or something else?
  • Friendliness: How personable should your AI sound? Is it playful, or should responses stay neutral and professional?

Think of your AI as a character. Samantha Gagliardi, Associate Director of Customer Experience at Rhoback, described their approach as building an AI persona:

"I kind of treat it like breaking down an actor. I used to sing and perform for a living — how would I break down the character of Rhoback? How does Rhoback speak? What age are they? What makes the most sense?" 

Next step

✅ Create a brand voice guide with tone, style, formality, and example phrases.

2. Delay responses to mimic human behavior

Humans associate short pauses with thinking, so when your AI responds too quickly, it instantly feels unnatural.

Adding small delays helps your AI feel more like a real teammate.

Where to add response delays:

  • Before sharing info that would realistically take a moment to look up, e.g., order history
  • Before confirming an action like issuing a refund or applying a discount
  • Transitioning or escalating between steps or agents
  • Emotional messages, like customer complaints and product quality issues

Even a one- to two-second pause can make a big difference in a robotic or human-sounding AI.

Next step

✅ Add instructions in your AI’s knowledge base to include short response delays during key moments.

3. Avoid generic phrasing and canned language

Generic phrases make your AI sound like... well, AI. Customers can spot a copy-pasted response immediately — especially when it's overly formal.

That doesn't mean you need to be extremely casual. It means being true to your brand. Whether your voice is professional or conversational, the goal is the same: sound like a real person on your team.

Here's how to replace robotic phrasing with more brand-aligned responses:

Generic Phrase

More Natural Alternative

“We apologize for the inconvenience.”

“Sorry about that, we’re working on it now.” (friendly)
“Apologies for the trouble. We’re resolving this ASAP.” (professional)

“Your satisfaction is our top priority.”

“We want to make sure this works for you.” (friendly)
“Let us know how we can make this right.” (professional)

“Please be advised…”

“Just a quick heads up…” (friendly)
“For your reference…” (professional)

“Your request has been received.”

“Got it. Thanks for reaching out.” (friendly)
“We’ve received your request and will follow up shortly.” (professional)

“I will now review your request.”

“Let me take a quick look.” (friendly)
“I’m reviewing the details now.” (professional)

Next step

✅ Identify your five most common inquiries and give your AI a rewritten example response for each.

4. Use context to inform answers

One of the biggest tells that a response is AI-generated? It ignores what's already happened.

When your AI doesn't reference order history or past conversations, customers are forced to repeat themselves. Repetition can lead to frustration and can quickly turn a good customer experience into a bad one.

Great AI uses context to craft replies that feel personalized and genuinely helpful.

Here's what good context looks like in AI responses:

  • Order awareness: The AI knows the customer placed an order yesterday and provides an accurate delivery estimate without asking for the order number again.
  • Conversation continuity: If the customer reached out earlier that week from a different support channel, the AI references that interaction or picks up where things left off.
  • Customer type: First-time shopper? VIP? The AI adjusts tone and detail level accordingly.

Tools like Gorgias AI Agent automatically pull in customer and order data, so replies feel human and contextual without sacrificing speed.

Next step

✅ Add instructions that prompt your AI to reference order details and/or past conversations in its replies, so customers feel acknowledged.

5. Balance automation with human handoff

Customers just want help. They don't care whether it comes from a human or AI, as long as it's the right help. But if you try to trick them, it backfires fast. AI that pretend to be human often give customers the runaround, especially when the issue is complex or emotional.

A better approach is to be transparent. Solve what you can, and hand off anything else to an agent as needed.

When to disclose that the customer is talking to AI:

  • You can disclose it at the start of the conversation, or include a disclaimer in your chat widget, contact page, or help center to let customers know AI may assist
  • When the customer asks to speak to a human or expresses frustration
  • If the AI cannot fulfill the request and needs to escalate
  • Anytime the AI is making decisions, like issuing refunds or processing cancellations
  • When transitioning from AI to a human agent

For more on this topic, check out our article: Should You Tell Customers They're Talking to AI?

Next step

✅ Set clear rules for when your AI should escalate to a human and include handoff messaging that sets expectations and preserves context.

6. Add intentional imperfections to sound human

We're giving you permission to break the rules a little bit. The most human-sounding AI doesn't follow perfect grammar or structure. It reflects the messiness of real dialogue.

People don't speak in flawless sentences every time. We pause, rephrase, cut ourselves off, and throw in the occasional emoji or "uh." When AI has an unpredictable cadence, it feels more relatable and, in turn, more human.

What an imperfect AI could look like: 

  • Vary sentence length and structure. Some short and choppy, others long. 
  • Add subtle grammatical “mistakes” like sentence fragments or informal punctuation. 
  • Mix in casual phrasing or idioms where appropriate. 
  • Avoid mechanical-sounding transitions. 
  • Occasionally use filler phrases like "kinda," "just checking," or "I think."

These imperfections give your AI a more believable voice.

Next step

✅ Add instructions for your AI that permit variation in grammar, tone, and sentence structure to mimic real human speech.

Natural-sounding AI is easier to set up than you think

Human-sounding AI doesn’t require complex prompts or endless fine-tuning. With the right voice guidelines, small tone adjustments, and a few smart instructions, your AI can sound like a real part of your team.

Book a demo of Gorgias AI Agent and see for yourself.

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5 min read.

AI Chatbot Not Working? 7 Common Issues and How to Fix Them

If your AI chatbot is looping, escalating too fast, or giving wrong answers, here’s how to fix it.
By Christelle Agustin
0 min read . By Christelle Agustin

TL;DR:

  • If your AI is giving wrong answers or getting stuck, it’s likely due to missing or conflicting knowledge. Ensure your AI is trained with up-to-date documents and add guardrails to prevent off-topic replies.
  • Loops and escalations usually mean your escalation rules aren’t specific enough. Define when AI should step in, when it should hand over, and create “escape phrases” that trigger human takeover.
  • Customers still want human help. Always offer a path to a real person and make sure your agents get full conversation context when a handoff happens.
  • Inconsistent tone between AI and agents can make disjointed experiences. Align your brand voice across all support channels and choose tools that let you customize AI tone.
  • AI works best when its role is clearly defined. Decide which topics it can handle, train it using real conversations, and review performance regularly to fine-tune your setup.

You’ve chosen your AI tool and turned it on, hoping you won’t have to answer another WISMO question. But now you’re here. Why is AI going in circles? Why isn’t it answering simple questions? Why does it hand off every conversation to a human agent?

Conversational AI and chatbots thrive on proper training and data. Like any other team member on your customer support team, AI needs guidance. This includes knowledge documents, policies, brand voice guidelines, and escalation rules. So, if your AI has gone rogue, you may have skipped a step.

In this article, we’ll show you the top seven AI issues, why they happen, how to fix them, and the best practices for AI setup. 

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1. AI sends the wrong answer — with confidence

AI can only be as accurate as the information you feed it. If your AI is confidently giving customers incorrect answers, it likely has a gap in its knowledge or a lack of guardrails.

Insufficient knowledge can cause AI to pull context from similar topics to create an answer, while the lack of guardrails gives it the green light to compose an answer, correct or not.

How to fix it: 

  • Update the AI knowledge base. Create a new document that covers the affected topic in its entirety. To ensure AI follows every step, write your instructions in a when/if/then format.
  • Define topics that AI should not handle. As a preventive measure, specify the topics the AI should skip and hand over to a human agent. For example, add words such as ‘disappointed’, ‘bad’, and ‘unacceptable’ to your AI off-limit list, so that human agents automatically handle negative-intent tickets.

2. Customer is stuck in an AI loop 

This is one of the most frustrating customer service issues out there. Left unfixed, you risk losing 29% of customers

If your AI is putting customers through a never-ending loop, it’s time to review your knowledge docs and escalation rules.

How to fix it:

  • Double-check for conflicts in knowledge. You may have provided multiple resolutions for the same issue across different knowledge sources, such as uploaded documents, website pages, and in-app instructions.
  • Add “escape routes”. Choose a set of phrases that automatically escalate conversations from AI to your support team. For example, “it’s not working” or “I already tried that”.
  • Set a max number of failed interactions before escalation. Opt for a one-fail-and-escalate approach for every conversation, or specify the number of failed interactions for certain topics.

3. AI escalates too quickly, even for easy questions

It can be frustrating when AI can’t do the bare minimum, like automate WISMO tickets. This issue is likely due to missing knowledge or overly broad escalation rules.

How to fix it:

  • Train AI on your FAQs and common issues. Which customer questions do you repeatedly receive? Create a document that lists out every question and its answer.
  • Update vague escalation rules. AI works best with specificity. For example, if you told it to escalate conversations about “returns,” it may even escalate frequently asked questions about return eligibility.

4. Customers can’t find a way to reach a human

One in two customers still prefer talking to a human to an AI, according to Katana. Limiting them to AI-only support could risk a sale or their relationship. 

The top live chat apps clearly display options to speak with AI or a human agent. If your tool doesn’t have this, refine your AI-to-human escalation rules.

How to fix it:

  • Set phrases to trigger escalation. In your knowledge docs, define which phrases should tell AI to hand a conversation over to your support team. For example, “I want to talk to someone” or “Can I talk to a human?”
  • Add a visible option to connect with a human. This can be a button in your chat widget, a note in your contact page, or even a link in your website footer. At minimum, give customers an easy-to-find way to reach a real person.

5. Handoff happens — but the agent gets no context

If your agents are asking customers to repeat themselves, you’ve already lost momentum. One of the fastest ways to break trust is by making someone explain their issue twice. This happens when AI escalates without passing the conversation history, customer profile, or even a summary of what’s already been attempted.

How to fix it:

  • Use rules to auto-tag conversations based on AI activity. Set up logic to tag tickets when certain conditions are met — like when AI attempted a specific action, couldn't resolve the issue, or triggered escalation.
  • Audit your escalated tickets. Look for patterns where context is missing, and adjust the AI-to-human transition logic accordingly.
  • Use an AI platform that provides automated ticket summaries. Choose a tool like Gorgias that provides a quick overview of every ticket.

6. The tone between AI and agent is jarring

Sure, conversational AI has near-perfect grammar, but if its tone is entirely different from your agents’, customers can be put off.

This mismatch usually comes from not settling on an official customer support tone of voice. AI might be pulling from marketing copy. Agents might be winging it. Either way, inconsistency breaks the flow.

How to fix it:

  • Create shared brand voice guidelines. Align tone, formality, and language rules across both AI scripts and agent responses.
  • Define emojis and punctuation use. A consistent visual style helps conversations feel smoother and more human.
  • Use AI tools that allow tone control. Choose platforms that let you customize the voice and personality of your AI to match your brand.
  • Train your agents with examples of ideal tone. Give your team brand voice examples of how conversations should continue when handed off.

7. You haven’t defined what AI should actually handle

When AI is underperforming, the problem isn’t always the tool. Many teams launch AI without ever mapping out what it's actually supposed to do. So it tries to do everything (and fails), or it does nothing at all.

It’s important to remember that support automation isn’t “set it and forget it.” It needs to know its playing field and boundaries.

How to fix it:

AI should handle

AI should escalate to a human

Order tracking (“Where’s my package?”)

Upset, frustrated, or emotional customers

Return and refund policy questions

Billing problems or refund exceptions

Store hours, shipping rates, and FAQs

Technical product or troubleshooting issues

Simple product questions

Complex or edge‑case product questions

Password resets

Multi‑part or multi‑issue requests

Pre‑sale questions with clear, binary answers

Anything where a wrong answer risks churn

How to set up AI that actually works

Once you’ve addressed the obvious issues, it’s important to build a setup that works reliably. These best practices will help your AI deliver consistently helpful support.

1. Define clear AI boundaries

Start by deciding what AI should and shouldn’t handle. Let it take care of repetitive tasks like order tracking, return policies, and product questions. Anything complex or emotionally sensitive should go straight to your team.

2. Train it using real customer conversations

Use examples from actual tickets and messages your team handles every day. Help center articles are a good start, but real interactions are what help AI learn how customers actually ask questions.

3. Set up fallback triggers

Create rules that tell your AI when to escalate. These might include customer frustration, low confidence in the answer, or specific phrases like “talk to a person.” The goal is to avoid infinite loops and to hand things off before the experience breaks down.

4. Make sure agents receive full context

When a handoff happens, your agents should see everything the AI did. That includes the full conversation, relevant customer data, and any actions it has already attempted. This helps your team respond quickly and avoid repeating what the customer just went through. 

An easy way to keep order history, customer data, and conversation history in one place is by using a conversational commerce tool like Gorgias.

5. Keep tone and voice consistent

A jarring shift in tone between AI and agent makes the experience feel disconnected. Align aspects such as formality, punctuation, and language style so the transition from AI to human feels natural.

6. Review handoffs regularly

Look at recent escalations each week. Identify where the AI struggled or handed off too early or too late. Use those insights to improve training, adjust boundaries, and strengthen your automation flows.

If your AI chatbot isn’t working the way you expected, it’s probably not because the technology is broken. It’s because it hasn’t been given the right rules.

AI that works your way and knows when to escalate

When you set AI up with clear responsibilities, it becomes a powerful extension of your team.

Want to see what it looks like when AI is set up the right way?

Try Gorgias AI Agent. It’s conversational AI built with smart automation, clean escalations, and ecommerce data in its core — so your customers get faster answers and your agents stay focused.

Get started with Gorgias AI Agent →

min read.
Create powerful self-service resources
Capture support-generated revenue
Automate repetitive tasks

Further reading

Order Fulfillment

Order Fulfillment for Ecommerce: Process, Tips, & Tools

By Lauren Strapagiel
17 min read.
0 min read . By Lauren Strapagiel

Gone are the days when a customer places an order online without considering order fulfillment. They want free shipping, two-day shipping, and live order tracking — and that’s just table stakes.

Big ecommerce brands and marketplaces, especially Amazon Prime, have trained customers to expect their orders will arrive as soon as the next day and with absolutely no hassle. That creates challenges for small and medium businesses now tasked with achieving similar results.

Your ecommerce business may not have the resources for next-day delivery, but having online orders arrive quickly and smoothly is non-negotiable. Slow or frustrating order fulfillment can easily trigger a product return or a negative review, and will likely prevent a customer from turning into a repeat customer.

Even small brands can optimize their order fulfillment process, from taking in and storing inventory to taking return requests, and deliver great results every time.

What is order fulfillment?

Order fulfillment is the sequence of steps that starts after a customer places an online order, and ends when your customer receives their order. It includes order intake, order picking, assembling, packing, shipping, and order tracking

What does order fulfillment mean?

Some companies include post-delivery communications in this category, while others put that communication into another category, like customer support or onboarding.

All organizations rely on some third-party assistance within the order fulfillment process — even if you’re a solo business owner who handles most of the order fulfillment process in house (like inventory storage and order processing), you use a delivery carrier like FedEx or USPS to drop off packages. 

Other businesses lean on more outsourced fulfillment solutions to manage warehousing and ship orders, such as a dropshipping partner or third-party logistics (3PL) operation. Self-fulfillment is quite time-consuming for stores with high volumes of orders, so you’ll likely outsource more of the order fulfillment process as you grow. 

Common challenges of order fulfillment

Companies frequently run into several common hurdles when building an ecommerce fulfillment strategy, especially as they grow and scale. Processing more customer orders is a good thing, but only when businesses can keep up with customer expectations around their fulfillment needs. 

Top challenges of order fulfillment.

Do any of these order fulfillment challenges sound familiar to your business?

  • Poor inventory management: Frequently being out of stock (or, worse, selling items you don’t have in stock) hampers your sales potential and harms the customer experience.
  • Low shipping quality: When you hand packages off to a shipping carrier, much of the shipping process is out of your hands. Yet, customers still blame you when items don’t arrive or show up damaged.
  • Too much stock: Keeping too much stock on hand affects storage and carrying costs, and you can end up stuck with unsellable items that have gone out of style, out of season, or otherwise become unpopular.
  • Supply chain breakdown: When one or more links in your supply chain are unable to keep up with demand for inventory.

These issues are common, but they add up over time, diminishing your customer experience (CX) and growth potential. Building loyal customers is key to repeat business and a poor fulfillment strategy put that at risk. Every time a customer has to reach out about an issue in the process, you’re a step closer to losing them. 

Even if you have the fastest, friendliest customer service team around, a fulfillment operation that doesn’t require customers to reach out is always preferred.

Most customer service interactions do not drive loyalty.
The Effortless Experience

📚Related reading: Our list of revenue-driving ecommerce shipping best practices.

Why is order fulfillment important for ecommerce businesses?

Why pay close attention to your order fulfillment strategy? Because it’s what ensures your customers get what they ordered, when they expect it. 

As many as 90% of online shoppers see 2-day and 3-day delivery as the standard, with 30% of shoppers saying that they expect same-day delivery. In fact, the same-day delivery market in the US is expected to grow by more than $9 billion from 2020 to 2025.

What’s more, Arvato finds that 54% percent of U.S. shoppers have walked away from a purchase because of the cost of delivery, and 27% percent have done the same because the ecommerce business didn’t have fulfillment options that arrive in time.

Providing a delivery estimate is also key. A 2020 report from Navnar found 68% of customers said estimated delivery time during the checkout process influenced their decision to complete a purchase.

The bottom line is that customers expect fast, cost-effective, and transparent shipping if you want to win their business and loyalty.

What customers expect from shipping in ecommerce.

How does the order fulfillment process generally work?

Let’s take a step back to the basics and look at how the order fulfillment process works for the typical ecommerce business selling on an ecommerce platform.

Each of these steps has its own set of intricacies and details, and it’s easy to overlook something in one or more of these areas. Looking at each step before getting any deeper in will help you better assess what your business needs to handle — and how to go about doing so.

1) Receiving inventory

Receiving inventory is the process of taking stock into a warehouse or fulfillment center. Before you (or your order fulfillment company) can ship products to customers, you (or they) must first have products to ship. 

Order fulfillment process step 1: receiving inventory

Depending on how your business is structured, inventory can come from your own production facilities, from other companies directly, or from third-party or intermediary services.

Part of the receiving process is counting and inspecting incoming stock for damage. Categorizing or labeling starts here and continues in the next step.

2) Storing inventory

Any products you don’t immediately process and ship need to be categorized, logged, and stored, usually using a stock-keeping unit (SKU). Some larger businesses may also use some other kind of barcode or radio-frequency identification (RFID) tracking system to help with inventory management.

Order fulfillment process step 2: storing inventory

Items are placed into inventory storage, either in your warehouse (whether that’s a large facility or just your garage) or in your fulfillment service center or third-party logistics partner’s warehouse.

This step encompasses a lot, as your strategy here dictates how much time and labor goes into finding and packing items later on. For example, digital inventory management systems are crucial for tracking and locating items stored in inventory.

3) Processing the order

Processing an order involves developing a system to find items, pull them from the inventory, and then pack them once a customer places an order. 

Order fulfillment process step 3: processing the order

This could look like you going to your at-home inventory and packaging the items, or your fulfillment partners taking your items from a warehouse. It all depends on the size of your business.

You can streamline and track order processing Gorgias and with apps that integrate into Gorgias such as ShipMonk and Bigblue. ShipMonk, for example, pulls order fulfillment data and tracking information right into Gorgias helpdesk.

There’s also ShipBob, a 3PL that takes care of order fulfillment for ecommerce businesses. ShipBob integrates with Gorgias to pull all your customer orders fulfilled by ShipBob into a single account.

4) Shipping the order

This step is when your team (or your 3PL) hands off the order to a transportation channel (for example, shipping carriers like FedEx, UPS, and USPS).

Order fulfillment process step 4: shipping the order

This is the step where your strategy most directly influences the costs your business incurs. The packing materials, weight, and sizes you choose get calculated into a measurement called dimensional weight (DIM weight), which generally determines how much you pay in shipping costs.

