

TL;DR:
The way shoppers buy online has shifted and customers are at the center.
They no longer want to scroll through product pages, dig through FAQs, or wait 24 hours for an email reply. They open a conversation, ask a specific question, and expect a useful answer in seconds. Brands that can’t deliver these experiences at scale are seeing customer hesitation turn into abandoned carts and lost revenue.
This shift has a name: conversational commerce. It's the practice of using real-time, two-way conversations as your primary sales channel, through chat, AI agents, messaging apps, and voice.
What started as an experiment for early adopters has become a key growth lever, with 84% of ecommerce brands treating conversational commerce as a strategic pillar this year vs. last year.

We surveyed 400 ecommerce decision-makers across North America, the U.K., and Europe to understand how conversational commerce and AI are reshaping the ecommerce landscape. These findings are complemented by aggregated and anonymized internal Gorgias platform data from 16,000+ ecommerce brands.
The State of Conversational Commerce in 2026 trends report breaks down all of the findings, including five key trends shaping the ecommerce landscape.
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A few years ago, adding an AI chatbot to your site that could provide tracking links and Help Center article recommendations was a differentiator. Today, it's table stakes. McKinsey found that 71% of shoppers expect personalized experiences, and 76% get frustrated when they don't get them.
Right now, most ecommerce professionals use AI, with 93% having used it for at least 1 year. Enthusiasm is accelerating quickly, with only 30% of ecommerce professionals rating their excitement for AI at 10/10 in April 2025. Similarly, while AI adoption rose steadily year over year, it reached a clear peak in 2026.

The use cases driving this adoption are practical and high-volume:

These are the tickets that flood brands’ inboxes every day. AI agents resolve them instantly, without pulling teams away from conversations that actually require human judgment.
Explore AI adoption and use case data in more depth in the full report.
The traditional ecommerce funnel, visit site, browse products, add to cart, check out, is losing ground. Shoppers now discover products on Instagram, ask questions via direct message, and complete purchases without ever visiting a website.

Conversational AI is actively increasing revenue, with 79% of brands reporting that AI-driven interactions have increased sales and conversion in their business.

The practical implication is that every channel is becoming a storefront. Creating personalized touchpoints with customers earlier in the journey, through proactive engagement, is impacting the bottom line.
Read the full report to explore how AI conversions have increased QoQ by industry.
Pre-purchase hesitation is one of the biggest conversion killers in ecommerce. A shopper lands on your product page, has a question about sizing or compatibility, can't find the answer quickly, and leaves. That's a lost sale that had nothing to do with your product.
Conversational AI changes that dynamic. When a shopper can ask a question and get an accurate, personalized answer in real time, the friction disappears.
Brands using Gorgias saw this play out at scale in 2025. When AI Agent recommended a product, 80% of the resulting purchases happened the same day, and 13% happened the next day.

Brands are further accelerating the buying cycle through proactive engagement. On-site features such as suggested product questions, recommendations triggered by search results, and “Ask Anything” input bars drove 50% of conversation-driven purchases during BFCM 2025.
Explore how AI is collapsing the purchase cycle in Trend 3 of the report.
There's a persistent narrative that AI is making CX teams redundant. The data tells a different story. 62% of ecommerce brands are planning to grow their teams, not cut them. But the scope of those teams is changing.

New roles are emerging around AI configuration and quality assurance. Teams are investing in technical members to write AI Guidance instructions, develop tone-of-voice instructions, and continuously QA results.
CX teams are also bridging the gap between support goals and revenue goals, as the two functions increasingly overlap.

The result is CX teams that are more technical than they were before. Agents who once spent their days answering repetitive tickets are now spending that time on higher-value work: complex escalations, VIP customer relationships, and improving the AI systems and knowledge bases that handle the volume.
Learn more about the evolution of CX roles in Trend #4.
Despite increasing AI adoption, data shows that ecommerce brands shouldn’t strive for 100% automation. Winning brands are building systems in which AI handles repetitive tier-1 tickets, and humans handle complex, sensitive cases.

AI handles speed and scale. It resolves order-tracking requests at 2 a.m., processes return-eligibility checks in seconds, and answers the same shipping question for the thousandth time without compromising quality.
Human agents handle conversations that require context, empathy, or decisions that fall outside the standard playbook. There are several topics where shoppers still prefer human support.