This is an opportunity to communicate shipping notices to the customer. AfterShip provides tracking for you and transparency for customers and integrates with Gorgias so you can quickly access shipping information when communicating with customers.

Providing detailed shipping information is a crucial step of your fulfillment process. According to Optimroute, 24.6% of customers said they were “extremely likely” to buy again from a brand that provides real-time order tracking.

Shipping is deep into the process, but your shipping options greatly impact your incoming sales. Shipping costs are the most common reason behind abandoned carts: According to the Baynard Institute, 48% of customers will abandon a cart if shipping costs are too high, and 22% will do the same if the delivery time was too slow.

Top reasons for cart abandonment.
Baymard

📚Recommended reading:

5) Handling returns

Any ecommerce business must have a process for handling returns in place, and this crucial function usually falls under order fulfillment. Your returns procedures must establish when returns are and are not accepted, along with how to determine which returns can be restocked and which cannot (e.g., soiled or defective items).

Order fulfillment process step 5: handling returns

You need to be prepared for returns as they’re guaranteed to happen. In 2021, shoppers returned over 20.8% of products ordered, according to the National Retail Foundation. Items returned in 2021 alone were worth a total of $761 billion.

Again, apps can make this all easier. Loop Returns, for example, automates returns for Shopify merchants. Loop and Gorgias work together to place all your returns data inside the Gorgias helpdesk. 

📚Recommended reading: 

The 4 types of order fulfillment

While the broad strokes we just outlined are fairly consistent, the details of order fulfillment are different from company to company, as are fulfillment costs.

Most businesses fall into one of four categories or types of order fulfillment. Below, we’ll detail each of these four categories: in-house order fulfillment, third-party order fulfillment, dropshipping order fulfillment, and hybrid order fulfillment.

In-house order fulfillment

In-house order fulfillment is what it sounds like — the business handles all the steps listed above internally (aside from the actual shipping). Employees or contractors for the ecommerce business receive and store inventory, pick and pack orders with a shipping label and packing slip, and handle the customer relationships that accompany each order.

In-house is common on two extreme ends of the spectrum: smaller, low-volume businesses and startups (where packing boxes doesn’t consume too much of any one person’s time), and major enterprises (think Amazon).

📚Recommended reading: How to Offer Free Shipping and Lift Revenue

Third-party order fulfillment

In a third-party model, everything about the order fulfillment process is outsourced to a third-party logistics company. Outsourcing to a third-party fulfillment provider like the Shopify Fulfillment Network, Amazon FBA, Amazon MCF, or Deliverr is a highly strategic choice for ecommerce businesses that have grown to a certain order volume but lack order fulfillment infrastructure.

Using an order fulfillment service also makes sense for firms with volatile or seasonal sales patterns, where maintaining as much storage space as possible is unsustainable during slower seasons.

📚Recommended reading: Shopify Fulfillment Network Review From an Ecommerce Merchant

Dropshipping order fulfillment

Dropshipping is when an ecommerce store doesn’t keep items in stock and, instead, sources products from a third-party manufacturer or wholesaler who holds the items and ships them as needed. The store owner pays the wholesale price as items are shipped, removing the burden of keeping their own inventory.

This is different from the 3PL model, where the store provides its own inventory to the third-party provider, and different from when a store stores its own inventory.

It makes sense for D2C businesses that own their own manufacturing and want to keep order fulfillment in house. It also makes sense for ecommerce businesses that want minimal involvement in the fulfillment process. Essentially, the business forwards shipping details to the manufacturer, who takes over the transaction.

The downside to dropshipping is that it means giving up control of the order process. Additionally, costs (and shipping times) can shoot up quickly when customers are far away from your manufacturing partner’s shipping locations.

Hybrid order fulfillment

Hybrid order fulfillment is any scenario that combines multiple strategies. For example, a company with heavy seasonal sales might keep most order fulfillment in house, but outsource some to a third-party firm during Q4. Alternatively, the company may select high-value or specialty items for dropshipping, while everything else is handled another way.

10 Best practices and tips for an optimized order fulfillment process

Once you’ve determined a broad direction for your order fulfillment strategy (or identified some top-tier issues with your current process), it’s time to reevaluate and optimize. Use these best practices and tips to tighten up your order fulfillment strategy and further wow your customer base.

1) Streamline receiving processes so damaged goods are handled promptly

Returns handling is something no business wants to focus on, but it’s an important area nonetheless. 

Assess all incoming products before they’re sent to your inventory and set a process to separate and catalog those damaged goods. All damaged items should be documented so you can provide proof to the wholesaler or manufacturer of defective items.

Return damaged goods as soon as possible so you can get replacements and not slow down your order fulfillment. The last thing you want is to find a product that is damaged just as you’re packing it for shipment and be left scrambling.

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2) Organize your inventory and warehouse with efficiency in mind

If you’re handling your own inventory management and doing in-house fulfillment, keeping your inventory and warehouse organized can have a meaningful impact on your bottom line. When used in combination with an order fulfillment system, better organization can generate real results.

Searching for lost pallets is a resource drain that generates zero revenue. The right organizational strategy makes it easier for human or automated pickers to find the items, and can even reduce travel time between items. This is especially true as you scale organizational strategies across entire or multiple distribution centers — clear organization helps improve pick and pack times.

Even for small businesses, which may involve keeping inventory in a garage or office, it’s still important to have an organizational system in place. Simple tools like labels and a spreadsheet can go a long way.

Using a 3PL like ShipBob makes this all easier by taking inventory out of your hands, leaving you to focus on branding and customer service.

📚Recommended reading: An Essential Guide to Ecommerce Inventory Management

3) Automate processes wherever possible

Automation in warehousing settings requires substantial upfront investment and may even require rethinking your entire warehouse footprint. But wherever you’re able to implement it, automation can help save you money and time in the long run by optimizing labor, improving working conditions, and making operations safer.

Automation can happen in small ways, too. Using Gorgias and the apps that integrate into the helpdesk puts all your data into one place and makes it easier and faster to make decisions.

Adding an app like Alloy Automation makes your Gorgias admin even more efficient by pulling in tickets, daily shipments, survey data, and review information.

📚Recommended reading: Automate and Streamline Ecommerce Tasks While Keeping a Human Touch

4) Use order fulfillment software that integrates with customer service software

As your company grows, you’ll eventually turn to some kind of order fulfillment software. When you do, choose one that integrates well with your chosen customer service software — you don’t want siloed information systems that can’t talk to each other.

When your fulfillment software integrates with your helpdesk, you can see fulfillment data while answering customer questions. So, if a customer asks about the status of their order, you don’t have to pull open a new tab and copy/paste things like tracking numbers and estimated delivery dates. All of that is already in your helpdesk, making it much faster to provide helpful, personalized answers. 

NetSuite and Gorgias integration.

Source: NetSuite and Gorgias integration

NetSuite and ShipBob are two leaders in this category. The latter also offers some third-party logistics support.

Learn more about Gorgias’ multiple integration options.

5) Prioritize your inventory’s accuracy

From a customer’s perspective, which is worse? Seeing that an item is sold out before you order it, or ordering (and paying for) an item that’s listed as in stock, only to find out later that the item was not actually in stock?

Most customers would prefer the bad news upfront. Inventory inaccuracies create a host of customer frustrations that your business would surely prefer to avoid.

The math here is simple, even if the execution is complex: The more accurate your inventory, the more success you’ll have in delivering the right products on time.

Whether you’re using an in-house order fulfillment model or you’re relying on a 3PL partner’s distribution centers, using a warehouse management system is generally better than relying on manual data entry. This is certainly true as you grow or scale your ecommerce venture.

You also want to be sure to watch the right set of inventory management metrics, which can show you how well you’re doing at keeping an accurate inventory. These metrics will vary depending on your goals, but could include:

  • Backorder rate (rate of unfulfilled orders due to items on backorder)
  • Accuracy of forecast demand (compares on-hand quantity to the forecasted demand)
  • Lost sales ratio (number of days a product is out of stock compared to projected sales over that time)
  • Inventory shrinkage (inventory that you cannot find or cannot sell due to damage)
  • Fill rate (measures how many items were shipped compared to ordered)
  • Customer satisfaction score (number of positive responses against all responses)

If you’d like to learn more about these and other metrics, NetSuite has put together a solid explainer on 33 of the most important inventory management KPIs and metrics. Their guide explains all six of the metrics we’ve listed, plus several others.

6) Minimize package touching and handling

In general, it’s a good idea to limit the number of touches that each package gets (There are packing strategies that disregard this, such as wave picking, but we still consider it to be a best practice unless you have an overriding reason to choose a different strategy).

Why is it a good strategy to minimize touching and handling? Because of all the things that could potentially go wrong at every touch:

  • Product damage
  • Shrinkage
  • Employee injury
  • Packing mistakes (too many, not enough, or missing items)

Additionally, every touch is added time and energy expended on an item. You want to get items out the door with as little friction as possible, so engineer your processes in a way that minimizes touches and handoffs.

7) Keep enough inventory to keep up with demand

This best practice circles back to demand forecasting, which is always a complex element for ecommerce retailers. You want to keep enough inventory on hand to keep up with customer demand, because delivering on time and reducing stockouts are two primary ways to increase customer satisfaction.

Of course, you don’t want to overdo it and end up with excess or even dead inventory. Keep your inventory levels modest, yet sufficient — always have enough to deliver on time, but remain agile enough that you don’t end up with pallets upon pallets of product sitting around that cannot be sold.

Regularly assess your orders for what items are most popular and keep an eye on key calendar dates — like Black Friday and the holiday season — to predict how much inventory you’ll need.

8) Use an RFID system to enhance analytics

If you’re not relying on a third-party order fulfillment system and you’ve reached a certain size and complexity, consider implementing a radio-frequency identification (RFID) system for tracking inventory. 

RFID is a technology that uses tags and a reader device to track inventory in an automated way. It’s a way of providing real-time tracking for your inventory. Learn more about RFID with this Luluemon case study:

https://youtu.be/cZfx2naKYXo

Such a system far outpaces traditional systems for tracking and managing inventory, and it unlocks additional levels of analytics that can give you a better understanding of your inventory.

When doing inventory at scale, better data means better decision-making, which can filter through all levels of your supply chain.

9) Be clear with your shipping options

Unless you offer pick-up or can deliver orders yourself, such as in a local delivery area, you’ll be relying on a shipping carrier such as USPS, FedEx, or Purolator.

Customers want clear shipping times and flexibility. Do your research to understand which shipping partner will best suit your needs and communicate their various options to your customers, who may be willing to pay more for shipping if it means a faster delivery time.

The same is true if you’re using a third-party fulfillment partner. Ensure they can meet your shipping expectations, keeping in mind the average customer expectation for online delivery is three days

Another way to achieve this is with good coverage. Ideally, a fulfillment provider has enough warehouse locations to cover at least 95% of the US, for example.

Native Union, a tech accessory brand, lets customers input their shipping zip code to estimate the cost of each delivery option before they place an order:

Estimate shipping costs.
Native Union

10) Make returns and edits a simple process

Your customers want a simple returns process, as do your in-house order fulfillment teams.

There’s strategic value in instituting a transparent returns process that’s easy for your customers to understand and use when they need it. Don’t forget about the back end, either. Your internal teams are just as important to your continued order fulfillment success, so make sure the process for handling returns is simple to execute.

Start by setting expectations for returns and exchanges ahead of time with a FAQ or Help Center page that clearly outlines your return and refund policies.

Then, streamline the returns process with the following recommendations:

Use self-service order management to let customers cancel orders and request returns

Make it as easy as possible for customers to initiate cancellations or request returns, saving time for both them and your customer service team.

Use Gorgias’ Automate to create a self-service portal that customers can use for these processes. Instead of waiting for an agent to help, customers can use the chat widget on your ecommerce website to:

  • Track the status of their order
  • Return an order
  • Report issues
  • Cancel an order

Self-service order tracking and management with Gorgias.

For any ecommerce business, these are the top reasons customers reach out or file tickets, cluttering your dashboard. Letting customers take care of these processes themselves streamlines your workflow and builds customer satisfaction.

Use a tool like Loop to fully automate the returns and exchanges

Loop is a returns app that allows a customer to initiate a return or exchange all on their own without having to wait for your customer support team. With Loop, customers can see which of their items are available for return or exchange or select a new item or size for replacement.

Loop helps with customer retention by offering an exchange or bonus credit rather than an outright return, giving customers a chance to stay a customer. Loop then provides you with data so you can get insights into where customers may be running into issues with your products.

Automated returns with Loop Returns.
Loop

And best of all, Loop fully integrates with Gorgias so you can see all those return and exchange details in one place. Read how Kulani Kinis saved $400,000 in refunds using Gorgias and Loop together.

📚Recommended reading: 10 Ways To Reduce Ecommerce Product Returns With Great CX

Enhance your ecommerce order fulfillment process and customer service with Gorgias

Ecommerce businesses benefit when they get intentional about their order fulfillment strategy. By leapfrogging past common hurdles like poor inventory management or poor shipping experiences, businesses can strengthen customer relationships and continue to grow.

The best practices and tips we’ve provided here can get you well on your way to improving your order fulfillment strategy. But in the end, you also need the right tools and apps to round out your inventory and customer service abilities.

Gorgias can transform how you empower your customer service team with better helpdesk and customer service tools tailored to the needs of ecommerce businesses. 

Plus, Gorgias integrates with all the top ecommerce platforms, shipping and fulfillment software, and other ecommerce apps used by businesses like yours to simplify essential services like order management.


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Ready to find out how Gorgias can help improve your order fulfillment strategy? Sign up for free today!

Ecommerce KPIs

20 Essential Ecommerce KPIs for Growing Your Business

By Julien Marcialis
18 min read.
0 min read . By Julien Marcialis

Running a successful online store requires a lot of strategy and decision making. But if you don't use the right data and insights to guide those decisions, then it becomes a lot harder to optimize your ecommerce business based on intuition alone.

This is where ecommerce KPIs come into play. By providing a broad range of insights regarding how your ecommerce store is performing, these KPIs can serve as a roadmap to guide your ecommerce strategy and help you meet your business goals.

To help you get started tracking the health and performance of your ecommerce business, let's take a look at the 20 most important KPIs that every ecommerce store should track.

What is a key performance indicator?

A standard performance indicator is a measurement used to calculate a business operation relative to a certain goal.

Sounds too complicated? Here’s a practical example: In ecommerce, most people aim to boost their website traffic by 50% to 100% yearly. Therefore, web traffic growth would be a metric relative to this goal and serve as one of the business's standard performance indicators.

There are many performance indicators, but many of them are irrelevant to your business's success. This is why most serious business managers tend to narrow the selection down to 10 to 20 indicators that significantly impact their business's success. These are known as key performance indicators (or KPIs).

Defining and tracking KPIs for your ecommerce business provides enlightening insights into your business's performance. You can use them to evaluate your business's health and spot issues that need correcting. You can even use them to evaluate the results of changes you make to your ecommerce store and strategy for data-based optimization.

Your business can’t possibly survive on your gut instinct alone. That’s why you need to measure the effectiveness of your business strategy, and the best way to do this is by defining and tracking your business's KPIs.

Different types of KPIs in ecommerce

While there are a few so-called "universal" KPIs, most industries measure success differently. 

In the ecommerce industry, several different KPIs are generally considered important to track. More often than not, store owners use the following KPIs to measure their success:

  • Monetary KPIs: If you want to get some return on your investment, you need to keep track of your money. In the beginning, you should pick whether to track gross profit, revenue, or both. Other KPIs, such as average order value (AOV), customer acquisition cost (CAC), and customer lifetime value (CLV), can also fall under this category.
  • Customer KPIs: The number of new customers, repeat customers, and former customers are a few ecommerce metrics that fall into this category, but any metrics about customer behavior, customer experience, and customer support can be customer KPIs.
  • Purchase KPIs: The number of people that have made, tried to make, and abandoned a purchase are all vital KPIs for ecommerce stores to track.
  • Conversion KPIs: How many of your visitors actually purchase something? Conversion KPIs provide insights into the performance of your ecommerce sales funnel and are also key to gauging the performance of marketing campaigns.

These different types of KPIs are measured during business operation assessments. You should perform these assessments once a month (if possible) during your store's first six months of operation. Past the six-month mark, you should perform business operation assessments once every three to six months.

Here are two different types of businesses assessment:

  • SWOTT Analysis: Assessing your businesses’ Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, Threats, and Trends, should be performed twice a year
  • GPCT Analysis: Looking at your Goals, Plans, Challenges, and Timeline, should be performed at least once a year

Along with assessing your overall business goals and strategy, these business operation assessments serve as an opportunity to measure and analyze your store's KPIs. 

KPIs to track revenue, profitability & conversions

If you would like to grow the sales on your ecommerce site (and what store owner doesn't?), then here are the top five KPIs that you will need to track and improve:

1) Overall sales

The first step to growing your store's sales is tracking how many sales you're already making. You can monitor your sales on a monthly, weekly, daily, and even hourly basis if needed. It all depends on the type of product you're selling and your sales volume. Businesses can easily monitor overall sales in Magento or Shopify. Another option is to set up sales trackers in your Gorgias dashboard and track them directly.

Tips to improve this KPI:

  • Create an optimized customer experience to drive sales via customer loyalty and word-of-mouth advertising.
  • Utilize cross-selling and upselling to increase average order value.
  • Use A/B testing to improve your online store's conversion rate.

You can view how much sales you generated from support in Gorgias's Statistics view.

‎2) Conversion rates

Conversion rate is the percentage of your website visitors that actually purchase something. Optimizing your conversion rate will enable you to turn a larger number of visitors into paying customers. While conversion rates vary from niche to niche, ecommerce stores usually have a conversion rate slightly above 3%. Unsurprisingly, you should try to get the number as high as possible.

Tips to improve this KPI:

Pinpoint exactly which tickets turned into conversions within Gorgias Statistics.

3) Cart abandonment rates

Shopping cart abandonment rate is the percentage of orders abandoned at checkout. In the ecommerce industry, benchmarks for the average cart abandonment rate are incredibly high, with 70% of all online orders being abandoned at checkout. While an alarming figure, this also provides plenty of room for your business to grow its sales simply by reducing its cart abandonment rate.

Tips to improve this KPI:

  • Make your checkout process quick and simple, and offer a guest checkout option.
  • Offer free shipping to encourage checkout completion.
  • Target customers who have left items in their cart with abandoned cart recovery email campaigns.

4) Customer lifetime value (CLV)

CLV shows the average amount of money a single consumer will spend on your products throughout your relationship. It's a measure of how much value your store can gain by attracting a single customer, and improving CLV means that each new customer you acquire will lead to more sales for your company. The best way to grow CLV is to encourage customer loyalty and repeat purchases, which will benefit any ecommerce business hoping to grow its sales.

Tips to improve this KPI:

  • Use a tool such as LoyaltyLion to promote customer loyalty via loyalty programs.
  • Increase your average order value (AOV) with cross-sells and upsells.
  • Reduce ecommerce churn rate with exceptional customer support.

5) Customer acquisition costs (CAC)

While sometimes overlooked, the amount of money spent on acquiring new customers has to be tracked. If you can reduce your CAC without harming your brand's reach, then your marketing budget will go further, and you will be able to attract even more customers to your store.

Tips to improve this KPI:

  • Target your marketing efforts to the demographic of customers most likely to purchase your products, defined as your brand's "ideal customer."
  • Utilize high ROI marketing tactics such as email marketing.
  • Attract more organic traffic to your store via content marketing and SEO.
  • Shift your emphasis from marketing to conversion so that the potential customers you target are more likely to convert.