Successful hybrid systems require continuous iteration, meaning reviewing handover topics, Guidance, and reviewing AI tickets on a weekly basis.
Discover how leading brands are balancing human and AI systems in Trend #5.
The 2026 trends are about expansion and standardization. The 2030 predictions are about what comes next.

Voice-based purchasing is the biggest bet on the horizon. Only 7% of brands currently use voice assistants for commerce, but 89% expect it to be standard by 2030. The vision is a customer who can reorder a product, check their subscription status, or manage a return entirely over the phone.
Proactive AI is the other major shift. Rather than waiting for a customer to reach out, AI will anticipate needs based on browsing behavior, purchase history, and where someone is in their relationship with your brand. Think of it as the digital equivalent of a sales associate who remembers what you bought last time and knows what you're likely to need next.
Explore where ecommerce brands are allocating their AI budgets in the full report.
The brands winning in 2026 are creating smart, scalable systems where AIhandles volume and humans handle nuance. They’re treating every conversational channel as an opportunity to serve and sell.
The data is clear: AI adoption is accelerating, customer expectations are rising, and the revenue impact of getting this right is measurable.
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TL;DR:
In 2025, chat’s growth outpaced email by 2.5x quarter over quarter. Chat has become our most powerful customer experience tool for how shoppers discover products, ask questions, and decide to buy.
We knew it needed an upgrade, so we reimagined the entire experience from the ground up.
The result is 36% more engagement with product recommendations, nearly 2.25x more shoppers add-to-cart, and 7.3% more customer engagement.
In this post, we'll walk you through our thinking, what’s new in Chat, and how brands are already seeing big gains.
Chat has outpaced email support. Today’s shoppers prefer the speed of quick chat conversations over email. And when shoppers make a new move, we watch, listen, and move with them.
This behavioral shift isn’t happening in isolation. It aligns with the rise of conversational commerce and proves a universal move toward real-time conversations in ecommerce.
In fact, the signals were already there. Two years of building AI Agent showed us just how much design shapes behavior. The interface is the experience, and we knew that pushing chat experiences to closely resemble human interactions would transform how shoppers engage.
Our new and updated chat brings that vision to life. We believe that shopping is moving from static pages to conversations. This new update is built for how people actually want to shop.
The new design turns live chat into an interactive shopping surface made for modern shoppers. We've brought together multiple ways for shoppers to jump into chat, added clickable replies instead of typing, browsable product cards right in the conversation, and quick cart access.
Let's walk through what's new.
Chat now comes in a softer color palette that adapts to your store’s branding. We removed message bubbles in favor of an airy design that brings in the familiarity of speaking to your favorite conversational AI assistant. Every interaction now has the breathing room for deeper conversation and personalization.

It’s now easier for shoppers to get an answer with quick reply buttons and suggested questions in Chat. This replaces the tree-based flows of the previous Chat, removing the need to follow a fixed path. Shoppers can find answers faster without typing text-heavy explanations.

Browsing and buying within Chat is now possible. Previously, it only supported product links that would open in a new page. With the upgrade, you can view item details without leaving the conversation. Shoppers can browse, compare products, and add to cart in one place.

We’re keeping the context by removing the external redirects. The new interface lets shoppers browse product recommendations right in chat. View key product details, images, descriptions, variants, and pricing without opening a new tab.

Chat adds clickable questions on product pages — like “Is this true to size?” or “What’s the difference between shades?” — designed to match what a shopper is likely wondering in the moment. These context-aware prompts help remove buying hesitation before shoppers even think to ask.

Chat adds instant access to shopper actions, like a cart button and an orders button for returning customers. Shoppers can jump straight to their cart or check on an existing order without waiting for an agent to give them a status update.