6) Average order value (AOV)

AOV measures how much customers purchase, on average, with each transaction. By improving your store's AOV, you can generate more profit for each customer you attract and transaction that you process, improving your store's profitability.

Tips to improve this KPI:

  • Present customers with cross-sell and upsell opportunities at checkout.
  • Focus your marketing and merchandising efforts on promoting high-value products.
  • Offers discounts or promotions to encourage larger orders (i.e., free shipping on orders over $100).

7) Customer retention rate

Customer retention rate is a KPI that tells you how many customers remain loyal to your brand versus the number of customers who leave your brand. When creating consistent revenue for your store, nothing is more important than customer retention.

Tips to improve this KPI:

  • Utilize Gorgias' intent and sentiment detection features to identify customers who are upset or at risk of leaving your brand.
  • Promote customer loyalty with rewards and loyalty programs.
  • Prioritize creating an exceptional customer experience.

8) Average profit margin

Average profit margin measures how much you profit, on average, for each item that you sell. While raising the pricing of your products is one way to improve this metric, it comes with the risk of decreased sales. The good news is that this isn't the only way that ecommerce stores can raise their average profit margin.

Tips to improve this KPI:

  • Use your marketing and ecommerce merchandising efforts to promote products with high profit margins.
  • Reduce your costs of goods sold (see the next section for more on this).
  • Consider eliminating low-margin products from your inventory.

9) Cost of goods sold (COGS)

COGS is the direct cost of producing or acquiring the goods that your ecommerce store sells. Lowering your COGS can improve the profit margins of the products you sell and ultimately improve your store's profitability.

Tips to improve this KPI:

  • Eliminate products from your inventory that are not selling well.
  • Negotiate with suppliers.
  • Reduce waste and inefficiency in your supply chain.

10) CAC/CLV ratio

Customer acquisition costs (CAC) and customer lifetime value (CLV) are metrics we've discussed already. Combined, though, these metrics can provide a ratio that is arguably one of the most vital for ecommerce stores to track. If your CAC/CLV ratio is greater than one, your customers are spending more than it costs to acquire them, and your store will be profitable. If it's lower than one, you're spending more to acquire new customers than those new customers spend — meaning you're losing money.

Tips to improve this KPI:

  • Grow CLV by promoting customer loyalty, growing AOV, and utilizing the other tips we've covered for boosting CLV.

Reduce CAC by targeting your marketing efforts, emphasizing conversions, and utilizing the other tips we've covered for reducing CAC.

KPIs to track web and social media performance

Forty-six percent of U.S. customers state that they are willing to pay more for a brand name that they recognize and trust. If you want to boost your store's brand awareness, focus on improving these KPIs.

11) Website traffic

This is the total number of people that visit your ecommerce website during a given time period. Around 53% of your traffic will come from organic search, while the remainder comes from social media, blogs, and referral sources. Your website is the cornerstone of your brand's online presence, so increasing the traffic that it receives is one of the best ways to improve your brand awareness and reach.

Tips to improve this KPI:

On Gorgias, if you have a Help Center (a knowledge base of articles), you can view what customers are searching for.

12) Bounce rates

When someone does manage to find your website, you want to keep them there for as long as possible - ideally long enough to learn about your products and make a purchasing decision. However, many of your website visitors will leave or "bounce" after viewing a single page. The rate at which this happens is your website's bounce rate, and you should strive to keep your bounce rate as low as possible.

Home page bounce rate

The home page is the page of your website that most visitors will discover first, making it vital to create a homepage that will capture their attention and encourage them to explore your website further.

Product page bounce rate

If you have a high bounce rate on your product pages, it could indicate that your product descriptions or product images are lacking.

Category page bounce rate

A high bounce rate here could indicate that your category pages are not well-organized and that your ecommerce merchandising strategy (defined as how products are organized and displayed within your store) might need improvements.

Search results page bounce rate

If your ecommerce store includes a search bar that enables customers to search for products, then a high bounce rate on your search results page could indicate that your store's search functionality is not up to par.

Tips to improve this KPI:

  • Ensure that your web pages are fast-loading and function properly.
  • Populate your web pages with eye-catching images and compelling content.
  • Engage website visitors with proactive customer service.

13) Mobile traffic

In addition to overall traffic, you need to monitor your mobile traffic closely. That’s because a large chunk of your traffic will come from mobile devices and perhaps a majority of conversions on your website; nearly 60.28% of all web traffic comes from mobile devices.

Tips to improve this KPI:

  • Ensure that your ecommerce website is optimized for mobile devices.
  • Consider offering an app version of your online store where customers can shop in-app.

14) Social followers

One of the best ways to improve brand awareness is to grow your brand's social media reach. Today, more customers than ever are using social media platforms such as Facebook and Instagram to discover new products and brands. By developing a large audience of social followers, you can make your brand and products more discoverable.

Tips to improve this KPI:

  • Publish engaging social media posts that your audience will actually enjoy.
  • Expand your brand's social media reach with influencer marketing
  • Use photos and videos in your posts to make them more eye-catching.
  • Invest in social media ads that are designed to grow your social following.

15) Click-through-rate (CTR)

Mainly used to measure the effectiveness of paid advertisements, CTR shows you the ratio of clicks to impressions in your ad campaign. For Google Ads, the average CTR is roughly 4-6%. Anything above that is considered great. By improving the CTR of your advertising campaigns, you can direct more traffic to your site and improve brand awareness.

Email marketing CTR

CTR in email marketing is the number of customers who click the links in your marketing emails. This is often one of the most valuable CTRs for stores to improve since email clicks won't typically cost you anything (unlike PPC ad clicks).

Social media CTR

Social media CTR is the rate at which customers click on the links in your social media posts. These are likewise "free clicks" and should be promoted as much as possible with high-quality social posts and compelling CTAs.

Paid advertising CTR

Paid advertising CTR is the rate at which people click on the paid ads that you publish. In most cases, you will be charged for each one of these clicks, making it especially important to target paid ads only to the demographic of customers most likely to convert.

Landing page CTR

Landing page CTR is the rate at which visitors who have been directed to one of your landing pages click on the links it contains. These could be links to your product pages or links to some other page or piece of content in your sales funnel.

Tips to improve this KPI:

  • Target your ads and marketing efforts to potential customers who fit your ideal customer profile.
  • Create well-polished ads that feature compelling CTAs.
  • Use high-quality images and or other visuals to capture attention.

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KPIs to track customer satisfaction & support performance

For as much value as positive reviews offer to ecommerce brands, negative reviews can do even more harm. If you would like to boost customer satisfaction and start generating more positive reviews, here are the top KPIs to track and improve:

16) Customer satisfaction (CSAT)

Poor reviews and low customer satisfaction go hand in hand. CSAT is a vital metric to track and improve if your store is receiving a lot of negative reviews. CSAT is most often measured using targeted CSAT surveys that ask customers to rate their satisfaction following a customer support interaction.

Tips to improve this KPI:

  • Gather customer feedback to identify the issues that are harming customer satisfaction.
  • Make sure that your support team is equipped with the right tools and training to offer exceptional customer support.

View your average customer satisfaction score and feedback in Gorgias's Statistics overview.

‎‎17) Net promoter score (NPS)

NPS showcases how likely customers are to recommend your brand to their friends, family, and colleagues. Like CSAT, NPS is most commonly measured via customer feedback surveys that ask customers to rate their willingness to recommend your brand on a scale of 1-10.

Tips to improve this KPI:

  • Prioritize improvements to the customer experience.
  • Utilize customer feedback to identify issues that are harming NPS.

18) First response time (FRT)

When customers have a question for your customer support team, they expect it to be answered as quickly as possible. FRT is a measure of how long it takes your support team to initially respond to customer support tickets and is one of the most important customer support metrics to track. While what constitutes an acceptable FRT varies from channel to channel (for example, customers will have much more patience waiting for an email response than waiting on hold on the phone), having an average FRT higher than industry benchmarks creates the risk of dissatisfied customers.

Tips to improve this KPI:

  • Use a helpdesk such as Gorgias to ensure support reps can efficiently respond to tickets.
  • Create automated responses to common customer questions for instant responses and resolutions.
  • Offer live chat support.

You can view your First Response Time, Satisfaction Score, and more under Support Performance Statistics in Gorgias.

‎19) Resolution time

While FRT is a measure of how long it takes you to first respond to customer queries, resolution time is a measure of how long it takes, on average, to actually resolve a customer's issue. Swift responses and resolutions are equally important when boosting customer satisfaction. This means you'll want to optimize your customer support services to resolve customer issues as quickly as possible.

Tips to improve this KPI:

20) Active problems (shipping delays, faulty products, etc.)

Last but not least, you need to know how many problems have been solved during a particular period of time. Whenever there are many unsolved problems, satisfaction rates take a dive. Any active customer issues that have not been addressed should be resolved as swiftly as possible to ensure customer satisfaction.

How Gorgias can help

If your support team is struggling to keep up with your store's active issues, there are numerous ways that Gorgias' industry-leading helpdesk can assist. By both deflecting support tickets via automation and self-service options as well as improving the efficiency of your support team via a broad range of helpful tools, Gorgias empowers improved FRT and resolution times and helps your team stay on top of active problems.

KPIs for ecommerce businesses whose profitability ebbs and flows

Every ecommerce store experiences some degree of ebbs and flows in profitability. However, your goal should be to create a business that brings in a consistent and reliable revenue stream. When it comes to keeping a store profitable on a consistent basis, these are the most important metrics to track and improve:

21) Average order value (AOV)

AOV measures how much customers purchase, on average, with each transaction. By improving your store's AOV, you can generate more profit for each customer you attract and transaction that you process, improving your store's profitability.

Tips to improve this KPI:

  • Present customers with cross-sell and upsell opportunities at checkout.
  • Focus your marketing and merchandising efforts on promoting high-value products.
  • Offers discounts or promotions to encourage larger orders (i.e., free shipping on orders over $100).

22) Customer retention rate

Customer retention rate is a KPI that tells you how many customers remain loyal to your brand versus the number of customers who leave your brand. When creating consistent revenue for your store, nothing is more important than customer retention.

Tips to improve this KPI:

  • Utilize Gorgias' intent and sentiment detection features to identify customers who are upset or at risk of leaving your brand.
  • Promote customer loyalty with rewards and loyalty programs.
  • Prioritize creating an exceptional customer experience.

23) Average profit margin

Average profit margin measures how much you profit, on average, for each item that you sell. While raising the pricing of your products is one way to improve this metric, it comes with the risk of decreased sales. The good news is that this isn't the only way that ecommerce stores can raise their average profit margin.

Tips to improve this KPI:

  • Use your marketing and ecommerce merchandising efforts to promote products with high profit margins.
  • Reduce your costs of goods sold (see the next section for more on this).
  • Consider eliminating low-margin products from your inventory.

24) Cost of goods sold (COGS)

COGS is the direct cost of producing or acquiring the goods that your ecommerce store sells. Lowering your COGS can improve the profit margins of the products you sell and ultimately improve your store's profitability.

Tips to improve this KPI:

  • Eliminate products from your inventory that are not selling well.
  • Negotiate with suppliers.
  • Reduce waste and inefficiency in your supply chain.

25) CAC/CLV ratio

Customer acquisition costs (CAC) and customer lifetime value (CLV) are metrics we've discussed already. Combined, though, these metrics can provide a ratio that is arguably one of the most vital for ecommerce stores to track. If your CAC/CLV ratio is greater than one, your customers are spending more than it costs to acquire them, and your store will be profitable. If it's lower than one, you're spending more to acquire new customers than those new customers spend — meaning you're losing money.

Tips to improve this KPI:

  • Grow CLV by promoting customer loyalty, growing AOV, and utilizing the other tips we've covered for boosting CLV.

Reduce CAC by targeting your marketing efforts, emphasizing conversions, and utilizing the other tips we've covered for reducing CAC.

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Metrics For Customer Satisfaction

12 Customer Satisfaction Metrics to Track & Why CSAT Isn't Everything

By Ryan Baum
13 min read.
0 min read . By Ryan Baum

Creating a unique and satisfying customer experience is a crucial objective for brands across all industries. You’re probably already aware that most customers (95%, according to a Microsoft study) rank customer experience as important when it comes to brand choice and brand loyalty.

Most brands rely on customer satisfaction scores (CSAT) as the go-to metric for evaluating the customer experience. However, the problem with CSAT is that it's a lagging indicator of customer sentiment. Customers give you a CSAT score after an interaction. So, if your CSAT is low, you've likely already frustrated a new or loyal customer by the time you realize there is a problem.

Thankfully, tracking additional customer satisfaction metrics can go a long way toward filling the gap and ensuring that you can keep a finger on the pulse of your customer base. Below, we'll explore the best customer satisfaction metrics to track so that you can optimize your customer support services and overall customer journey — before your customer loyalty takes a hit.

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12 customer satisfaction metrics to better understand sentiment

Along with CSAT and NPS, you can use numerous other metrics to gauge customer satisfaction. If you want to create a holistic picture of how happy customers are with your brand to inform your customer service management efforts, here are the 12 metrics that you should track and analyze.

1) Customer effort score (CES)

CES tells you how much effort your customers have to put in to get answers to their questions or resolve their support issues. 

By tracking this metric, you can identify high-effort customer experiences like long wait times when customers contact your call center or confusing responses from your support team. This gives you a great starting point so that you can address these obstacles that are inevitably harming customer satisfaction.

Customer effort is an extremely important indicator for the quality brand’s customer experience. Plus, it’s directly connected to your bottom line. 96% of high-effort experience drive customer disloyalty, according to The Effortless Experience

96% of high-effort experience drive customer disloyalty
Source: The Effortless Experience

Formula for calculating CES

To measure CES, you will need to send customers CES surveys. These surveys ask customers to rate on a scale of one to ten how much effort they had to exert to get an answer to their question. To calculate your overall CES score, you will need to divide the total sum of all responses by the total number of all responses. 

CES = Total sum of responses / Total number of responses

2) Customer health score (CHS)

CHS is a metric largely employed by customer success teams to determine whether a customer is "healthy" or "at risk." 

This enables customer success teams to identify customers who are at risk of leaving the company so that you can make efforts to retain them. 

Unlike other customer satisfaction metrics, this metric is measured on a customer-by-customer basis rather than the average score of your entire customer base. This enables brands to utilize CHS to boost customer retention one customer at a time.

Formula for calculating CHS

There is no set formula for calculating CHS, and brands utilize a broad range of criteria to evaluate the health of individual customers. These criteria can also vary dramatically from industry to industry and even company to company. 

But for ecommerce stores, here are a few important factors to consider when determining whether a customer is healthy or at risk: 

  • Customer survey results
  • Contact rate with your support team
  • Number of closed and open support tickets
  • Social media involvement
  • Email engagement rate

Especially for larger brands, we recommend creating a standard formula to measure customer health, and periodically measuring each customer (especially VIP customers) to proactively prevent customer churn. 

3) Customer lifetime value (CLTV)

The primary point of reducing churn and improving customer loyalty is to increase your average customer lifetime value. 

Attracting new customers is difficult and expensive, and when you succeed at bringing a new customer into the fold, you want them to spend as much money with your brand as possible. 

The value of repeat shoppers.

Lifetime value can indicate customer satisfaction because satisfied customers tend to spend more with companies they’re satisfied with. Continued spending and repeat purchases are a surer sign on satisfaction than any star rating could provide. 

Formula for calculating CLTV

CLTV =  Average purchase value x Average purchase frequency x Average customer lifespan

4) Customer churn rate (CCR)

Customer churn rate is the rate at which customers leave your company. For subscription-based online businesses, ecommerce churn rate is the rate at which people cancel subscriptions. For non-subscription-based companies, you can define churn as shoppers who fail to place a repeat order within some time frame (likely between one and six months, depending on your products and industry).

If your churn rate exceeds industry benchmarks, it almost certainly spells issues with your customer experience. 

Churn rate.

Reducing churn goes hand in hand with improving customer loyalty (and thus boosting revenue via higher customer lifetime values). If you can keep a handle on churn rate, you’ll have concrete evidence about how customer satisfaction is impacting your repeat business.

Formula for calculating CCR

CCR is calculated over a specific period. To calculate your churn rate for a given period of time, you can use this formula: 

CCR  = (Number of customers at the beginning of the time period - Number of customers at the end of the time period) / Number of customers at the beginning of the time period

5) Internal quality score (IQS)

IQS measures the quality of each of your support team's tickets, according to your own internal standards. For instance, you may define a good ticket as a ticket that resolves the customer's issues, reflects your brand voice and values, and is responded to promptly. A bad ticket might be any ticket that falls short of these standards.

If you’re like most brand, your IQS will revolve around four main elements:

  • Speed: Did the agent respond within the terms of your service-level agreement (SLA)?
  • Correctness: Did the agent’s response adhere to your company’s relevant policies?
  • Helpfulness: Did the agent full address the customer’s question (and practice forward resolution)?
  • Friendliness: Did the agent maintain a positive tone and use the powerful phrases that adhere to your company’s style guide?
What makes a quality support interaction?

With an IQS, you can proactively identify where your customer support agents are currently improving satisfaction (or degrading it). 

Formula for calculating IQS

We don’t have a clear calculation for IQS because each brand’s is different. However, we recommend using a simple rubric, where a ticket gets a point for meeting each item on the rubric. 

This way, you can simply compare the quality of each ticket (or the average quality of each agent’s tickets). You’ll also get valuable information about the missing elements of each ticket, which can inform your customer service training.

6) First response time (FRT)

One thing that is sure to generate a lot of unhappy customers is making them wait a long time for answers to their questions. 90% of customers rate an immediate response as "important" or "very important" when they have a customer service question. 

Therefore, attempting to reduce your FRT is one of the first steps to take on the road to optimizing customer satisfaction. This starts with tracking your average FRT and comparing it against industry benchmarks.

First-reply time.

Formula for calculating FRT

Depending on your helpdesk, you may never need to manually calculate first-reply time. For example, with Gorgias, you get first-response time broken down by agent, time period, ticket type, and more:

First-reply time in Gorgias.

To calculate your support team's average FRT, you can use this formula: 

FRT = Total first response times during the time period / Total number of resolved tickets during the time period 

📚Recommended reading: 7 tips to improve your customer service response times. 

7) Resolution time

It's important to respond to customer support tickets as fast as possible, but not all tickets can be resolved in a single response. 

Resolution time.

While customers who have received an initial response to their ticket tend to have a little more patience when waiting for a resolution, that patience will only stretch so far. This makes it important to calculate and improve your average resolution time and FRT.

Formula for calculating resolution time

Just like first-response time, average resolution time isn’t normally something brands should spend time calculating. That’s why Gorgias users can see resolution time broken down by agent, time period, ticket type, and more:

Resolution time in Gorgias.

Average resolution time = Total resolution times during the time period / Total number of resolved tickets during the time period 

Resolution time formula.

8) First-contact resolution

While it's true that you can't resolve every ticket with a single response, it's still a great objective for support teams to strive for. Resolving a customer's issue in a single response typically means that the customer received swift and satisfactory assistance that required minimal effort on their part. Therefore, working to boost your first-contact resolution rate is sure to improve customer satisfaction.

Formula for calculating first-contact resolution

To get an accurate evaluation of your first-contact resolution rate, you should only consider tickets that are possible to resolve in a single response. Once you've identified the criteria for tickets that are FCR-eligible, you can use this formula to calculate your FCR rate: 

FCR = Number of support issues resolved on first contact / Total number of FCR-eligible support tickets

9) Self-service resolution rate

Enabling customers to resolve issues on their own without needing to contact your support team offers numerous benefits — like reducing agent workload and freeing them up to focus on more complex tickets. 