Every update in Chat drives performance. We didn’t simply give it a makeover, we also fine-tuned its underlying mechanics.
When product suggestions are easy to browse, shoppers interact with them more. The new product cards make shopping feel natural, allowing customers to explore items at their own pace. That convenience led to a 36% increase in engagement with recommended products.
Chat keeps the entire shopping journey inside the conversation, from browsing and asking questions, to adding to cart and checking out. This new layout removes the usual tab-switching between chat and the website. Less friction has led to more than double add-to-cart actions than before the redesign.
Chat's cleaner design and contextual entry points make it easier for shoppers to start a conversation. With suggested questions on product pages and quick reply buttons, more visitors are choosing to engage earlier in their journey. This has resulted in a 7.3% lift in chat engagement.
Conversational commerce has moved from concept to reality. Chat makes it part of the everyday shopping experience, letting shoppers browse, ask questions, compare products, and check out in one interaction. It brings the ease of the in-person shopping experience into the digital world.
We built Chat to redefine the shopping experience. We hope you see it reflected in your customers’ journeys.
Book a demo to see what's possible with the new experience.
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TL;DR:
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.
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.
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.
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:
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
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
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:
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.
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.
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.
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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TL;DR:
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.
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:
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?"
✅ Create a brand voice guide with tone, style, formality, and example phrases.
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:
Even a one- to two-second pause can make a big difference in a robotic or human-sounding AI.
✅ Add instructions in your AI’s knowledge base to include short response delays during key moments.
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) |
|
“Your satisfaction is our top priority.” |
“We want to make sure this works for you.” (friendly) |
|
“Please be advised…” |
“Just a quick heads up…” (friendly) |
|
“Your request has been received.” |
“Got it. Thanks for reaching out.” (friendly) |
|
“I will now review your request.” |
“Let me take a quick look.” (friendly) |
✅ Identify your five most common inquiries and give your AI a rewritten example response for each.
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:
Tools like Gorgias AI Agent automatically pull in customer and order data, so replies feel human and contextual without sacrificing speed.
✅ Add instructions that prompt your AI to reference order details and/or past conversations in its replies, so customers feel acknowledged.
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:
For more on this topic, check out our article: Should You Tell Customers They're Talking to AI?
✅ Set clear rules for when your AI should escalate to a human and include handoff messaging that sets expectations and preserves context.
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:
These imperfections give your AI a more believable voice.
✅ Add instructions for your AI that permit variation in grammar, tone, and sentence structure to mimic real human speech.
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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TL;DR:
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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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:
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:
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:
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:
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:
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:
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 |
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.

TL;DR:
Customer service is often viewed as a cost center, but measuring ROI proves it drives revenue. When you track the right metrics, you can show how support reduces churn, increases CLV, and justifies budget.
Most companies focus on ROI for marketing and sales while overlooking the measurable impact of customer service. But during my time as VP of Success & Support at Gorgias, I've seen firsthand how good customer service delivers concrete returns. This guide covers what customer service ROI is, how to measure it, which metrics matter, and how to improve it.
Customer service ROI is a metric that measures the financial return from support operations compared to the cost of running them. It shows whether your investment in customer service generates value through retention, upsells, and reduced churn.
90% of shoppers consider customer service when deciding whether to do business with a company, so your customer service has a strong ROI whether or not you're aware. It's up to you whether that ROI is positive or negative.
ROI = [(Revenue from customer service - Cost of customer service) / Cost of customer service] × 100
Revenue includes retained customers, upsells, and prevented churn. Costs include salaries, tools, training, and overhead. This formula gives you a percentage that shows return for every dollar spent.
Returns include revenue from retained customers, upsells, cross-sells, referrals, and prevented churn. Costs include agent salaries, helpdesk software, training programs, and operational overhead. Tracking both sides accurately is essential for calculating meaningful ROI.
Measuring ROI shifts customer service from a cost center to a profit center. It's always important to measure the return of any investment you make in your company, and customer service is no exception.
Three core reasons to measure customer service ROI:
Lovevery used personalized support to increase retention and improve ROI by connecting service quality to customer lifetime value. Their approach shows how measuring customer service ROI helps you with forecasting and resource planning.
ROI data helps you secure budget by showing leadership how support drives retention and revenue. When you prove that better service reduces churn and increases CLV, you can justify headcount and tools. Great customer service improves customer retention, which is especially important considering the cost to acquire new customers has increased by 60% in recent years.
Measuring ROI requires three steps: establish baselines, apply the formula, and run testable experiments. Start by tracking current metrics before making changes so you can measure impact accurately.
Before changing anything, track your current metrics: AHT, FCR, CSAT, churn, and cost per contact. Identify which customer behaviors you want to affect, like retention, upsells, or referrals. Baseline data lets you measure the impact of any changes you make.
Common behaviors to track:
Calculate costs (salaries, tools, overhead) and returns (retained revenue, upsells, prevented churn). Plug these numbers into the formula: (returns - costs) / costs × 100