Additionally, it provides customers with helpful self-service options, which improves customer satisfaction by ensuring that customers can quickly find the answers they need. 

But to evaluate how effective your self-service options actually are, you'll need to track your self-service resolution rate. This metric tells you the rate at which customers can resolve issues on their own and can be used to gauge and improve the quality of your self-service resources, like your FAQ pages and Help Center.

Formula for calculating self-service resolution rate

Depending on your helpdesk, you may never need to manually calculate self-service resolution rate. With Gorgias, for example, you get detailed information about the usage of self-service resources on your site:

Self-service statistics in Gorgias.

That said, you can calculate your self-service resolution rate using this formula: 

Self-service resolution rate = Number of sessions that customers initiate with your brand's knowledge base or other self-help resources / Number of support tickets your support team handles over the same period of time

📚Interested in helping your customers help themselves for a low-effort experience? Check out our VP of Success's guide to customer self-service.

10) Support performance score

Support performance score (created by Gorgias) is a metric that encapsulates the three most important elements of great customer service: speed, helpfulness, and customer satisfaction. 

To achieve this, the support performance score combines average first response time, average resolution time, and CSAT into a score that is on a scale of 1-5. 

Tracking this metric provides support teams with a comprehensive overview of their performance quality.

Support performance score (SPS)

Formula for calculating support performance score

Support performance score is calculated using a series of FRT, CSAT, and resolution time thresholds. To reach the next rating level, you must meet each category's threshold. Here is an example of what these thresholds look like for FRT:

  • Level 1 (poor): 13+ hours
  • Level 2 (lagging): 12 hours
  • Level 3 (fair): 6 hours
  • Level 4 (strong): 1 hour
  • Level 5 (exceptional) 10 minutes

11) Customer satisfaction score (CSAT)

Customer satisfaction (CSAT) is the go-to customer support metric to understand customer sentiment around your brand and customer experience. Don’t get us wrong: We believe CSAT is one of the most important metrics. However, CSAT only gets measured after customers have a good or bad experience, making it a lagging indicator of customer sentiment.  

You can determine your CSAT score using customer satisfaction surveys. The survey questions should ask customers to rate their satisfaction with your company by choosing from one of four responses: very unsatisfied, unsatisfied, neutral, satisfied, and very satisfied. 

Customer satisfaction surveys.
Source: Gorgias

The ratio of customers who were either satisfied or very satisfied compared to the total number of customers who were unsatisfied or very unsatisfied is your brand's CSAT score.

While CSAT is certainly an important metric for ecommerce brands to measure and utilize, it isn't the end-all, be-all of tracking customer satisfaction. Brands that only track CSAT can encounter several limitations that can make it difficult to turn customer satisfaction results into business growth.

12) Net promoter score (NPS)

Net promoter score (NPS) is a metric that tells you how likely customers are to recommend your brand to friends, family members, and colleagues. If you want to improve your word-of-mouth advertising and start generating more referrals, NPS is the metric you will need to optimize.

Net promoter score (NPS)

Your NPS score can also provide insight into the overall satisfaction of your customer base. 

For one, NPS isn't quite as subjective and one-dimensional as CSAT, since it asks customers to rate their willingness to recommend your company on a scale of 0-10 rather than asking them a single question about their satisfaction. 

NPS is also more a measure of a customer's long-term satisfaction with your company, while CSAT surveys typically gauge a customer's short-term satisfaction with your product or service.

How to calculate NPS

NPS surveys gather feedback on how likely customers are to recommend your brand on a scale of 0-10. Customers who rate you at 0-6 are considered detractors; customers who rate 7-8 are passives, and customers who rate 9-10 are your promoters. 

To calculate NPS, you will need to calculate your promoters and detractors as percentages of your total number of survey responses. Then, subtract the percentage of detractors from the percentage of promoters. 

So, if you got 100 responses with 40 promoters and 30 detractors (the rest being passives), here's what your calculation would look like:

NPS = 40% promoters - 30% detractors

NPS = 10

Net promoter score (NPS) formula.

Why CSAT isn't the only metric you need to measure customer satisfaction

Customer satisfaction (CSAT).

CSAT is a vital benchmark for analyzing your brand's number of satisfied customers. However, here are the three most important reasons why CSAT alone is not enough:

CSAT is a lagging indicator

We've already mentioned that the CSAT score doesn't indicate an issue with the overall experience at your company until it's already too late, when you've already provided a poor experience to customers. 

This is an especially pressing issue when you consider that nearly a quarter of customers will switch to a competitor after a bad experience. Their CSAT results can help you improve the experience for future customers — but ideally, you don’t have to lose customers to get this information. 

Ideally, your set of metrics to understand customer satisfaction include ones that don't require angry customers to tell you that your customer experience could be improved.

CSAT is one-dimensional

CSAT tells you the ratio of customers who are satisfied with your brand compared to the number of unhappy customers, but it doesn't tell you anything about why your customer satisfaction levels are what they are.

Most CSAT surveys have a comment box, but customers rarely take the time to fill these out — especially with any meaningful level of detail. 

A more well-rounded collection of metrics will help you better pinpoint the reason for high or low satisfaction, without solely depending on an optional comment box. 

CSAT is subjective

Asking customers a single question about whether they are satisfied with their experience will yield highly subjective responses. 

For instance, a specific issue might cause one customer to state they are "very unsatisfied," while the same issue might prompt another customer to respond with "neutral." 

Plus, customers may complete the survey while annoyed, emotional, or tired — all of which could inflate (or minimze) the importance of an issue, skewing the insights. 

For these reasons, CSAT offers the most value when used in tandem with other important customer satisfaction metrics — and the first of these important metrics is net promoter score (NPS).

How to improve customer satisfaction by collecting (and using) customer feedback

Metrics such as CSAT, NPS, and CES are all forms of customer feedback that ecommerce merchants can use to improve customer satisfaction. But along with tracking these metrics, gathering more in-depth customer feedback can be highly helpful for informing your customer satisfaction efforts.

A few of the ways that ecommerce brands can go about collecting and utilizing valuable customer feedback include:

  • Audit low-scoring tickets to look for themes.
  • Reach out to low-scoring customers for in-depth feedback.
  • Reduce ticket volume with automation and self-service to free agents to solve complex tickets.
  • Activate instant messaging channels like SMS and live chat.

📚Recommended reading: Our Director of Support’s guide to implementing customer feedback into your product and customer experience. 

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Analyze customer satisfaction from all angles with Gorgias' dashboards

There are numerous metrics that support teams need to track to evaluate and improve customer satisfaction. Thankfully, Gorgias' best-in-class customer support platform makes tracking these metrics easier than ever before. With Gorgias' dashboards, you can:

To get started utilizing these powerful tools to track and improve customer satisfaction, sign up for Gorgias today!

Ecommerce Pop-Up

11 Ecommerce Pop-Up Types & Examples, Plus Benefits and Top Apps

By Jordan Miller
21 min read.
0 min read . By Jordan Miller

We reviewed 300 Shopify store owners and discovered that 50% used website pop-ups as their preferred customer engagement tool. This isn’t surprising since pop-ups can yield a conversion rate of between 3% and 11%, compared to the standard rate of around 2%.

But using pop-ups to get more conversions for your website requires more than just slapping a newsletter email signup pop-up window on your website. In fact, poor use of pop-ups can drive customers away.

High-converting pop-ups are built on some of the best apps and tick all the boxes on our pop-up checklist. Below, we’ll dive deeper into this checklist and provide you with our top picks for pop-up app software.

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11 ecommerce pop-up types and examples

If you spend any time on the internet, you’ve likely encountered a pop-up campaign at some point. You may have even seen one on your journey to this page! 

Pop-ups have come a long way over the last decade. Whereas they used to be aggressive annoyances, they are now significantly subtler and operate as invaluable sales and marketing tools. 

Here are some of the most popular types of pop-ups to consider using for your store with ecommerce pop-up examples for each.

📚 Read more: 13 Ecommerce Growth Tactics to Boost Revenue

1) Sign-up form pop-ups

Depending on your current digital marketing strategy, sign-ups can be useful for a number of goals. You can invite visitors to sign up for a newsletter, register for an event, or receive an exclusive discount. 

This lets you collect valuable customer information like email addresses and phone numbers that can be used for marketing efforts.

Offering something like a discount in exchange for an email subscription sign up is known as a “lead magnet.”

Example of a sign-up form pop-up

When customers visit swimwear brand Kulani Kinis ecommerce store, the first pop-up they see is a sign-up form. It also includes an enticing offer of a discount on a customer’s first order. And it’s all done with cute graphics that match Kulani Kinis’ branding.

Also note that the pop-up includes a line that says “By signing up you agree to receive email marketing.” This is required to comply with email marketing laws.

Example of a sign-up pop-up form.
Source: Kulani Kinis

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2) Special offers and discounts

Those glossy pop-ups that appear and, for example, offer free shipping for orders over $xx or highlight a sale. 

These can be tailored to just about any offering your ecommerce brand wants to promote, and can even be turned into a game to attract more interest. 

Spin-the-wheel pop-ups that allow customers to “spin” to unlock their discount percentage is a fun way to interact with customers, and many enjoy the gamified experience.

You could also offer a post-purchase discount by offering one in exchange for a customer review on social media.

Example of an offer or discount pop-up

When shoppers visit Bagallery, they’re greeted by a large pop-up promoting an up to 60% discount and a link to “shop now.”

Use pop-ups to offer discount codes.
Source: BagGallery

3) Exit pop-ups

If you’ve ever visited an ecommerce store and moved your mouse to navigate to another tab, you may have seen one of these pop-ups. 

Exit pop-ups trigger when customers try to leave your website or have left the tab idling and are a great way to grab a customer’s attention and convince them to go to checkout.

It’s smart to offer an incentive to stay, like a discount code if they follow through on the purchase. The goal here is to reduce cart abandonment.

Example of an exit pop-up

This is the pop-up that appears on Princess Polly, a women’s apparel ecommerce store.

It’s triggered when a potential customer has added items to their shopping cart but left them sitting. The pop-up entices those customers with 10% off if they follow through with the purchase.

Example of an exit pop-up
Source: Princess Polly

4) Seasonal pop-ups

Around seasonal shopping holidays, you may have targeted products or categories you’re looking to highlight to customers.

A pop-up can be a great way to draw attention to those products. A great example would be gift sets or stocking stuffer ideas during the Christmas season, or spooky items around Halloween. This pop-up type helps customers find what they need faster.

These can also create a sense of urgency by promoting a limited-time deal that coincides with a holiday.

Example of a seasonal pop-up

Here’s an example from skincare brand Absolute Collagen. It appears once the customer has scrolled down the main landing page a bit and reminds them that the “countdown to Christmas is on.”

Clicking through brings customers to Absolute Collagen’s curated gift sets, which is exactly what a customer might be looking for just before Christmas.

Example of a seasonal pop-up
Source: Absolute Collagen

5) Upsell pop-ups

Upsell pop-ups suggest additional products a customer may want to add to their cart based on what they’ve already added. It typically pop ups right after an item has been added to the cart.

It’s important that these pop-ups are related to what customers have already been shopping for. It just doesn’t make sense, for example, to suggest purchasing a piece of cookware to someone who just bought a beauty product.

Product value also plays a role. If someone has just added a $25 product to their cart, it’s unlikely you can upsell them on a $100 product. The upsell product should be a cheaper product related to their original product choice.

Example of an upsell pop-up

Uqora is an ecommerce store that sells over-the-counter products for urinary health, targeted at women.

After adding their “Flush” product, shoppers get a pop-up suggesting their pH-balanced vulva cleanser for $10. This is a great example because the upsell product is inexpensive and targets site visitors already showing interest in health products.

Example of an upsell pop-up
Source: Uqora

📚 Read more: 11 Best Practices for Ecommerce Upselling

6) Chat campaigns

An unobtrusive chat pop-up tells shoppers that customer service is ready and waiting for their questions or concerns.

We’ll dig more into chat pop-ups later on, but they can be used for more than just offering help. They can be a spot to offer discounts, promote sales or products, or act as a personal stylist.

Example of a chat pop-up

Jewelry brand Jaxxon uses a chat pop-up to offer customer service as well as styling advice.

Powered by Gorgias, Jaxxon’s chat pop-up appears subtly in the bottom right corner of premium product pages, offering unique styling services. This is just one example of how you can use chat campaigns to spark conversation and increase conversions:

Source: Jaxxon

7) New arrivals pop-ups

When you launch a new product, a pop-up is a great way to get some eyeballs on it. 

These pop-ups are especially important for your loyal, returning visitors to show them something new and exciting.

Example of a new product pop-up

This is a pop-up that appears on the homepage of Lillie Q, a BBQ sauce brand. It highlights their new tender sauces and also includes a button to see other new releases.

example of a new product pop-up
Source: Lillie Q

8) Local currency redirect pop-ups

Customers will always prefer to shop in their local currency, if available. According to Shopify, 17% of shoppers will abandon a cart if they can’t determine the total cost up front. Having to convert currencies makes it more difficult to determine that cost.

If your ecommerce store is equipped to offer local currency prices, or has multiple sites to offer a localized experience, a pop-up can redirect international customers. 

Example of a local currency redirect pop-up

Crossnet is a sports equipment ecommerce store based in the US. However, when a customer visits from Canada they get a pop-up directing them to shop from the Canadian store in Canadian dollars.

This pop-up appears as soon as a Canadian customer visits, so their entire shopping experience can be in local currency.

Example of a local currency pop-up
Source: CROSSNET

📚 Read more: Reduce and Recover Shopify Cart Abandonment: 17 Tips & Tools

9) Loyalty program pop-ups

If you have an active loyalty program for your ecommerce store that earns customers points or other perks, a pop-up can prompt them to sign up.

Having a loyalty pop-up come up early tells customers before they even make a purchase that they’ll earn something when they do convert. This is another opportunity to capture email subscribers for email marketing campaigns.

Example of a loyalty program pop-up

Campus Protein is a supplement ecommerce store targeted at college students. When first visiting the site, a pop-up appears in the bottom left corner prompting new visitors to join their loyalty program and “unlock rewards.”

Clicking through takes customers to a page to create an account on the site and start earning Campus Protein points.

Example of a loyalty pop-up
Source: Campus Protein=

10) Giveaway pop-ups

A giveaway or other offer can pull double duty. First, they entice customers to stay on the site, similar to an exit pop-up. They’re also another way to collect information such as emails.

These are best employed after a potential customer has already been on the site for some time, as a way to keep them browsing.

Example of a giveaway pop-up

This is an example from Darn Good Yarn, an ecommerce store that specializes in ethically-sourced fiber.

It triggers when the site senses a potential customer is going to leave and offers a chance to win a $250 gift card. Not only is the offer enticing, but it’s an opportunity to collect emails for marketing.

Example of a giveaway pop-up
Source: Darn Good Yarn

11) Bundle pop-ups

This is a type of upsell that recommends bundling an item added to a customer’s cart with other products to create a discounted bundle. This is useful if you have products that can be worn or used together.

It’s an opportunity to add another product to a customer’s cart but also give a styling or utilization recommendation. It’s also a more customized type of pop-up because the product recommendation is directly related to something the customer already wants to purchase.

Example of a bundle pop-up

On the Jaxxon website, there are products in similar styles that look great when worn together.

In this case, when a customer adds the Cuban Link Bracelet to their cart, the pop-up recommends upgrading to the Cuban Essentials Set, which includes a matching necklace, at a discounted price.

Example of a bundle pop-up
Source: Jaxxon

Risks of pop-ups in ecommerce

Pop-ups have a ton of uses and are a proven conversion tool, so the temptation is there to use them as much as possible. However, that would be a huge mistake.

Pop-ups are only useful if they’re used smartly, sparingly, and with purpose.

The short-term conversion win will be harmed if they’re overused, hurting:

  • Brand image
  • Repeat business and loyalty
  • Site performance

It’s vital that your pop-up choices do more harm than good so here are some of the risks of employing a pop-up strategy.

Risks of using pop-ups

Pop-ups annoy customers

This might seem obvious but it can’t be understated: Customers simply aren’t fans of pop-ups. There’s a reason ad and pop-up blockers are popular browser add-ons.

Even with your best intentions, pop-ups interrupt the shopping experience. If a customer came to your ecommerce website looking for a particular product or just to browse, their first choice is not to have that experience intruded upon by a pop-up.

G2 conducted a poll and found that an overwhelming 82% of customers said they “hate” pop-ups asking with an email capture. In particular, 45.6% said they dislike how pop-ups seem to be “everywhere” and 28.6% disliked how they appear right away.

While 72% said there was nothing that makes pop-ups better, 11.9% said a discount offer helps reduce their displeasure.

Pop-ups can harm load speed

Adding pop-ups to your ecommerce site usually means adding additional apps or other tech, which can impact how quickly your site loads. Each additional pop-up can mean a slower load speed and higher bounce rate.

Load speed is a vital part of your ecommerce website. Data from Portent shows that conversion rates are highest at a 1-second load time and drop from there. Ecommerce retailers should aim for a load time of between 1 and 4 seconds, more than that seriously hurts conversion. 

Plus, according to Unbounce, 45.4% of shoppers are less likely to make a purchase if the site loads slowly, and 36.8% are less likely to return to that ecommerce store. 

Pop-ups can hurt your SEO strategy

Customers aren’t too fond of pop-ups, and neither is Google.

Since at least 2016, Google has been penalizing the most intrusive types of pop-ups, especially for users on mobile. In particular, Google doesn’t like pop-ups that appear right away and fill the whole screen and need to be closed before the website can be accessed.

That doesn’t mean pop-ups are a complete no-go. You can appease Google by:

  • Disabling pop-ups on mobile
  • Having a delay before pop-ups appear
  • Keep pop-ups small an unobtrusive
  • Disable pop-ups for customers coming in through Google search results

📚 Recommended reading: Our guide to Shopify search engine optimization (SEO).

Pop-ups can overlap

If a single pop-up can turn off a potential customer, several overlapping pop-ups is much worse.

In addition to the load time issues, competing pop-ups is just a bad user experience. There are more pop-ups than ever now when you consider prompts to accept cookies or other privacy provisions and browser pop-ups like requests to allow notifications.

This is compounded when a customer is on mobile, because there’s even less space and a higher likelihood of overlap.

Be mindful of what pop-ups are showing up by default and time pop-ups so only one is appearing at any one time.

Ecommerce pop-up best practices checklist

At the most basic level, a pop-up provides a call-to-action that entices potential customers. The right type of pop-up can increase your ecommerce store’s conversion rate, but this is only possible if you check off all six items on the checklist below.

1) Entice buyers with a value add

The offer you present in your pop-up should be useful to your target buyers. But the only way for you to create the right offer is to truly get to know who your buyers are and what interests them.

Say you create a pop-up to collect email addresses from web visitors. If the pop-up doesn’t have an incentive, there’s no “what’s in it for me?” for the target buyer.

We’d recommend modifying pop-up to present the buyer with a chance to win something. Providing a clearer incentive for customers is a much better way to improve the conversion rate of your pop-up.

📚 Read more: Ecommerce CRO: Increase Conversion Rate with A/B Testing and Optimization

2) Keep pop-ups short and sweet (like these pop-up examples)

The wording of your pop-up copy depends on both your offer and the type of pop-up you‘re using (exit pop-up, sales pop-up, discount pop-up, etc.). Regardless of the type of pop-up you use, it should follow what we call the SIP rule: short, impactful, and precise.

Here’s a fun example from United By Blue, a Shopify store that sells clothing and accessories. The pop-up is a wheel you can spin to get a special offer.

A Shopify pop-up from United by Blue offering a discount.
Source: United by Blue

We received a 15% off offer after spinning the wheel, but take a closer look at the wording on this pop-up.

The results of the pop-up wheel: 15% off!

The headline makes the offer clear:

  • The website visitor can then choose men’s clothing, women’s clothing, or both. Giving website visitors this choice helps with audience segmentation so that future offers are relevant to the user.
  • There’s a prompt to input an email address which is followed by a clear CTA that once again reminds the website visitor of the precise offer.

Here’s another example from BLK & Bold, a Shopify store that sells specialty coffee.

A Shopify pop-up from BLK & Bold offering 15% off the shopper's first order.
Source: BLK & Bold
  • The headline clearly states the value of the offer — a 15% discount on the buyer’s first order.
  • The short text that follows further explains the value of signing up for their email list — the buyer will receive exclusive offers via email.

Short. Impactful. Precise.

Note: Your pop-ups should always provide a clear option for people to opt in to receive newsletters and promotional emails from your brand. Otherwise, you run the risk of breaching data protection laws such as the GDPR.

3) Create a compelling image

The team at Drip analyzed over 1 billion pop-ups and discovered that pop-ups with images convert better than pop-ups without images by 83.57%. Images used for online store pop-ups should either showcase the brand’s products in an interesting way or paint a picture of what the website visitor wants to achieve after using the product.

Let’s look at an example from Fresh Heritage, a Shopify store that sells grooming products and supplements.

A Shopify pop-up offering a discount for giving a phone number.
Source: Fresh Heritage

The image used here features a man with a well-groomed beard — something Fresh Heritage's customers would want to achieve for themselves.

Here’s another example of creative use of imagery:

Here, Mavi uses a pop-up bar with a visual that stands out and provides depth.

The bottom line is that relevant images make your pop-ups stand out more and entice potential buyers to sign up for your offer.

4) Time your pop-up so that it isn’t intrusive

The same Drip study referenced above finds that pop-ups that display after eight seconds convert better than those that display before or after. However, remember that the timing of the pop-up itself won’t necessarily boost conversions for your ecommerce store — that largely depends on how well you can check off the boxes on this list.

There are also pop-ups that appear based on scroll triggers. The Drip study reveals that using 35% of a page as a scroll trigger works best for increasing conversion rates.

You can use the suggestions that the Drip study provides as your baseline, but conversion rates depend heavily on the nuances of your brand and the customers you serve. It’s best to do A/B testing so that you can optimize your pop-ups based on what works for your business.

5) Make sure your pop-up works well on mobile

Pop-ups convert better on mobile devices than they do on desktop devices. In a study conducted by OptiMonk, the average conversion rate for desktop pop-ups was 9.69% while the average conversion rate for mobile pop-ups was 11.07%. But there’s a catch: Mobile pop-ups only convert well when they’re optimized for use on those devices.

Here are some tips to optimize your pop-ups for mobile devices:

  • Ensure the pop-up doesn’t cover more than 30% of the page.
  • Use only one or two pop-up form fields.
  • Use the best types of pop-ups for mobile devices. Three of the best options are the floating pop-up, slidebox pop-up, and featured pop-up.
  • Make it easy for the website visitor to close the pop-up.
  • Ensure the CTA button and exit button are easy to click.
  • Limit image sizes to less than 100KB (or don’t use images at all).

Here’s an example of a mobile-friendly pop-up from Romwe that incorporates these principles:

6) Create different pop-ups for different actions and events

Don’t limit yourself to one type of pop-up. It’s best to strategically use pop-ups throughout your website so that you can better capture your website visitors’ data. A typical shopping experience includes multiple opportunities to display pop-ups. Here are a few examples:

  • Display a simple email bar on the homepage.
  • Create a specific exit-intent pop-up for visitors exiting a product page that offers a discount.
  • Create a pop-up that appears only on out-of-stock items to encourage your visitors to subscribe to your restock alerts.
  • Create a cart abandonment pop-up on the cart page.

Here’s an example of this strategy in action on the Christy Dawn website. Notice that the website displays an email bar on the first page a visitor views.

original And if this visitor doesn’t subscribe, the store displays this complementary pop-up (you’ll notice the different wording) on out-of-stock product pages.

Note: Be sure not to display pop-ups on every page of your website. This creates an intrusive experience for website visitors — and that‘s something that search engines will penalize you for.

Related: Learn how to climb search results with our Shopify SEO guide

The 7 best Shopify pop-up apps

The pop-up checklist described above is only as good as the app used to create the pop-ups. Here are our picks for some of the best pop-up builder apps on the market to add to your ecommerce tech stack — all available in the Shopify app store.

1) SmartPopup: Promotion Popup

SmartPopup is a user-friendly pop-up builder designed to help ecommerce store owners connect with website visitors, contribute to lead generation, and increase sales. The tool has a great collection of prebuilt pop-up templates that make the setup process easy: newsletters, videos, coupon codes, product-specific, countdown timers, and automatic discounts.

Pros

  • Offers a truly free plan with basic features
  • Fast setup
  • Customizable for those familiar with code

Cons

  • Some reports of problems with the tool’s mobile version
  • Free plan features are limited
  • Reported issues with late or unhelpful responses from support

2) Pixelpop Popups & Banners

Pixelpop is a tool built by Orbit. Like other email pop-up tools, Pixelpop helps brands collect email addresses from leads so they can be nurtured through your brand’s email marketing campaigns.

Pros

  • Pixel Union offers premium customer support
  • Easy-to-use promotional bar
  • Intuitive and customizable

Cons

  • Some reports of slow responses from customer support
  • Overly complicated for some users; support needed to use custom themes
  • Klaviyo integration doesn’t work for some users

Related: Our list of 150+ of the best tools for ecommerce.

3) Quick Announcement Bar

Quick Announcement Bar is a message bar app that Shopify store owners can use to quickly post announcements on their websites — no coding required. Broadcast a free shipping bar, or a bar that displays important information and special offers.

Pros

  • Bars can be set to display only on certain pages, or only to users from specific countries
  • Multiple bar rotation allows multiple bars to display every few seconds
  • Animated CTA button to grab visitor’s attention
  • Multiple language translations available

Cons

  • Only one pop-up option (the announcement bar)
  • Placement limitations

4) Pop! Sales & Live Activity Pop

Pop! Sales & Live Activity Pop creates automatic sales notification pop-up windows that make your store look busy without obstructing the customer experience. It’s great for building trust with prospects who are on the fence about purchasing a product — seeing that someone else recently purchased something triggers a fear of missing out (FOMO).

Pros

  • Shows real-time purchases to help boost conversion rates and social proof
  • Customizable designs and advanced CSS in paid plans for easy, consistent branding
  • Quick, smooth setup process

Cons

  • Not great for new sellers with low traffic (you will be charged if you go over 100 web visitors a month, whether it’s real people or bots)
  • Multiple reports of unauthorized charges
  • Slow responses from customer support

5) Promolayer

Promolayer doesn’t only offer basic pop-up templates — there’s a full suite of exciting options that will help your website stand out such as banners, spin-to-wins, full screen welcome mats, exit offers, and slide-ins.

Pros

  • Easy to customize
  • Ability to run A/B tests without affecting Google Optimize data
  • Built-in spellchecker to ensure your pop-ups are well represented

Cons

  • Reports of some minor glitches, but the main pop-ups work well

6) Email Pop Ups & Exit Popups

Email Pop Ups & Exit Popups by OptiMonk is a pop-up app that focuses on helping Shopify store owners grow and meet their goals. With this app, you can build intuitive and attractive pop-ups for web and mobile that help you convert more visitors and collect quality feedback along the way.

Pros

  • Quick and professional customer service
  • Over 30 intelligent targeting and triggering options
  • A/B testing
  • Free version available

Cons

  • Hard to customize without a developer, support, or coding experience
  • No customization options on spin-the-wheel function
  • Somewhat confusing setup process

Pricing

  • Free: Free
  • Essential: $29/month
  • Growth: $79/month
  • Premium: $199/month

7) Privy

Privy is an ecommerce marketing platform that helps ecommerce store owners manage their marketing with ease. One of the best features of this platform is that it incorporates both SMS and email marketing.

Pros

  • Simple to setup and track SMS marketing
  • Easily build automation triggers based on website visitor behavior
  • Great for sending messages to customers for abandoned cart recovery

Cons

  • Complaints of limited reporting capabilities
  • Have to export data to assess how email campaigns are performing
  • More complicated than some alternatives; users report a bit of a learning curve
  • Not many options for post-purchase emailing

📚 Read more: Our list of the best apps for Shopify merchants.

Chat campaigns: A less intrusive conversion tool

If a pop-up is a perfume counter employee suddenly spraying you with the latest scent, a chat campaign is a clerk tactfully approaching to see if you need any assistance. 

Gorgias’ pop-up chat campaigns are a softer way to interact with customers that don’t feel intrusive the way a full-screen pop-up does. With Gorgias’ chat campaigns , you can reach out to customers to proactively ask for support: “What can I help you with?”

Chat campaigns are a non-intrusive pop-up that appear at the bottom corner of the screen and offer help, rather than a hard sell. Gorgias customers report they can lift revenue by 13% and conversion rates by 25 to 30%.

You can set up chat campaigns that reach out to customers at key moments. For example, if a customer lingers on a product page, you can send them a discount code. If they linger with items in their cart, your chat could remind them that you have free shipping.

How ecommerce chat campaigns work

Chat campaigns can be set to active when a customer visits a particular product page, or when a certain amount of time has lapsed, or both.

When activated, the chat pops up with a message of your choosing, whether that’s an announcement, a discount, or an offer of support. When a customer replies, that’s sent directly to your customer support team in Gorgias’ helpdesk.

Chat campaigns are easy to set up in Gorgias by navigating to Settings, then Integrations, and clicking Chat. Adding a new campaign allows you to customize when the chat is fired and what message customers will see.

If a customer does respond and creates a ticket, Gorgias helps you set up Rules to determine priority level for your customer service agents.

In addition, the chat button can be programmed so when a customer clicks, they get automated self-serve options such as tracking their order, canceling an order, or filing a ticket.

Examples of chat campaigns

There are several ways to implement chat campaigns so we’ll go over some examples of chat pop-ups in action.

Spark conversion around specific products

The chat campaign can be used to give specific products a boost or offer help. For example, if your core product is shoes, the chat campaign could pop up with advice on sizing.

Think of it as another space for frequently asked questions. Using the pop-up, you can satisfy those questions without the customer having to go looking for answers themselves, or file a ticket.

Here’s an example from Franklin, a French pet food brand. They programmed chat campaigns to appear on product pages for specialized foods, so shoppers can ask questions and make sure they’re buying the right product.

Share limited-time offers and product-specific discounts

Traditional pop-ups are one way to announce an offer or sale, but a chat campaign can do this as well, in a more friendly way.

A chat campaign message with a special offer feels more exclusive than a flashy pop-up and can be customized for individual products, for example offering a percentage off your best-selling item.

Capture high-value customers

Let’s go back to Jaxxon for an example of how to get the attention of customers browsing your best-selling products.

When a customer clicks to view Jaxxon’s Cuban Link Chain, their top gold chain under $100, the chat campaign pops up to help. The campaign offers a list of styles under $100 and a style quiz.

Neither of these are hard sells but ways to engage the customer and help them find just the right product. From here, customers can click the links to type to reply and speak to customer support.

Why chat campaigns are better

Pop-ups are risky business. Although they can lead to conversions, pop-ups that are intrusive can turn customers away. A chat campaign is a solution that combines all the useful parts of pop-ups with excellent customer service and a gentler approach.

Chat campaigns:

  • Are small, unobtrusive, and take up less screen space
  • Less invasive with a time delay
  • Employ a less aggressive sales approach
  • Are fully customizable to target particular products
  • Provide a direct path to human interaction
  • Have a wide variety of use cases
  • Are SEO-friendly

Boost your conversions with Gorgias chat campaigns

There’s a lot of ways to improve your ecommerce store’s conversion rate and chat campaigns are a proven method to do just that.

Chat campaigns are fully integrated into the Gorgias helpdesk, with your live chat and campaign options all available in one place. Plus, with the ability to bring in a customer’s unique information and order history, you can provide a truly custom customer experience.

Learn more about how Gorgias can help you provide amazing customer experiences.

Customer Apology Email

10 Customer Apology Email Templates to Help Retain Business

By Lauren Strapagiel
12 min read.
0 min read . By Lauren Strapagiel

You can — and should — prepare for these mishaps with a library of apology email templates. A timely apology email builds trust, prevents churn, improves your retention rate, protects your bottom line, and keeps your company name in good standing.

According to KPMG, 46% of customers who are truly loyal to a brand will remain so even after a negative experience. They’re also far more likely to recommend a brand to friends and family or write a positive review online. 

An effective apology email is your best bet to regain and reinforce customer loyalty after an error or delay. And loyal customers are closely linked to revenue. According to data from more than 10,000 Gorgias merchants, repeat customers generate 300% more revenue than first-time customers.

Repeat customers generate 300% more revenue than first-time customers.
The Effortless Experience
         

Continue reading to learn the key components that every effective and sincere apology email should have, as well as some dos and don’ts, to keep customers on your side.

{{lead-magnet-1}}

How to write customer service apology emails (the dos and don’ts)

Apologies can repair the situation or make it worse. If you bungle the apology, you risk losing a customer forever. But a well-executed apology can strengthen your relationship with a customer, as Brianna Christiano, Gorgias's Director of Support, explains.

 “In my experience, proactively sending an apology email and admitting that maybe you made a mistake as a company, or you didn't provide the best experience, really builds trust with customers,” says Christiano. “You'd be surprised how many customers will forgive you for that mistake.”

This list will prepare you for creating your own customer service apology emails to make sure you correct the situation without making it worse.

Customer apology email best practices and mistakes to avoid.

         

Do: Create a library of brand-appropriate apology email templates

When a mistake happens, you don’t want to be left scrambling. Being prepared ahead of time with email templates will allow you to send out on-brand apology emails and correct the mistake as quickly as possible. 

It’s also critical that everyone on your customer support team has access to those templates. Make this part of your customer service training and onboarding to ensure that every customer is receiving the same level of care when an apology needs to happen.

With Macros, Gorgias customers can build a library of customer service responses, including apologies, to send as emails to customers. You can respond directly to tickets in your helpdesk using these Macros and ensure consistent messaging (and the right customer service words), no matter who responds. 

Macros are templates that you build for common ticket responses, such as shipping inquiries or apologies, that can be further customized with individual customer information.

Macros integrate with ecommerce platforms (like Shopify or BigCommerce) so you can insert personalized information for each customer. Here’s an example of how Macros use variables to pull customer data directly from BigCommerce (in this case) and automatically personalize the message:  

Personalized, automated email templates with Gorgias.

         

Don’t: Wait to apologize

Speed is of the essence when it’s time to send a customer apology email. You should send an apology as soon as you see something has gone wrong, rather than waiting for a customer complaint to come in.

Frustrating or negative customer experiences decrease loyalty. According to The Effortless Experience, 96% of high-effort experiences — such as having to contact the company — make the customer feel disloyal afterward. Frustrated customers can easily turn into angry customers

“Instead, you're reducing the escalation upfront by being proactive,” says Christiano. “When the company sends an email about an issue the customer didn’t notice, customers appreciate that the company has gone above and beyond.”

Gorgias analyzes incoming tickets for sentiment to detect angry and escalated customers so you can address them before they take their anger out on social media and cause further damage.

Detect customer intention with Gorgias.
Gorgias
         

You can then apply rules (or automation) to filter tickets based on sentiment and prioritize your customer responses.

Do: Personalize the apology to each customer based on past interactions

A personal apology is always a more sincere apology. When you create your templates for customer apology emails, leave spots to insert personalized information about the affected customer, from the customer’s name to more detailed order information.

You can get even more detailed than that, though. Using Gorgias’ Customer Sidebar feature, your customer success or support team can see information in the sidebar such as:

  • Past orders
  • Reviews
  • Loyalty status and points
  • Previous conversations

For example, you could thank a customer for a past review (“Thanks so much for your kind words about our matcha powder!”), or reference a past order (“How did you like the matcha powder you ordered last month?”).

Or, go above and beyond ("Again, so sorry for this issue. I noticed you're a frequent shopper here and I want to thank you for your business and patience as we sort this out — here's a discount code for 15% off your next order: SORRY15!").

Personalize customer conversations with the Gorgias customer sidebar.

         

If you see a customer has left a negative comment in the past, mention it and tell them how that feedback has helped your brand to correct the issue and provide better service.

Taking the time to personalize customer interactions, including apology emails, directly impacts your revenue. According to a study by Twilio, 98% of companies say personalization increases customer loyalty. Additionally, customers around the world spend an average of 46% more when engagement is personalized. 

Don’t: Send your email to unaffected customers

Being proactive with your apology letters is important, but you can also go too far. Sending these emails to customers who haven’t actually been affected by the issue will just create more headaches for your customer support reps.

“Before you send a mass email to 50,000 customers, make sure that most of those people were impacted. Because if you don't, you're going to create more confusion,” says Christiano. 

If, for example, you’re having supply issues, don’t send a mass email to every single customer. Those whose orders are actually unaffected will now think there’s a problem with their orders even if there’s not. That’s going to mean more incoming and unnecessary tickets for you to deal with. 

Do: Maintain a tone that reflects your brand but also the severity of the mistake

Every company has a different brand identity and style of communication. For some, it may be on-brand to send communications with emojis and playful wording. Others may prefer something more simple and elegant. In any case, you may need to adjust that voice for customer apology letters.

This starts right from the subject line. If a customer’s order is delayed, whether due to shipping issues or stock shortages, that’s a serious issue. Sending a subject line with cutesy wording like “oops” and frowning emojis may communicate that you’re not taking the delay seriously.

“If it's a small inconvenience, I think you can keep it lighter. It really just depends on the severity of the problem,” says Christiano. 

Here’s an example of a small mistake that justifies a light-hearted tone:

Customer apology email example.
Paperchase
         

And here’s an example of a graver issue, handled with more detail and a serious tone:

Customer apology email example.
Death Wish Coffee
         

In the body of the email, use straightforward language that clearly acknowledges the problem rather than dancing around the issue and directly communicate how you’ve corrected the mistake. 

Again, this is where creating personalized email apologies comes in. Christiano says you should look at factors like:

  • The price point of an order
  • The customer’s order history
  • The customer’s VIP or loyalty status
  • The tone of past reviews and conversations

Adjust the templates below to fit with your brand’s unique voice, but don’t forget that the wrong tone can make an apology email less effective.

Don’t: Leave the customer empty handed

A sincere apology to your customers should directly acknowledge the issue, take full responsibility, tell them what steps are being done to correct it, and give them a reason to come back and shop again.

Consider ending apology letters with some sort of offer — a voucher code for free shipping, a discount coupon code, store credit, or other perks. This demonstrates that you understand the customer has dealt with an inconvenience and you want to make it up to them beyond sending your “sincerest apologies.”

Christiano says it’s a good rule of thumb that if an issue is serious enough that you need to send an apology email, it’s worth considering including some sort of offer. For the most serious issues, you may even want to offer a full refund to retain that customer.

Here’s a great example of a mass email apology that extends the discount for goodwill (and more sales):

Customer apology email example.
ELOQUII
         

Don’t think of offering a coupon code as a further loss. It’s better to take a small hit on the next purchase than to not get the next order at all. Plus, an angry customer may leave negative reviews on your site or social media, driving away other potential customers and impacting your customer satisfaction (CSAT) score. 

10 apology email templates for every type of mishap

Below you’ll find useful email templates for every type of apology you may have to send as a brand. These apology email examples have spaces for you to insert personalized information for each customer, such as the customer’s name and shopping history. Use these as a starting point to craft your own letter templates.