In practice, say that you spend $10,000 USD on your customer support program, including the cost of your team and tools. In turn, you make $15,000 USD. Your ROI would be 50%. Here's what the calculation looks like:

Test small changes, like adding conversational AI or launching a Help Center, and measure the impact on ROI. Create a hypothesis (e.g., "Conversational AI will reduce AHT by X, lowering costs"), track results, and adjust. Small experiments are easier to measure and less risky than big changes.
Experiment ideas:
Track three categories of metrics to measure ROI: cost and efficiency, revenue and CLV, and satisfaction and retention. Each category connects to a different part of the ROI formula.
Average handle time (AHT) measures how long each interaction takes. Lower AHT reduces labor costs.
First call resolution (FCR) tracks issues solved on the first contact, and a higher FCR lowers repeat ticket volume.
Cost per contact is the total support cost divided by ticket volume. A lower cost per contact improves ROI.
Customer lifetime value (CLV) measures total revenue from a customer over their relationship with your brand. Good service increases CLV by driving retention, upsells, and referrals. CLV gains directly improve the returns side of the ROI formula.
In addition to helping you retain the customers you already have, great customer service can also improve your company's net promoter score (NPS). This means that your existing customers are more likely to recommend your company to their friends and colleagues.
Customer satisfaction (CSAT) measures happiness after each interaction. Net promoter score (NPS) tracks the likelihood a customer will recommend your brand.
Churn rate shows the percentage of customers who stop buying. These metrics are leading indicators of ROI because they predict long-term retention and revenue.
Customer satisfaction (CSAT) functions as a proxy for customer lifetime value (CLTV).
Each incremental increase in CSAT represents a higher likelihood of customers coming back to your brand and buying more.
You can gather this kind of customer feedback with a simple post-interaction CSAT survey. Most helpdesks have built-in survey features. I recommend you use them to gain invaluable data about your customers' experience and your customer support team's performance.
After a customer service interaction, ask customers to rate their experience on a scale of one to five (with one being a horrible experience and five being an exceptional experience). You can then divide the total number of satisfied responses (ratings of 4 or 5) by the total number of responses and multiply that number by 100.

CSAT = (Total number of satisfied responses (4 or 5 rating) / Total number of responses) × 100
Your CSAT score will be a whole number between 0 and 100. A higher score is always better. This is an essential metric to keep an eye on as you experience customer service challenges and experiment with new tools and strategies.
A good customer service platform should highlight your live CSAT score for easy tracking, with additional details for context. Here's what that would look like in Gorgias:
Calculating your NPS is easy if you're already collecting customer feedback. In your post-interaction survey, include a question like, "On a scale of 1-10, how likely are you to recommend us to a friend?" From this feedback, pull out the following information:
Then, calculate your NPS with this formula:

Two categories of practices drive the biggest ROI improvements: automation and operational tools. Focus on tactics that reduce costs or increase revenue without adding headcount.
Lush used AI and automation to improve efficiency and achieve strong ROI by reducing ticket volume and improving satisfaction. Their approach demonstrates how the right tools can transform support operations.
Use Gorgias AI Agent to handle repetitive tickets like order tracking and returns, which reduces agent workload. Launch a Help Center with FAQs and guides so customers can find answers without contacting support.
Set up Macros and Rules to automate common workflows and speed up resolutions. Deflecting tickets and reducing handle time lowers costs and improves ROI.
Sentiment analysis uses machine learning to evaluate the overall sentiment of datasets. Analyzing your customer service data to see if your customers' overall sentiment is positive, negative, or neutral is a quick and simple way to get a broad sense of your customer service quality at scale.
Intent analysis also uses machine learning to understand the underlying request of an incoming message. Most other customer service platforms rely on keywords. In contrast, Gorgias's intent analysis understands a customer's common request even if they don't use a pre-selected keyword. The platform automatically handles the ticket, whether that means auto-responding with a Macro or assigning the ticket to a specialized agent with a Rule.
Customer self-service options such as knowledge bases, FAQ pages, and automation like AI chatbots can improve your customer service ROI in two key ways. For one, self-service options can reduce your customer service expenses by eliminating many customer support tickets you'd otherwise pay a human agent to handle.