1) Service or website outage or downtime (mass email)

This template is for when you’ve had site-wide technical issues or glitch that has impacted your entire customer base. Mass emails are less customized than individual emails, but should still contain all the key parts of a good apology.

Hi {{Customer first name}},

We’re currently experiencing a service outage for {{Website / Product / Service}}. We’re actively working on resolving the issue, which we believe is due to {{Reason for outage}}. We apologize for the inconvenience and assure you we’ll have everything up and running as quickly as possible.

Stay tuned at {{Website / Social media page}} for the latest updates.

Thanks, 

{{Current agent first name}}

2) Late shipment or delivery (individual)

This is for when a customer’s order will be sent out late. This is when you should consider how to tailor your apology letter to the unique customer and their history with your brand.

Hi {{Customer First Name}},

We regret to inform you that your order {{order number}} has been delayed.

We apologize for any inconvenience, and we appreciate your understanding. The reason for the delay is {{reason for the delay}}.

You can track the status of your order using this tracking link {{Link to tracking portal}}.

If you’d like to return or exchange your order, you can do so here {{Link to return/exchange portal}}.

Once again, we apologize for the inconvenience. Please let us know if you have any questions or can provide further assistance. 

Best,

{{Current agent first name}}

3) Late shipment or delivery (mass email)

This is for when you have a company-wide issue with delivery times, such as stock shortages or even shipping issues beyond your control, and need to send a mass apology email.

Hi {{Customer First Name}},

We’re reaching out to let you know that we’re currently experiencing shipment delays, largely due to {{Cause (e.g. supply chain issues, holiday rush, broken workflows, etc.}}. There will most likely be delays of {{range of business days}} on recent orders.

We understand this is a serious issue and are doing everything in our power to fulfill your orders as quickly as possible. For more information on shipping delays, you can check out {{link to FAQ page}}. If you have any other questions, please feel free to reach out to our team by responding to this email.

Best,

{{Current agent first name}}

4) Package never arrived

This is a customer whose order has been lost This will likely be sent in response to an incoming ticket from an upset customer.

Hi {{Customer First Name}},

Thank you for reaching out! I’m so sorry to hear that you were unable to locate the missing package. Rest assured we will remedy this situation for you. 

I have two options to offer: we can ship a replacement to you or issue a full refund for the order instead. If you prefer a replacement order, we kindly ask that you confirm the shipping address of where you would like the replacement order sent. We look forward to receiving your reply.

{{Current agent first name}}

5) Item arrived damaged

This is for when a customer receives a defective product. You’ll need to provide instructions on what the customer should do next, in addition to an apology. 

Hi {{Customer First Name}}, 

Thanks for reaching out about your recent order {{Number of last order}}. I’m sorry to hear about your experience. As we try our best to provide exceptional service, some factors like shipping and handling are out of our control and issues like this can happen.  

Please send us a photo of the broken/damaged item(s) you received and we’ll do our best to resolve this as soon as possible. 

{{Current agent first name}} 

6) Incorrect item delivered

If the incorrect item, or incorrect quantity of an item, is delivered you’ll need to apologize but also tell the customer what they should do with any incorrect items.

Hi {{Customer First Name}},

Thank you for letting us know we sent you the wrong product. We apologize for the inconvenience. We are sending you the correct product, the {{correct product name}} and it will be shipped by {{estimated shipping date}}. 

We sent it using expedited shipping, so you should receive it {{estimated delivery date}}. Please return {{old product}} in the original shipping box and packaging using the attached shipping label and instructions. Please contact us with any additional questions. 

{{Current agent first name}}

7) Previous communication mistake

If you sent a piece of email marketing with an incorrect or missing discount code, for example, you should follow up with an apology and correction. And, if it’s not too complicated, explain what caused the miscommunication in the first place, and the steps you’ve taken to prevent it from happening again. 

Hi {{Customer First Name}},

On {{day of the communication mistake}}, we experienced a hiccup with {{cause of the error}}. This resulted in you receiving a confusing email — sorry about that!

We addressed the issue and hope to avoid this happening in the future. As a way to apologize for any confusion caused by the last email, we {{Insert policy: temporary discount, free shipping, personalized code, added a credit, etc..}}. 

Thank you for understanding. Please respond to this email with any questions!

Best,

{{Current agent first name}} 

8) Reply to a bad customer review

When a customer is upset, a professional apology can go a long way to correcting the issue and retaining their business.

{{Customer First Name}},

Thanks so much for your feedback on {{Customer survey, review site, etc.}}.

I wanted to check in and get a little more information from you about your experience. This will help our team improve future experiences for you and other shoppers. If you’re open to it, you can just reply to this email and share your thoughts.

Thanks for your time, 

{{Current agent first name}}

9) Poor service experience

As we’ve discussed, poor customer experience can decrease loyalty. Correcting the issue and apologizing can help get that loyalty back.

Hi {{Customer first name}},

Thank you for reaching out and letting us know about your experience with us. This is not up to our standard and I've passed this along to our team to ensure this doesn't happen again. 

In addition, I've {{Insert policy: refund, added a credit, send a replacement, etc.}} to make this right. 

We truly value you as a customer and apologize for the inconvenience this caused.

Please let me know if I can help with anything else.

{{Current agent first name}}

10) Escalated customer

If a customer is already escalated, you need to have an apology email that reflects how the customer feels. Unhappy customers can cause lots of damage beyond lost business, including damage to your reputation through social posting and reviews.

Hi {{Customer first name}},

Thank you for reaching out and letting us know about your experience with us. This is not up to our standard and I've passed this along to our team to ensure this doesn't happen again.

I have CC’d {{Technical/Lead agent first name}} on this email. They will be able to figure out what happened here and ensure that we resolve this for you. 

{{Current agent first name}}

Winning back upset customers is worth it

When mistakes happen, remember that your most valuable customers are the ones who come back again and again. Mistakes create a risk of losing a customer, but it’s also an opportunity to rebuild loyalty and turn a bad situation into a chance for a positive customer service interaction.

Your customer service team should have a clear process in place for winning back upset customers and having a thorough library of sincere, on-brand customer apology emails is a key piece of the process. 

For further reading on customer responses, read about Gorgias’ other customer email templates and customer service scripts inspired by top ecommerce brands.

Start a demo with Gorgias today to streamline your customer responses and get the best possible return on investment with customer service.Mistakes happen. Even with the best-laid plans, your ecommerce business will inevitably run into shipping delays, website outages, and other mishaps that cause customer complaints.

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Shopping Cart Best Practices

14 Ecommerce Shopping Cart Best Practices To Increase Conversions

By Jordan Miller
17 min read.
0 min read . By Jordan Miller

The trick to ecommerce is having great products and attracting a bunch of people to your website. Right? Not quite. 

Great products and brand awareness are important, but so are all the little details that make up your website’s shopping experience. Everything — from the way your products are categorized to the live chat widget (or lack thereof) — impacts how successfully you can turn browsers into buyers, also known as your site’s conversion rate. One of the most important of those elements is your online store’s shopping cart. 

In this article, we’ll explore everything that happens after a website visitor clicks “Add to cart,” including the reasons customers abandon carts and 14 shopping cart best practices to encourage customers to keep shopping and place an order.

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How damaging is cart abandonment for your brand’s revenue?

Shopping cart abandonment is when a customer adds items to their shopping cart on your website, but leaves before making the purchase. Recent data from the Baymard Institute shows that the average shopping cart abandonment rate is 69.82%. This means that about seven out of every 10 shoppers at your store will not click “purchase.” 

Baymard also crunched the numbers to find out that companies across the U.S. and Europe collectively lost out on $260 billion worth of revenue due to cart abandonment. This revenue could be recovered through a stronger checkout flow and cart design. 

What causes shoppers to abandon shopping carts?

The next layer of navigating how to address checkout abandonment issues revolves around reasons for abandonment, which run the gamut. Baymard’s research reveals the top reasons for cart abandonment:

A list of reasons for cart abandonments.
Source: Baymard

Let’s dive into some of the top reasons.

Multi-step checkout processes 

A checkout process that requires the customer to go through multiple steps is one reason that customers abandoned their carts, as cited by the Baymard survey from late 2021. Of those surveyed, 17% say that they didn’t complete their purchase because the process was “too long or complicated.” 

It’s vital to get your shoppers to quickly find a checkout button that actually completes the purchase, in as few clicks and screens as possible. 

Gated checkout processes

If you require customers to create an account before checking out, you’re most likely losing some of them before checkout. Simply put, people don’t want to be forced into creating an account (that will most likely lead to emails they do not care for in their inbox) just to purchase a product from your company. In the Baymard study, 24% of consumers report “the site wanted me to create an account” as their top reason for abandoning during checkout. 

Even if customers do comply and create an account, they may be annoyed or frustrated by having to do so — which your company should avoid at all costs in order to ensure an excellent customer experience. 

Not enough payment options (or missing convenient options)

Another reason for cart abandonment cited in the Baymard survey was “not enough payment methods.” This could mean that an ecommerce company doesn’t accept certain credit cards or other payment options like PayPal.

When your online store accepts multiple payment methods, you are more likely to meet each customer’s individual expectations. This leads to a sense of convenience and a smoother customer experience. 

A collection of logos for payment methods like Apple Pay, Visa, Stripe, and more.

Lack of trust in the shopping cart’s security 

Most online shoppers want to feel a sense of trust before plugging their credit card details into any website. Baymard’s 2021 survey finds that 18% of customers say they abandoned their online cart because they did not feel that the ecommerce store was trustworthy. 

It’s important to make your customers feel secure, specifically when dealing with privacy and sensitive data like credit card numbers and personal information. Social proof like customer reviews on your products, as well as security guidelines like secure sockets layer (SSL) and payment card industry data security standard (PCI DSS), are a great way to bolster trust among first-time visitors. 

Surprise shipping charges or long delivery wait times

Finally, the most commonly cited reason for cart abandonment among consumers is surprise shipping costs or long delivery wait times. According to Baymard, “extra costs” and “delivery was too slow” made up 68% of survey responses. This shows just how much shipping can impact whether or not someone chooses to go through with ordering your product.

Related: Trying to improve your shipping experience? Check out our guides on shipping for ecommerce and how to offer free shipping

14 optimization tips for the best shopping cart experience

  1. Offer the right payment options
  2. Don’t require shoppers to create an account in order to buy 
  3. Add “mini cart” functionality to keep your cart visible
  4. Make product descriptions and thumbnails visible on the shopping cart page
  5. Limit the customer information you collect
  6. Provide total cost estimates during checkout
  7. Use breadcrumbs to show the number of steps in your checkout process
  8. Create an abandoned cart workflow automation
  9. Give your customers multiple shipping options
  10. Implement an auto-save feature for items in shoppers’ carts
  11. Offer a live chat feature on the checkout page
  12. Make it easy for customers to move between their cart and product pages
  13. Use your shopping cart for upselling and cross-selling
  14. Add a “Buy now” button to skip the shopping cart

Now that you know some of the top reasons customers are abandoning their carts, let’s look at some best practices you can implement to give customers a positive shopping cart experience — and lower your cart abandonment rate.

1) Offer the right payment options for your customers 

As mentioned, a lack of payment options is one reason customers abandon their online shopping carts, so ensuring your ecommerce website has options is vital. According to SaleCycle, the majority of online shoppers want the option to pay for purchases online with either a digital wallet (digital payments not attached to a card), credit card, debit card, or bank transfer. 

The more options you have available, the better. Additionally, some payment options can also make checkout faster and easier for customers, which also helps with cart abandonment rates. 

Pro tip

Be sure to think about which payment types will make the most sense for your customers and your business size. If you are just starting out and have a limited budget, consider starting with PayPal or Venmo. Once you start growing, expand to include all the major payment options: Visa, MasterCard, American Express, Discover, Apple Pay, PayPal, and maybe even a buy-now-pay-later option like Klarna or Afterpay. 

Also, consider investigating whether your ecommerce platform has express checkout options. Shopify, for example, has express checkout options that let people pay through services like Amazon so they can skip typing out contact, payment, and billing information. Here’s an example of express pay on CROSSNET’s website:

CROSSNET's express pay options include PayPal and Amazon Pay.
Source: CROSSNET

Read more about choosing payment options for your ecommerce business. 

2) Don’t require shoppers to create an account in order to buy 

Shoppers don't want to create an account in order to make a purchase, so eliminating this requirement (if you’re using it within your online store) can be a quick fix for boosting conversions. 

The National Retail Federation reports that 97% of cart abandonment is due to inconvenience. So, keep the shopping cart design as simple as possible — give customers the option to create or sign into an account, but also provide a guest checkout option with a prominent checkout button.

Pro tip

Give customers the option to create an account via social media or their Google account after they purchase. This taps into the convenience factor, and gives you a chance for future email marketing or customer loyalty programs. 

Also, if you have subscribe-and-save functionality, make the discount clear to customers throughout the checkout process — again, without making it mandatory. Olipop’s “Add to cart” option is a great example of advertising the better deal without sacrificing usability for the shopper:

OLIPOP's product page offers a Subscribe & Save option.
Source: OLIPOP

3) Add “mini cart” functionality to your ecommerce site to keep your cart visible while browsing

Keeping a customer’s online shopping cart accessible while browsing is another best practice that can help decrease cart abandonment. A mini cart makes the shopping process much more seamless because customers can easily add products to their cart — or review current cart contents — in a drop-down and without being directed to a new page. This can help minimize potential website loading issues, which Baymard’s survey cites as a top reason that customers abandon their carts during checkout. 

Pro tip

Mini carts are usually a simple add-on, depending on which platform your online store is based. Both Shopify and WooCommerce offer mini cart options that you can easily add to your shop. If you’re looking for a brand that has a successful mini cart, check out fashion retailer Marine Layer. Here’s the drop-down that happens if you hover over the cart icon:

Marine Layer's drop-down mini-cart.
Source: Marine Layer

  

Looking for more Shopify-specific tips on abandoned cart recovery? Read more here.

4) Make product descriptions and thumbnails visible on the shopping cart page (where it makes sense) 

Adding your product details to customers’ carts can be extremely helpful — if it makes sense for your business. 

For example, if you sell power tools and a customer is purchasing new drill bits, they may want to double-check that the drill bits they put in their cart are the correct size. So, in order to keep them on the checkout page, include a brief description below the product name. This eliminates the need to go back to the main product page, which eliminates the potential for slow page loading and frustrated customers.

Pro tip

The product description on the checkout screen doesn’t need to be long or complicated — one or two solid sentences from the original product page will do. Or, if your company sells highly visual merchandise, a thumbnail — a picture’s worth a thousand words, after all. One store that add thumbnails to their shopping carts is Glamnetic:

Glamnetic shows product thumbnails in the checkout cart.
Source: Glamnetic

5) Limit the customer information you collect to only the essentials

Everyone values their personal privacy, especially when shopping online. ROI Revolution reports that ”39% of consumers say they have maintained the same level of concern about their online privacy over the past year and 20.5% of consumers say they’re much more concerned about their online privacy compared to one year ago.” Only 8.6% of online shoppers say they’re less concerned now than they were a year ago. 

This is why it’s so important to only collect information from your customers that is absolutely necessary. In a typical shopping transaction, these essentials would include things like email address, phone number, and street address. In some cases, you might also ask for some basic demographic info that’s important to your company’s segmentation, such as gender and purchase habits. You may offer the option to keep customers’ credit cards on file, but we don’t recommend doing this without their permission. 

If customers do opt to keep their credit card information stored on your site, be sure to let them know exactly how this works. Most companies take advantage of encrypted online or cloud-based storage systems. Let customers know there are even regulations that dictate what you can and can’t do with your information. This will help put them at ease and show that your brand is trustworthy. 

A list of optional and required fields during checkout.

Pro tip

Offer customers two-factor authentication (2FA) or multi-factor authentication (MFA) when shopping on your site, which signals to your customers that you take their privacy seriously. Many companies have opted for MFA or 2FA in the past few years, and you can use Amazon Pay or Google Pay as a version of 2FA on your ecommerce site. 

6) Provide total cost estimates during checkout to reduce sticker shock

As pointed out earlier in this article, unexpected fees are cited as the most popular reason that customers abandon their carts before checkout. To avoid this, give customers an estimated subtotal before they get to the checkout screen. This can be especially important for larger-ticket items because shipping a $1,000 sofa will most likely come with a higher shipping fee (and more tax) than a box of clothing. 

Pro tip

When a customer is on a product page, include an option to enter their zip code to calculate a preview of tax and shipping before they click “add to cart.” Native Union does an excellent job of this on its website. They even break down the costs for various shipping options like standard and express delivery:

Native Union lets you estimate shipping cost based on zip code.
Source: Native Union

7) Use breadcrumbs (progress indicators) to show the number of steps in your checkout process

The breadcrumb feature can be used in many ways on websites but has a specific use for ecommerce checkout processes. Letting customers know how much time, or how many steps, they have left in the checkout process is important to ensure they complete their purchase. Progress indicators can be as simple as a little block of text on the checkout screen that says “1 of 3,” or can use graphics for more visual appeal.

Pro tip

Take this time to think about each step of your business’ checkout process and make it as simple as possible. The more steps a customer has to go through, the more chances you have to lose them. Shopify’s default checkout page has a clear progression from Cart > Information > Shipping > Payment, which you can see on Comfort One Shoes’ site:

 

Comfort One Shoes' checkout page uses breadcrumbs to show previews of the checkout process.
Source: Comfort One Shoes

8) Create an abandoned cart workflow automation for customers that leave items for later

Some ecommerce sites let customers add items to a wish list or “save for later” to reduce the number of times customers add items to a cart without plans to buy them in that shopping session. Regardless of whether you have that functionality, you should create a workflow for customers who leave items behind. 

This workflow could include things like email reminders, on-screen pop-ups, retargeting ads, and sending follow-up coupon codes. It’s important to keep in mind the specific goals of your ecommerce business. What may be right for some brands may not be right for yours. 

Pro tip

Timeliness is everything when it comes to your abandoned cart workflow. When customers are ready to buy, you must be there. Some sites use exit-intent pop-ups as a hail mary for customers about to abandon carts. And while this is effective, some customers find it disruptive. 

Consider instead adding live chat to your website, ideally with proactive functionality. Live chat can have an incredible impact on salesOhh Deer generates about $12,500 per quarter in sales through Gorgias’ live chat — because you can reach out to customers with certain order values in their cart to ask if they need support or offer a discount to stop them from leaving. 

"When you make sales thanks to your good service, customers will come back and recommend you. That's revenue-generating."

Alex Turner, Customer Experience Manager at Ohh Deer

Check out our guide to shopping cart recovery for more recommendations on winning back lost sales.

9) Give your customers multiple shipping options

Every customer has different expectations and needs when it comes to shipping. Offering robust shipping options expands the number of situations your ecommerce business can seamlessly respond to. Beyond helping to decrease your brand’s cart abandonment rate, providing various shipping options can lead to more sales as well as higher retention and customer satisfaction. 

Pro tip

Take into account your target customers’ needs and try to cater to every shipping scenario, which could include the following options:

  • Flat-rate shipping (4-5 business days)
  • Expedited shipping (3 business days)
  • Next-day/overnight shipping (1-2 business days)
  • Local pick up, especially if you have a large number of customers in the city where you operate

Regardless of your options, clarify the price as early as possible to avoid unwanted surprises. Here’s the clear layout of shipping costs on Sol de Janeiro’s website:

Sol de Janeiro offer multiple shipping options.
Source: Sol de Janeiro

10) Implement an auto-save feature for items in shoppers’ carts

At this point, you know many of the reasons customers may abandon their shopping carts online. From frustration and slow page loading speed to simply being distracted, customers leave their carts a lot, so implementing an auto-save feature on your website can help decrease your shop's cart abandon rate. A customer may be distracted and leave your website, but then come back to it a few days later. When they reopen it, their saved cart will remind them of their previous intent to purchase. 

Pro tip

Tap into your website management software to see if an auto-save feature is available. It may be as easy as flipping a toggle. If you use Shopify, you can also save carts between visits so customers can retrieve their old carts when coming back to your site.

11) Offer a live chat feature on the checkout page for customer questions

Most customers (90%) expect an immediate response to their customer service inquiries, according to HubSpot. Being able to provide your customers with this support through a live chat feature can boost the overall customer experience, as well as improve your store’s cart abandonment rate. Even more, Kayako reports that 79% of businesses say offering a live chat feature positively impacted sales (including upsells), revenue, and customer loyalty.

Pro tip

Use Gorgias for live chat (and more). The live chat widget can seamlessly integrate with your Shopify store and provide a solution for customers who may have questions at the time of purchase to drive sales. You can even use chat campaigns to target certain customers — like those lingering on a checkout page — to see if they need information or a discount to complete the purchase:

Source: Gorgias

Want to learn more about the power of live chat for ecommerce? Check out these lists:

Alternatively, if you already have a live chat app in mind, learn how to install it into your Shopify store.

12) Make it easy for customers to move between their cart, product pages, and more in your online store 

Ensuring the design and user experience of your ecommerce shop is up to par is the last but extremely important best practice when it comes to lowering your cart abandonment rate.  You’ll want to ensure customers can move through all areas of your website with ease. 

Pro tip

Explore new features and add-ons that your website software offers. If you’re currently building everything yourself, we encourage you to check out how a tool like Shopify can drastically elevate your customers’ experience while not taking too much time away from your team. For inspiration from an online retailer who does this well, check out skincare brand Then I Met You

Related: Learn how to offer proactive customer service to improve your customer experience.

13) Use your shopping cart for upselling and cross-selling — with limits

Your shopping cart can be a good place to recommend additional products to browsers. This is especially true if some of your products require others for full functionality. 

As you can imagine, pushing items onto customers before they’ve even decided whether they want to make a purchase in the first place is dangerous. They could get annoyed and abandon the purchase altogether. So, if you do decide to add this to your store, do so strategically. For example, Little Poppy Co. uses in-cart recommendations to offer a discount and subscribe-and-save option, which many customers may appreciate.

Little Poppy Co. offers a subscribe and save option at checkout.
Source: Little Poppy Co.

Tools like In Cart Upsell and Cross Sell can activate this feature on your store. 

14) Add a “Buy now” call to action (CTA) button to skip the shopping cart altogether

As we described above, the shopping cart is a bit of a minefield. Customers can fall off at any second and decide not to buy anything or, worse, check out your competitor’s website. One way to avoid issues is to let shoppers skip the shopping cart altogether and let customers just buy the product. 

If you use Shopify, check out their article on Buy Buttons for more information, including some words of warning about the button’s shoddy functionality. 

Check out Loop Earplug’s website for a good example of a clear, visible button to skip the checkout process and buy now:

Loop Earplugs offers a buy now button on product pages in addition to Add to cart
Source: Loop Earplugs

Check out our customer story on Loop Earplugs to learn how Gorgias helped them increase 43% of their revenue from CS.

“We’ve seen 43% increase in revenue from customer support since we launched pre-sales flows. Quick response flows give us the ability to build trust with our customers and that’s priceless. When customers get a quick and honest answer, they often end up buying more than one product in a short span of time. Seeing customers live the life we’re aiming to create for them in Loop Earplugs is extremely rewarding for us.”
- Milan Vanmarcke, Customer Service Manager at Loop Earplugs

3 amazing ecommerce shopping cart experiences to inspire you

Finally, let’s take a look at what we consider to be the gold standards of ecommerce shopping experiences. Don’t hesitate to take some ideas back for your online shop — they may be exactly what your ecommerce strategy needs.

Revolve

Clothing retailer Revolve is a top example of a clean, efficient customer checkout process. The brand doesn’t force customers to log in or sign up for an account in order to purchase — but does give the option. Revolve also provides a live chat option, as well as text and phone numbers to get a hold of a customer service rep should a question come up. 

Revolve
Source: Revolve

Amazon

Amazon is another leading example of a shopping cart experience that covers a lot in a small amount of space. Though it may seem busy for some customers, Amazon features additional information about the product a customer is buying right in the checkout screen, such as the stock count (if there is a low number), eligibility for free shipping, and even information about if the product is Climate Pledge Friendly. 

Amazon
Source: Amazon

Nike

Third, we’re highlighting the athletic wear brand Nike. The company takes a similarly minimalistic approach to Revolve, but is a top-tier example of breadcrumbing and providing estimated additional fees like shipping and tax. The brand also provides a product description on this page, which can be especially helpful when purchasing shoes. 

Nike checkout page
Source: Nike

Take your ecommerce customer service to the next level with Gorgias

Providing a smooth shopping and purchasing experience can lead to a satisfying, stress-free customer experience. Ensuring a positive customer experience will lead to greater customer experience which has a huge impact on your revenue.

To make the process even more seamless, we recommend checking out Gorgias to manage all of your customer support in one place. The all-in-one platform was built specifically for ecommerce businesses and can integrate easily with other online shop platforms like Shopify, BigCommerce, and Magento. Learn more about how Gorgias can optimize all customer interactions and streamline your business.

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FAQ Example

FAQ Pages: Examples, Benefits, and When to Add a Help Center

By Gorgias Team
min read.
0 min read . By Gorgias Team

TL;DR:

  • FAQ pages deflect repetitive support tickets and reduce response times by providing instant self-service answers
  • Strong FAQ pages combine clear categorization, search functionality, and schema markup to capture organic traffic
  • Top-performing examples from Amazon, Nike, and Etsy use accordion user interfaces (UIs) and contextual placement across product pages
  • Creating an effective FAQ requires mining customer data, writing concise answers, and maintaining content freshness
  • Schema markup can earn rich results for government and health sites, though eligibility is limited

Shoppers expect instant answers, but support teams can't scale 24/7. FAQ pages bridge this gap by providing self-service resources that work around the clock.

A well-executed FAQ page reduces ticket volume while building trust with shoppers. This guide covers proven examples, creation steps, search engine optimization (SEO) implementation, and strategies to measure your FAQ's impact.

What is an FAQ page?

An FAQ page is a self-service resource that answers your shoppers' most frequently asked questions in one centralized location.

The questions typically cover key information relevant to most visitors: operating hours, product availability, pricing, return policy, basic troubleshooting, and more.

By providing these answers proactively, customers get the information they want immediately without contacting your support team. FAQ pages are fairly low-tech but highly strategic. 

You can create an FAQ page in just a few hours and start seeing benefits immediately, whereas more advanced customer service strategies like customer service automation and omnichannel customer support require more investment.

FAQ vs. Help Center (when to use each)

A Help Center is a broader knowledge base that includes detailed articles, tutorials, video guides, and, in some cases, community forums. It serves as a comprehensive resource for complex topics that require step-by-step explanations or troubleshooting flows. 

An FAQ page, by contrast, is a focused Q&A list designed for high-frequency, straightforward questions that can be answered in a few sentences.

Use an FAQ page when customers need quick answers to common questions like shipping costs, return windows, or order status. Build a full Help Center when your products or services require detailed guidance, technical documentation, or multi-step tutorials. Most ecommerce brands benefit from both: an FAQ page for speed and a Help Center for depth.

Why FAQ pages matter

We identified the FAQ page as one of our top customer service trends because more brands have realized how much time their customer support teams can save by implementing effective self-service resources. FAQ pages aren't just great for agents, they're great for customer experience.

Reduce support tickets (deflection)

FAQ pages intercept repetitive inquiries before they reach agents, a strategy called ticket deflection. A Microsoft study shows that 66% of all customers consult self-service resources before contacting an agent. Your team doesn't need to spend hours answering questions about return policies, shipping rates, or order status.

Reducing repetitive tickets improves your customer service response time and frees up agents to work on sensitive, urgent, or higher-value support tickets. self-service resolves up to 60% of common inquiries, letting your team focus on conversations that actually require human expertise and build customer relationships.

Creating an FAQ page to answer common customer questions is one of our top tips in our CX-Driven Growth Playbook. The playbook shares 18 actionable tactics to boost revenue by 44% by improving CX. Our team created it using data from over 10,000 Gorgias merchants and in-depth interviews with 25 top ecommerce brands.

Improve conversion and trust

Shoppers experience pre-purchase anxiety about shipping, returns, sizing, and product quality. They need clarity before buying, especially when visiting your site for the first time. An FAQ page addresses this anxiety by demonstrating transparency and making essential information easy to find.

Earning shopper trust is key to growing your store, and a well-organized FAQ page shows customers you have clear policies for essential buying considerations. When answers are readily available, cart abandonment drops because customers feel confident moving forward with their purchase.

Capture organic and AI Overview traffic

If properly search-optimized, your FAQ page becomes another entrance point into your website from Google. A Help Center article from FIGS, a direct-to-consumer (DTC) scrubs brand, appears on the first page of Google's search results for the question:

Google AI Overview mentions Figs for a search query about best scrubs for nurses

The person who searched the question might click this link, find their answer, explore FIGS' website, remember the brand, and eventually return to make a purchase. Schema markup, which we'll cover later, helps search engines understand your FAQ content and include it in these valuable search features.

Shorten time-to-answer

FAQ pages provide 24/7 availability, unlike human support that operates during specific hours. Global customers across time zones can find answers immediately, regardless of when they visit your site. For simple inquiries, 68% of people would rather use self-service resources like an FAQ page than contact an agent and wait for a response.

Mobile accessibility makes FAQ pages even more valuable for shoppers browsing on-the-go. Of course, some customers prefer human support, and many questions are too complex for an FAQ page. Offer a healthy combination of self-service and human support to cover the entire range of customers and questions.

Best FAQ page examples

Studying what works on screen helps you understand effective FAQ design patterns. These nine examples from brands of all sizes showcase different approaches to organization, search functionality, and visual presentation.

Amazon

Amazon's help center creates a tailored experience using customer data and purchase history. When you log in, the FAQ prioritizes topics relevant to your recent orders and browsing behavior. Amazon also integrates AI-powered conversational support alongside traditional FAQ sections, letting customers choose their preferred path to answers.

The platform seamlessly connects FAQ content with account history and order tracking, so customers can resolve issues without leaving the help interface. This contextual approach reduces friction and keeps resolution times low.

Amazon FAQs about account, order management, returns, gift cards, and more

WhatsApp Help Center

WhatsApp's FAQ page features clean categorization with expandable sections that keep the interface uncluttered. The conversational tone matches WhatsApp's brand voice, making technical information feel approachable. Each answer is concise and written in plain language, avoiding jargon that might confuse users.

The mobile-first design loads quickly and works smoothly on small screens, which is essential for an app primarily used on phones. Fast load times and responsive design ensure customers can find answers without frustration.

WhatsApp displays its most popular articles in its help center

Wikipedia Help

Wikipedia's main FAQ page exemplifies how text-heavy, comprehensive FAQs can remain effective. It conforms to the overall site design, which creates consistency across the user experience. The page is fully searchable both on-page and using browser search, with a clear list of 11 questions linked to answers lower on the page.

Wikipedia also maintains a FAQ index page listing 20+ different FAQs on the site. While it doesn't list all questions for every FAQ, it includes strategic keywords that quickly guide users to the right FAQ for any use case.

Wikipedia's FAQs

Nike

Nike's Get Help page demonstrates how minimalist design with active white space can improve scannability.

The interface uses clear calls to action (CTAs) and simplified navigation that guide users to answers without overwhelming them with options.

This “less is more” approach works particularly well for brands with broad customer bases, where clarity trumps comprehensive detail on the main FAQ landing page.

Nike calls their FAQs 'Quick Assists'

Microsoft Support

Microsoft's page for Microsoft 365 mixes content types including video tutorials, community forum integration, and traditional text-based FAQs. This multi-format approach accommodates different learning styles and complexity levels. The robust search and filtering capabilities help users navigate vast amounts of information.

The top questions section smartly pulls the most-asked questions from each category and places them at the top of the page. For companies with complex products, this organizational strategy ensures quick access to high-priority information.

Google Support

Google's support hub serves as a reference example for organizing vast amounts of information with clear visual hierarchy. The categorization system breaks down complex services into digestible sections, each with intuitive icons and descriptions. Users can drill down from broad topics to specific questions through logical pathways.

The design, layout, and information architecture demonstrate how to scale FAQ content without sacrificing usability. Even with thousands of help articles, users can find answers quickly through strategic organization.

Google's FAQ page for Google Account

Etsy

Etsy's help center showcases ecommerce-specific FAQ structure with clear segmentation between seller and buyer resources. The platform spotlights cornerstone content based on engagement data, ensuring the most valuable articles appear prominently. This data-driven approach prioritizes what customers actually need rather than what the company assumes they need.

Etsy's search functionality is robust, with filters that narrow results by user type, topic, and issue category. This makes the Help Center scalable as the marketplace grows more complex.

Etsy's FAQ page

Spotify Community

Spotify's community-driven FAQ model combines official answers with peer support through user forums. This push-pull information access lets customers choose between verified company responses and community-sourced solutions. The voting system on community answers helps surface the most helpful responses over time.

Blending official FAQs with peer support creates a scalable support model where engaged users help answer questions. This approach works particularly well for consumer products with passionate user bases.

Spotify's FAQ page

Brooklinen

Brooklinen's FAQ page exemplifies effective DTC ecommerce design with focus on product care, shipping, and returns. The on-brand design matches the rest of their website, creating visual consistency. Simple navigation uses expandable sections to keep the page clean while providing detailed answers when needed.

The emphasis on product care information demonstrates understanding of customer concerns post-purchase. Addressing how to maintain product quality builds confidence in the purchase decision.

Brooklinen's FAQ page

How to create an FAQ page

Building an effective FAQ page from scratch requires a data-driven approach. Follow these steps to create an FAQ that actually serves your customers and reduces support volume.

Identify top customer questions

Start by mining your support tickets, chat logs, and email conversations for recurring questions. Tag and categorize inquiries by intent to identify patterns in what customers ask most frequently. If you use Gorgias, our shopper intent detection automatically provides this information.

Supplement ticket data with competitive research, customer surveys, and on-site search queries. Focus on questions that appear more than once rather than edge cases that affect only a handful of customers. Look at data from the past three to six months to capture current trends.

Additional data sources include:

  • Support tickets and chat transcripts
  • On-site search queries
  • Customer reviews mentioning confusion or questions
  • Sales call recordings
  • Social media comments and messages

Categorize by intent (shipping, returns, product)

Group questions into logical categories that match how customers think about their needs. Common categories include ordering, shipping, returns, account management, and product details. This categorization reduces cognitive load and improves scannability by letting users jump directly to relevant sections.

Use customer-facing language for category names rather than internal jargon. For example, use “Returns” instead of “Reverse Logistics” and “Shipping” instead of “Fulfillment.” Test your categories with a few customers to ensure the organization makes sense from their perspective.

Common category examples:

  • Orders and tracking
  • Shipping and delivery
  • Returns and exchanges
  • Account and billing
  • Product information and care
  • Technical support

Write concise, action-oriented answers

Answer the question in the first sentence, then provide supporting details if needed. Keep answers to two or three sentences maximum, linking to deeper resources for complex topics. Use active voice and simple language, avoiding jargon unless you define it first.

If you use Gorgias, AI Agent can auto-generate draft answers from existing Macros and Help Center content, giving you a starting point to refine.

Compare these two approaches:

  • Bad example: “We have a comprehensive returns process that we've designed to be as customer-friendly as possible while maintaining our business requirements.”
  • Good example: “You can return unworn items within 30 days for a full refund. Start your return by clicking the link in your order confirmation email.”

Add search + accordion UX

The accordion pattern uses expandable sections to reduce visual clutter while keeping all content accessible. Users see question headlines at a glance and can expand specific answers without scrolling past irrelevant information. This pattern works particularly well for FAQ pages with more than 10 questions.

Include a search bar for users with specific questions who don't want to browse categories. Mobile responsiveness is non-negotiable since many customers will access your FAQ from phones while shopping or awaiting deliveries.

UX best practices:

  • Prominent search bar at the top of the page
  • Expandable accordion sections for answers
  • Clear category headings with visual hierarchy
  • Mobile-friendly touch targets and readable text
  • Fast page load times

Link to deeper resources

FAQ answers should be concise starting points, not comprehensive guides. When topics require detailed explanations, link to full Help Center articles, product pages, or contact forms. This keeps your FAQ scannable while ensuring customers can access depth when they need it.

With Gorgias, you can embed links to Help Center articles, product pages, or your live chat widget directly in FAQ answers. For complex topics, link to a full guide instead of cramming details into the FAQ. This tiered approach to information architecture serves both customers who want quick answers and those who need comprehensive detail.

FAQ page design and user experience (UX)

Search + accordion for scannability

The accordion pattern has become the standard for FAQ pages because it keeps the interface clean while making all content accessible. Users can scan question headlines without opening every answer, then expand only the sections they need. This reduces scroll length and gives customers control over their experience.

Search bar placement matters. Position it prominently at the top of the page with placeholder text that suggests how to use it. Implement keyword matching and autocomplete to help users find answers even if they phrase questions differently than you do.

Accordion benefits:

  • Reduces page scroll length
  • Keeps interface visually clean
  • Lets users control their experience
  • Works well on mobile devices
  • Improves perceived load times

Accessibility and mobile readability

Use readable font sizes (minimum 16px for body text), sufficient color contrast ratios, and keyboard navigation support to ensure all customers can access your FAQ. Many customers have visual impairments or motor limitations that require assistive technologies. Following Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) isn't just ethical, it expands your potential customer base.

Test your FAQ on mobile before publishing. Mobile users represent a significant portion of traffic, and FAQ pages must work smoothly on small screens. Check that buttons are large enough to tap accurately and text is readable without zooming.

Accessibility checks:

  • Font size of at least 16px
  • Color contrast ratio of at least 4.5:1
  • Full keyboard navigation support
  • Screen reader compatibility
  • Touch targets at least 44x44 pixels

FAQ SEO and schema markup

Schema markup helps search engines understand your FAQ content structure, potentially earning rich results in search. While implementation requires some technical work, the SEO benefits make it worthwhile.

JSON-LD FAQPage markup (eligibility caveats)

FAQ schema is structured data that tells search engines which content represents questions and answers. It uses JavaScript Object Notation for Linked Data (JSON-LD) format, a lightweight markup language that sits in your page's code without affecting visible content. When implemented correctly, schema helps search engines parse your FAQ for AI Overviews and featured snippets.

Rich results are limited to government and health sites, but schema still improves SEO for all sites through better indexing and AI Overview inclusion. Even without rich results, search engines understand your content structure more clearly, which can improve rankings for question-based queries.

For complete implementation guidance, check out creating SEO-friendly FAQ pages, which walks through tactics like internal linking and keyword placement. Also see our guides on ecommerce SEO and creating ecommerce blog content that ranks on Google.

Track impressions/clicks in Search Console

Google Search Console shows how your FAQ page performs in organic search. Monitor impressions (how often your page appears in search results), clicks, average position, and click-through rate to understand which questions drive traffic. The URL Inspection tool validates your schema markup and identifies any implementation errors.

Key metrics to track:

  • Search impressions
  • Click-through rate
  • Average position in results
  • Top performing queries
  • Schema validation status

Make your FAQ visible

Embed on product pages

Product-specific FAQs reduce pre-purchase friction by answering questions in context. Questions about sizing, materials, compatibility, and care instructions belong on product pages where shoppers are making buying decisions. Contextual FAQs address concerns before they become barriers to purchase.