In addition to reducing expenses, lowering your support ticket volume can also free up your team to spend more time focusing on complex customer issues that require more personalized service.
If contacting a call center is the only customer service option you provide to your customers, you are probably missing out on many opportunities to make your customer service more convenient and accessible. Omnichannel customer service turns communication channels such as SMS, social media, email, and Live Chat into customer support channels, making it as easy and convenient as possible for customers to reach out to your company for assistance.
I remember a company that added a phone contact option. This simple change significantly increased their conversion, average order value (AOV), and repeat purchase rate. The return was more than enough to pay back the initial $1.2 million USD investment.
Phone was a better channel for specific instances like billing and urgent issues. For example, we were notified faster about address changes. This saved expenses by reducing the number of messages required to solve the issue.
Remember that every time a customer reaches out for help is an opportunity to create a positive experience. Be sure that your omnichannel support strategy is convenient and consistent, so customers can expect the same support quality no matter what communication channel they choose.
Use QA tools to score interactions and identify coaching opportunities, which improves quality and reduces errors. Workforce management (WFM) tools optimize staffing levels to reduce overtime costs and improve efficiency.
Analytics track metrics in real time to spot trends and make data-driven improvements. These operational tools improve both quality and efficiency, driving ROI from both sides of the formula.
Your company's customer service reps are essential to your customer service efforts. To maximize customer satisfaction, provide your team members with the training and education they need to perform at their best.
If you use Gorgias, consider having your agents complete a Gorgias Academy course, which provides certifications for customer service agents using Gorgias.
Post-experience surveys aren't just for measuring satisfaction. Open-ended questions allow customers to communicate what they loved about their experience and, more importantly, what they didn't. Comb through those responses to find areas of opportunity for your customer experience.
Most feedback will fall into two categories:
Take note of patterns in customer feedback to guide you toward the most high-impact opportunities. You may not be able to act today, but this qualitative feedback is very valuable as you set your long-term roadmap.
I remember a company that made a special effort to reward agents with high CSAT scores. During our Support All Hands meeting, we would read tickets with exceptional support out loud.
For example, an agent responded to a customer in Old English to match their humorous tone. The customer loved it and became a loyal, repeat shopper.
That agent was recognized for their clever replies, which boosted team morale.
While rewards such as this may seem trivial, everyone loves being recognized for their hard work. Even something as simple as a few words of appreciation can significantly boost your customer service team's morale and performance.
Measuring customer service ROI proves that support drives retention, CLV, and growth, not just costs. Track the right metrics, apply the formula, and use data to guide investment in AI, automation, and operational tools. When you consider the rising cost of acquiring customers, it puts the cost of investing in your support to retain customers into perspective.
Before you can achieve an optimal customer service ROI, you'll first need to convince your company's management team that customer service is a worthwhile investment. To this end, you can highlight several key metrics when proposing your customer service ROI strategy, including:
By comparing these metrics against metrics such as NPS, CSAT, and churn rates, you can present a compelling argument for investing in customer service. Gorgias helps you demonstrate the importance of customer service ROI by providing access to a wealth of customer service data, including revenue statistics. You can customize and quickly pull all of this data from your Gorgias dashboard.
Book a demo to see how Gorgias turns support into a revenue driver.
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What if you could deflect a third of your support tickets, automatically, without any agent interaction? With customer self-service and automation, that’s possible. I see it all the time with our customers at Gorgias.
Customer support doesn't always have to mean direct communication with support agents. A healthy support organization also leverages self-service to help customers answer their own questions without waiting for (or dealing with) an agent. On top of helping customers, self-service also reduces ticket volume and first-response time for your support team.
Self-service isn’t just a nice-to-have: 88% of customers in the United States expect company websites to offer a customer self-service portal according to a 2022 survey from Statista. Below, we'll explore the definition and types of customer self-service, the advantages of offering a suite of self-service options, and the best practices to help you meet customer expectations.