If you use Gorgias Convert, trigger FAQ modals based on user behavior. If a shopper lingers on a product page, show a modal about sizing or shipping to address common hesitations proactively.

Reinforce at cart/checkout

Cart and checkout represent high-anxiety moments where FAQ content can prevent abandonment. Common questions at this stage include shipping costs, delivery times, and return policies. Link to your FAQ page prominently during checkout or embed critical answers directly in the checkout flow.

Consider adding an FAQ link in the cart sidebar or below the checkout button. This placement catches customers who hesitate before completing their purchase.

Surface via live chat/helpdesk

FAQ articles can be surfaced in live chat conversations before escalating to human agents. This deflects tickets while maintaining customer satisfaction since most customers prefer instant answers over waiting for an agent. With Gorgias, AI Agent auto-suggests relevant FAQ articles based on the customer's question, resolving issues before creating a ticket.

Surface FAQ articles in live chat to resolve questions before creating a ticket. This approach combines the efficiency of self-service with the personal touch of chat, creating a seamless experience.

Measure FAQ success

KPIs (engagement, conversions, search visibility)

Key metrics include page views, time on page, bounce rate, conversion rate, and search impressions. Track engagement in Google Analytics 4 (GA4) by setting up events for scroll depth, link clicks, and accordion expansions. FAQ pages should reduce bounce rate by providing answers that keep users on site rather than leaving to search elsewhere.

Set up GA4 events to track FAQ engagement. This data shows which questions get the most attention and which categories might need expansion or clarification.

KPIs to track:

  • Page views and unique visitors
  • Average time on page
  • Bounce rate
  • Conversion rate for visitors who view FAQ
  • Search impressions and clicks
  • Click-through rate from search

Ticket deflection ROI

Ticket deflection measures inquiries resolved via FAQ instead of creating support tickets. Calculate the value using this formula: tickets avoided multiplied by cost per ticket equals deflection savings. If your FAQ prevents 100 tickets per month and each ticket costs $5 USD to resolve, that's $500 USD in monthly savings.

Maintain and improve

Feedback loops (tickets, on-site search)

Monitor support tickets, on-site search queries, and customer feedback to identify FAQ gaps. New product launches, policy changes, and seasonal trends require FAQ updates to stay relevant. If you see the same question appearing repeatedly in tickets despite having an FAQ page, either the answer isn't clear or customers can't find it.

With Gorgias, use ticket insights and intent statistics to surface emerging questions that should be added to your FAQ. Review ticket data monthly to identify new FAQ topics and update existing answers that generate follow-up questions.

Feedback sources:

  • Support ticket themes and trends
  • On-site search queries with no results
  • Customer surveys and feedback forms
  • Product reviews mentioning confusion
  • Sales team questions and objections

Update cadence and ownership

Schedule quarterly reviews of FAQ content to verify policies, refresh screenshots, add new questions, and remove outdated content. Assign ownership to your CX or content team to ensure accountability. Without clear ownership, FAQ pages decay over time as policies change and products evolve.

Outdated FAQs erode trust faster than having no FAQ at all. Customers who find incorrect information lose confidence in your brand and may abandon their purchase or leave negative reviews.

Example update checklist:

  • Verify all policies are current
  • Refresh screenshots and visual examples
  • Add questions that appeared in recent tickets
  • Remove content about discontinued products
  • Update seasonal information (holiday shipping)
  • Test all links to ensure they work

Build your FAQ page today

FAQ pages deliver immediate value through ticket deflection, improved conversion rates, and SEO visibility. The key is treating them as living documents that evolve with your business rather than static pages you build once and forget.

Gorgias makes FAQ implementation seamless, helping you turn FAQ pages into a strategic asset that reduces costs while improving customer experience. 

Book a demo to see how Gorgias can transform your approach to self-service support.

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Ecommerce Strategy

How to Optimize Your Ecommerce Strategy For Conversion & Retention

By Jordan Miller
14 min read.
0 min read . By Jordan Miller

In 2023, ecommerce stores face a bundle of challenges in the form of rising ad costs, mounting customer expectations, and ever-shifting spending habits. But challenges for the entire industry open a window of opportunity for savvy businesses. 

To navigate this rapidly evolving market and position themselves for success, it is essential for today's online stores to rethink their ecommerce strategy — specifically, to match investments in customer acquisition with investments in customer conversion and retention.

One way to think of this new strategic approach is by rethinking the traditional sales and marketing funnel. Rather than working down the funnel toward one sale, brands have to think about moving customers through an experience — from awareness to conversion and retention — to maximize the lifetime value of each customer (LTV).

Ecommerce strategy funnel for 2023

Below, we’ll highlight 12 important components of a successful ecommerce strategy. While no blog post could ever tell you how to run your business, you’ll learn some high-level mindsets and actionable tactics to incorporate into your 2023 ecommerce strategy.

What does an ecommerce strategy look like in 2023?

As you put together an ecommerce strategy, consider three fundamental questions:

  • How do I bring people to my website?
  • How do I get them to place an order once they’re there?
  • How do I maximize the lifetime value (LTV) of each customer?

Let’s break those down: First, getting people to your website. Ecommerce businesses still need to focus on growing their online presence and boosting brand awareness with marketing campaigns like paid ads, social media marketing, content marketing, and search engine optimization (SEO).

However, a lot is changing for ecommerce stores in 2023. This is where the second and third questions come in. Due to increased competition and higher marketing and advertising costs, customer conversion and retention are the new battlegrounds for ecommerce. 

This starts by prioritizing the customer experience. Customers have increasingly come to value a smooth, engaging, and personalized customer experience throughout the entire customer journey, just as much as the quality of the product or service they are purchasing. 

Customer experience across the entire customer journey

42% of customers say they're willing to pay more for a friendly, welcoming experience, and 65% say that a positive experience with a brand is more influential than great advertising.

Finally, the last question: Focusing on customer retention has now become just as important for ecommerce stores as customer acquisition. This is due in no small part to rising customer acquisition costs that have made attracting new customers increasingly expensive. 

Repeat customers are also much, much more valuable than first-time shoppers. 300% more valuable, thanks to behaviors like:

  • Placing repeat orders
  • Placing orders with higher average values (AOV)
  • Referring friends and family to your store
  • Posting about your products on social media
  • Writing product reviews for your website
Repeat customers generate 300% more revenue than first-time customers

With that in mind, let's take a look at 12 key components of a successful ecommerce strategy that are sure to help you form more positive, revenue-generating relationships with your customers.

12 Key components of a successful ecommerce strategy

  1. Develop your buyer personas with existing customer data
  2. Plot your buyer's journey through the four key stages
  3. Be bold with your ecommerce marketing strategy
  4. Personalize the customer experience to drive revenue and repeat business
  5. Make customer service one of your ecommerce superpowers
  6. Run constant tests to optimize your conversion rate
  7. Find ways to boost average order value (AOV) like subscriptions and upselling
  8. Collect and display social proof like reviews and user-generated content
  9. Use high-quality images and superb descriptions for your products
  10. Expand your social media strategy for social commerce
  11. Support social media login features
  12. Continuously collect data and iterate on your ecommerce strategy

1) Develop your buyer personas with existing customer data

One great way to make sure that everyone in your company understands your brand's target audience and how to market to them effectively is to use your existing customer data to develop buyer personas. 

Buyer persona

These buyer personas can serve as a helpful resource for guiding other elements of your ecommerce strategy. Whereas buyer personas of yore focused solely on artificial demographic information (like fake names and fake children), great buyer personas should focus more on elements of the target market that influence purchases:

  • Motivations
  • Pain points
  • Ideal outcomes
  • Alternatives
  • Buying considerations

2) Plot your buyer's journey through the four key stages

Ecommerce stores need to understand the journey customers go through before purchasing a product and carefully design each phase of that journey. This ensures that you can create an optimized sales funnel for your ecommerce site and is one of the most important keys to ecommerce success.

Again, the experience you provide customers is key here. While a traditional buyer’s journey indexes entirely on marketing channels — a customer will see an influencer marketing post, click through to a landing page, sign up for email campaigns to learn about new products and special offers, and eventually make a purchase — the reality is much more complicated.

Customers expect smooth, fast, and informative experiences at each stage of the journey. The good news? By providing great customer experiences, you can do much more than close one sale — you can boost order volume, promote repeat purchases, and drive much more value out of each customer.

The customer experience (and impact on business outcomes)

The four key stages of an online shopping customer journey that you will need to plot out and optimize include:

Awareness stage

This stage of the customer journey is when customers first discover your brand and its products. Most customers will be looking to learn more about your brand during this phase and will be browsing your blog posts, product descriptions, FAQ pages, and other educational resources.

Consideration stage

During the consideration stage of the customer journey, customers have identified a product they would like to purchase and are mulling over their decision. They may research the specific product they're considering further in this stage or compare it to offerings from other brands. Throughout the consideration stage, it's important to utilize strategies such as email marketing and retargeting to keep your brand and products at the forefront of the customer's mind.

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Decision stage

The decision stage is when customers decide whether to purchase the product they are considering. Given that online shopping cart abandonment rates sit at around 70%, this is also the stage of the customer journey where many would-be customers turn back. 

At this point of the journey, it's all about getting customers to cross the finish line via strategies such as abandoned cart recovery tactics, retargeting campaigns, and proactive customer support.

Retention stage

Once you've attracted a new customer and guided them through the three previous stages, you should shift your focus to retaining them and maximizing their lifetime value. 

This starts by continuing to offer an excellent experience to your existing customers. You can also leverage cross-selling and upselling to extract more value from your existing customer base, soliciting feedback and reviews, and more.

“Consumers are being more picky with their purchases as cash simply isn’t stretching as far, so brands will have to work harder to prove their value. Businesses themselves are also having to navigate smaller budgets, so with customer acquisition prices soaring, it makes sense to switch the focus towards existing customers.”

— Georgie Walsh, Content Marketing Manager at LoyaltyLion

3) Be bold with your ecommerce marketing strategy

If you want your ecommerce store to stand out from its competitors, you need to make a lasting impression. And no one has ever made a lasting impression by repeating the same, tired messaging as everyone else. 

Don't be afraid to be a little bold with your ecommerce marketing strategy, and try to develop campaigns that are creative and unique. To learn more about executing a bold and creative marketing strategy, check out our blog post on 13 unique ecommerce marketing strategies.

Retention has been the talk 2022 but I only see it becoming more important in 2023, with brands seeking out ways to truly differentiate their retention experience. It's not enough to have just a post-purchase flow, what are you really doing to personalize the customer experience from order #1 all the way through the course of their life with your brand.

— Brandon Amoroso, Founder and President of Electriq Marketing

4) Personalize the customer experience to drive revenue and repeat business

In 2023, creating personalized customer experiences is one of the most impactful ways to convert potential customers into paying customers. It's also key to creating experiences that drive customer loyalty and retention. One study finds that 70% of marketers using advanced personalization see an ROI of 200% or more for their efforts.

There are a lot of different ways that you can go about creating personalized customer experiences. Using customer data to create personalized marketing messages, offering customers proactive and personalized customer support via live chat support, and sprinkling specifics in your customer messages are just a few ways that ecommerce stores are able to leverage personalization. 

Check out our article on the ultimate guide to personalized customer service to learn more about how to create an impactful, personalized customer experience.

5) Make customer service one of your ecommerce superpowers

One crucial element of a great customer experience is excellent customer service. Given that 54% of customers will leave a brand after just one bad experience, great customer service is vital for promoting customer retention.

What makes for quality customer service

So what is it that defines great customer service? At Gorgias, we have identified the five elements as being the most important characteristics of excellent customer service:

  • Speed: You don't want to keep customers waiting, making it essential to offer fast first-response and resolution times
  • Convenience: Focus on creating low-effort customer experiences by making it as easy and convenient as possible for customers to find the answers they need
  • Helpfulness: Above all else, your customer support agents and resources must be able to address the questions and issues that customers have
  • Friendliness: Your customer support agents directly represent your brand, and you need them to be friendly and non-confrontational at all times
  • Feedback-focused: Customer feedback is an invaluable resource for further improving the quality of your brand's customer support

By providing a plethora of cutting-edge customer support tools and capabilities, Gorgias' industry-leading customer support platform enables brands to improve all four of these key customer service considerations. 

📚 Recommended reading: For a more in-depth analysis of what defines excellent customer service (and how Gorgias helps brands make customer service one of their ecommerce superpowers), check out this article on 20 customer service best practices.

Along with focusing on these four key elements of great customer service, it's also important to design a customer service process that includes omnichannel support options, self-service options, and personalized customer service:

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Offer omnichannel customer service

Omnichannel customer service entails offering support via multiple channels such as email, SMS, live chat, and social media. 

By providing multiple ways for customers to contact your support team, you can make your support services more convenient and accessible. While omnichannel typically indicates digital channels like email, SMS, and social media, it can also apply in store, too:

“As brick-and-mortar storefronts open up again, a unified customer service across all channels will be important. The unification of systems, operations, experience, and service with composable architectures will set a brand up for success in the next decade to come.”

— Steve Krueger, CEO and Founder at JIBE

Provide customer self-service

Customer self-service options such as FAQ pages, chatbots, automation, and knowledge bases enable customers to find the information they need without contacting your support team.

Knowledge base or help center
Source: ALOHAS

Self-service cuts the amount of effort customers have to expend way, way down. These solutions also help reduce your support team's workload by eliminating many would-be support tickets, freeing your agents up to focus on more complex and pressing tickets.

Insist on personalized customer service

Personalizing your customer support services at every opportunity by leveraging customer data to create personalized messaging will improve customer satisfaction and boost your retention rates.

6) Run constant tests to optimize your conversion rate

When optimizing your store's conversion rate, nothing is more important than continual A/B testing. A/B testing entails comparing the results of two different marketing approaches or messaging (for example, two different versions of the same ad or marketing email) and using the data you gather to constantly optimize your ecommerce site. 

A/B testing for conversion rate optimization
“Conversion rate is arguably the single most important metric in ecommerce: Without a high conversion rate, all your web traffic, brand awareness, and marketing dollars never turn into revenue.”

— Catherine Lambert, Marketing and Partnerships at Swanky

You can use this strategy to optimize everything from product descriptions to email marketing messages to PPC ads, and it's one of the most impactful keys to ecommerce success.

Read more about how to improve conversion rate with A/B testing. 

7) Find ways to boost average order value (AOV) like subscriptions and upselling

We've already discussed how rising customer acquisition costs have made it increasingly important for brands to extract as much revenue as possible from their existing customer base. Along with promoting customer loyalty, one effective way to generate more revenue from your existing customers is to boost AOV via subscriptions, upselling, and cross-selling strategies.

Consider a "subscribe and save" option

Amazon is one example of an ecommerce company that utilizes the "subscribe and save" model to generate more revenue from its customers. 

By allowing customers to subscribe to your products or services and receive a discount, you can generate a more reliable, recurring cash flow from your company's repeat customers.

Take a look at how OLIPOP offers a 15% discount for customers who opt for a subscription:

Subscribe and save to raise average order volume (AOV)
Source: OLIPOP

Lean on upselling and cross-selling

Upselling is defined as convincing customers to purchase a more expensive, upgraded, or premium version of the product they've chosen. Meanwhile, cross-selling entails recommending customers products related to the product they've already purchased. 

Upselling and cross-selling are both effective ways for ecommerce brands to increase their AOV and can be employed by providing customers with personalized product recommendations based on their past purchases.

Take a look at how ecommerce brand Uqora uses pop-ups to encourage customers to add additional items to their shopping cart:

Upsell with pop-ups
Source: Uqora

📚 Recommended reading: Learn how Uqora uses Recharge and Gorgias to delight subscribers, the majority of their customer base.

8) Collect and display social proof like reviews and user-generated content

Social proof (like user reviews) provides customers with peace of mind and can go a long way toward eliminating any hesitations about purchasing from your brand. 

Product reviews and testimonials, social media posts from customers, and customer messages are all examples of user-generated content that you should strive to collect and display across your website, product pages, and marketing materials. 

We love how Loop Earplugs leverages customer testimonials on their website to boost online sales with the power of social proof:

Use customer reviews as social proof
Source: Loop Earplugs

Politely requesting reviews in your post-purchase emails, incentivizing customer reviews with discounts or freebies, and simplifying the review process are a few effective ways to collect more of these valuable social proof resources.

9) Use high-quality images and superb descriptions for your products

Your product pages are the endpoint of the most crucial stage in the customer journey — the decision stage, when customers decide whether to purchase your product. This makes optimizing your product pages with compelling descriptions and high-quality images essential. 

Along with boosting your conversion rate, providing quality images and descriptions of your products also improves customer satisfaction and reduces support tickets by ensuring customers know exactly what it is they are purchasing.

10) Expand your social media strategy for social commerce

Social media marketing is something that every brand should take advantage of. 

Along with leveraging social media platforms for digital marketing tactics like content or influencer marketing, you can also leverage them as platforms for both sales and customer support. 

Selling on social media

Social commerce, which turns your social media accounts into ecommerce sales channels, makes it even more convenient for customers to place a purchase.

Social commerce is all the rage right now, so platforms such as Instagram, TikTok, and Facebook are offering more and more tools for ecommerce brands to set up and manage shops directly on their social media pages. 

Social commerce
Source: Glossier

These social commerce stores present an excellent opportunity to engage and sell to customers at the places where they are already spending the majority of their time online. And that kind of convenience is always great for user experience and, in turn, conversion.

Providing customer service via social media

The biggest tenet of providing customer support via social media is giving customers the option to contact you via social media messaging platforms like Facebook Messenger. 

Gorgias helps make social media customer service convenient for your support agents by enabling them to respond to customer messages across multiple channels from a single dashboard. 

Omnichannel customer service (including social media)

You can also utilize social listening tools to provide proactive customer support to customers who mention your brand in posts or comments.

11) Support social media login features

Social media login is a feature that enables customers to create an account on an ecommerce website/log in to an existing account using their social media login. If you've ever been prompted to create an account with a website using your Facebook or Google log in, then you've already seen this feature in action. 

Social media login features eliminate the hassle of creating a new account and can thus eliminate a significant barrier that might otherwise prevent customers from converting. As for how to add this feature to your ecommerce website, the exact process will depend on the specific ecommerce platform you're using. Search for “social login [ecommerce platform]” to find apps that will enable this functionality for website visitors.

For example, One Click Social Login is a Shopify app that enables social login. 

12) Continuously collect data and iterate on your ecommerce strategy

The data you collect from your customers is your company's most valuable asset and should serve as the North Star for your ecommerce strategy in 2023 and beyond. 

Throughout your marketing, sales, and customer support processes, you should prioritize collecting customer data and feedback and use it to optimize those same processes. This starts by utilizing tools that provide robust data and analytics. 

For example, Gorgias' data and analytics features enable brands to automatically capture a wide range of data and provide powerful insights like customer support metrics and the support team’s impact on the company's revenue

Likewise, Gorgias integrates with a wide range of ecommerce tools to pull customer data — like past orders, order shipment , loyalty data, and more — into the helpdesk. This way, your agents don’t have to switch tabs to get important context and information to personalize the conversation.

Customer sidebar for personalization

Never sacrifice customer experience and loyalty for short-term revenue

The importance of the customer experience is by far the biggest takeaway of our guide to a successful ecommerce strategy, and it's something you should never sacrifice for short-term revenue. 

Going the extra mile to keep your customers happy (such as replacing a lost package) may cost a little in the short term — but might also pay off tenfold in the long run through repeat purchases and referrals.

If you want to start creating an optimized experience for your customers that will drive customer loyalty and grow your store's sales, Gorgias can help. 

To get started leveraging all of the powerful customer support tools and features that our industry-leading customer support platform offers, be sure to sign up for Gorgias today!

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