Customer self-service is a combination of technology and resources that let customers resolve issues on their own. If a customer answers a question or resolves an issue using resources your company provides (and without messaging your support team), they’ve successfully used self-service.
For example, a customer finding an answer to their question on your website's FAQ page is an instance of customer self-service. Getting information about your order’s status from a chatbot is another. Even though the customer technically receives AI assistance in this second instance, it still counts as self-service because a human support agent isn’t involved.
It's fair to wonder whether static resources will actually improve your brand's customer support — and ultimately improve customer satisfaction.
But according to our research at Gorgias, customers with a robust mix of self-service and automation options deflect up to a third of tickets automatically. So there’s no doubt about the benefit to your business.
And keep in mind, most customer issues are not overly unique or complex. Your support team’s time isn’t optimized if they spend a third of the day answering "how do I track my order?" and "how do I return a product?" And your customer’s time isn’t optimized if these questions get routed through a human agent, since they now have to wait for the agent’s response.
Your customers don’t care how they get their answers, they just want them now.
Customer self-service channels can come in several different forms. While some of these self-service options are more popular than others, it’s typically best to create a self-service portal that offers multiple support options. With that said, here are the four most beneficial types of self-service tools for ecommerce stores.
Editor’s note: We developed a scoring method to represent the difficulty of setting up each method of self-service, as well as the volume of tickets each method usually deflects. More determined faces (😤) indicates that the form of self-service is more difficult and labor-intensive to set up. Lots of tickets ( 🎟) means that the form of self-service will likely deflect a high volume of tickets. Five emojis is the max for both scores.
Difficulty: 😤 /5
Ticket deflection: 🎟 🎟 🎟 🎟 /5
A frequently asked questions (FAQ) page is a great place to start your self-service efforts. These pages list common customer questions that your brand receives, along with answers to each. FAQ pages typically answer straightforward questions that don't require in-depth explanation.
FAQ pages may be simple, but they are incredibly effective. Given that simple questions can eat up a lot of your support team's time, a single FAQ page can do wonders for reducing support ticket volume. If you’re ready to deflect even more tickets, build out your FAQ page into a full-blown help center — a series of FAQ pages organized into searchable categories. More on help centers below.
Quick win to get started: Create a page that lists the five questions that usually fill up your support inbox and answer them fully. If you don't have an FAQ page, use our FAQ template generator to get started.
Brümate’s FAQ page — powered by Gorgias — is a great example of an eye-catching, organized, and easy-to-navigate FAQ page. Brümate even separates its FAQs into multiple categories, making it much easier for customers to find what they’re looking for. And they include top articles that would be helpful for specific, common questions.
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Difficulty: 😤 😤 😤 /5
Tickets deflected: 🎟 🎟 🎟 🎟 🎟 /5
A knowledge base is a digital library of customer support content. Written knowledge base articles (or technical documents) are most common, but a knowledge base can include video and audio files as well. This is the natural evolution of your FAQ page.
At Gorgias, we call knowledge bases help centers, and they can end up looking a lot like a company blog (with some important differences). For one, the resources in a knowledge base are specifically geared toward resolving customer issues rather than for general information. An effective knowledge base should also be searchable (or, at the very least, organized and broken into specific categories) so customers can find the answers they need without wading through page after page of irrelevant content.
Quick win to get started: Create a page that lists the ten questions that usually fill up your support inbox and answer them fully.
Branch’s help center is a great example of a knowledge base that provides everything customers need (and nothing they don’t). It’s categorized by type of customer question, and even includes a section for the most popular FAQs.
Because this help center is set up on Gorgias, Branch shoppers can also track their packages, alert Branch of any issues, or even start a chat or email — all from the help center’s main page. It’s a one-stop shop for customers who want to find their own answers.
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Difficulty (without Gorgias): 😤 😤 😤 😤 😤 /5
Difficulty (with Gorgias): 😤 😤 /5
Ticket deflected: 🎟 🎟 🎟 🎟 🎟 /5
Self-service flows and customer service portals have been around for a while, and they can be hugely helpful, both for ticket deflection and user experience. Unfortunately, many of the existing ones are difficult to set up and require a login, creating a lot of friction for the customer.
Gorgias’s self-service flows give customers exactly what they’re looking for, nothing more. With seamless verification and an easy transition to a live agent when requested, these flows can automatically deflect a third of your support tickets (while providing customers efficient, low-effort service).
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Quick win to get started: Set up Gorgias’ native self-service flows on the default settings and track how many tickets are deflected. (Deflecting order status requests can handle 15%, alone.)
Unlike a chatbot, which mimics a human agent, self-service flows use menus. They are easy to navigate and make it clear to the customer that they aren’t yet interacting with an agent.
Our default self-service options are:
And if the customer needs help at any time, they can bring an agent into the conversation seamlessly.
Difficulty: 😤 😤 😤 😤 😤 /5
Tickets deflected: 🎟 🎟 🎟 🎟 🎟 /5
Unlike live chat, chatbot software doesn’t require human interaction — at least at first. Instead, chatbot software connects customers with a chatbot that uses AI and machine learning to provide natural language answers to common questions. Unlike self-service flows, chatbots aim to mimic human agents.
Chatbots solve less complex issues and provide quick answers to your customers. And if you combine it with live chat, staffed by agents, you or your shoppers can easily tag in a human support agent for conversations that need a human touch.
Quick win to get started: It can be difficult to set up a chatbot, but integrating a pre-built chatbot like Ada (which works with Gorgias) can be a huge time saver.
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If your customer breezes by your self-service flows and still wants to know the status of their order, there’s still no reason to waste an agent’s time. Set up a chatbot (Gorgias makes this possible through an integration with Ada) or configure a custom automation Rule (see below) as a second line of defense before an agent receives the question.
Difficulty: 😤 😤 😤 /5
Tickets deflected: 🎟 🎟 🎟 🎟 🎟 /5
Questions that can’t be answered through self-service flows and chatbot conversations can usually be handled by an automation Rule. Rules are another line of defense against the repetitive requests that eat up your agents’ time.
In most platforms, Rules follow a specific logic to make building them easier. And in Gorgias, they can include templated Macro responses that bring in customer and order information automatically, deflecting tickets without an agent’s attention.
If you get a simple question over and over, consider setting up a Rule to deflect that kind of ticket.
Quick win to get started: If you already have self-service flows set up, trigger an automated answer to “Where is my order?” for customers that bypass them.
One powerful automation Rule that isn’t covered in self-service is a triage Rule that prioritizes tickets and sends them to the right teams while also sending a message to the customer that the team will be with them shortly.
This Rule can also take advantage of Gorgias’ unique sentiment and intent detection, which can process and tag your ticket automatically. The algorithms are quite precise after training on hundreds of millions of ecommerce tickets.
At Gorgias, we offer 24/7 support and dedicated managers who will help you get custom rules set up for these specific use cases.
Here’s what the Rule would look like when you’re building it:
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Check out our guide to ecommerce email marketing automation to learn how automated emails can help you get customers, not just provide great service.
Difficulty: 😤 😤 😤 😤 😤 /5
Tickets deflected: 🎟 /5 (but good for SEO/marketing)
A blog is a valuable marketing tool for ecommerce brands (and something that is sure to boost your website's SEO). And populating it with well-written, informative content can also be a great way to empower customers to resolve issues on their own.
Asking customers to search your blog for the answers that they need might not be the most straightforward approach to customer support. But an informative blog can certainly be a valuable self-service tool when combined with other tools — such as a knowledge base that organizes your blog articles in a way that makes it easier for customers to search.
At the very least, an informative blog will proactively educate your customers, even if it's not the first resource they turn to when they are having issues. Remember: an educated customer base is likely to experience issues less frequently.
Quick win to get started: Blogs aren’t about quick wins — they are long-term investments that only pay dividends over time, with consistent publishing. If you aren’t fully committed, hold off on the blog until you have more resources.
Spoonful of Comfort is a great example of an ecommerce brand using its blog to find new buyers and serve current customers. The company sells care packages and uses the blog to (among other things) give customers ideas about what to send for specific situations — like when someone’s in the hospital for Christmas.
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Difficulty: 😤😤/5
Ticket deflection: 🎟 🎟 /5
Most people don't consider browsing online forums as a customer service experience, but many companies host forums as a layer of self-service. Online forums allow customers to collaborate to resolve issues.
Once these communications between customers are live, future shoppers experiencing the same issue can see the solution. In other words, forums can serve as a shopper-generated knowledge base populated with support content your company doesn't even have to create.
Forums are more than a customer self-service strategy: they are also a great way to encourage a sense of community among your customers. That said, consider appointing a forum moderator to keep your forums a friendly, welcoming, and informative space.
Quick win to get started: Create a Facebook or Reddit community. Or show up consistently on existing forums dedicated to your space (or brand).
Fitbit has an excellent forum called Fitbit Community. The forum is broken down in many ways: a section for each Fitbit device, features, challenges, and so on. Fitbit users respond to questions and can vote on the best answers.
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If you want to get started without setting up forum infrastructure on your website, you can start a community on Reddit, Facebook, or a similar social media site to provide similar support. For example, Gorgias has a community where customers help each other and share ideas, and our support team monitors it to step in and add value.
Difficulty: 😤 😤 😤 😤 😤 /5
Tickets deflected: 🎟 🎟 🎟 🎟 /5
How-to videos and online webinars can be an excellent way to educate your customers with step-by-step tutorials on the proper use of your brand's products. Customer education is especially relevant for companies in the SaaS space, where confusing or complex software can get in the way of customer adoption.
By saving recordings of your webinars so that they are accessible to anyone who visits your knowledge base, you can double your webinars’ value — first as a lead magnet for those who choose to view the webinar live, and then as a permanent piece of support content future customers can access at any time.
Quick win to get started: Record a welcome video that serves as a product introduction and tour of the main features. Track views and other types of engagement to see if it’s resonating.
ActiveCampaign is a great example of a company that uses webinars to teach customers how to use its products. The above link goes to a page where ActiveCampaign aggregates all of their past webinars in specific categories and shares information on how to attend upcoming webinars live.
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Difficulty: 😤 😤 😤 😤 😤 /5
Tickets deflected: 🎟 🎟 🎟 🎟 🎟 /5
If you are a software company, in-app tutorials are one of the easiest ways to streamline your onboarding, reduce initial churn, and reduce your support costs.
In-app walkthroughs are powerful because they appear when they’re needed. Webinars, by contrast, are great for in-depth walkthroughs, but customers have to find the webinar when they need it. Many won’t know they exist. In-app tutorials provide guidance automatically, at the ideal moment, to help your users understand how to get value out of your product.
Quick win to get started: Create an onboarding tutorial that guides new users around your platform, highlighting common tools to get started (and shepherding the user away from advanced features they can wait to discover). Candu and Appcues are our favorite tools for in-product training.
We created in-app tutorials for Gorgias to strengthen our new-user journey, improve product adoption, and scale our onboarding efforts. When users log on or navigate to certain pages for the first time, a step-by-step tutorial appears to help them with setup.
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Customer self-service is powerful, but requires a well-thought-out approach. If you would like to start empowering your customers to solve issues on their own, here are the seven most helpful customer self-service best practices to follow.
Chatbots are a perfect example of self-service taking too many steps and turning customers against the concept. While there are chatbots that streamline the experience — like Ada, which integrates with Gorgias — may lead customers on a multi-message journey that leaves them begging for a live agent.
Anything more than a few clicks is a suboptimal customer experience. That’s why Gorgias starts with self-service flows as the first line of defense. These menus are clearly self-service (whereas a chatbot imitates a real agent) and lead customers to the solutions they’re looking for in one click, in many cases.
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A knowledge base is one of the easiest options to start executing a customer self-service strategy, and that starts with a strong FAQ page. Compared to managing a community forum or routinely publishing blog posts, an FAQ page is a very light lift. It's also a resource that your customers are sure to find helpful since an FAQ page necessarily addresses the most common questions your customers ask.
Before you create an FAQ page for your website, take the time to truly understand your customers and the issues they experience. Start by speaking with some of the more experienced members of your customer service team to see which questions they encounter most often. Weed out questions that are situational (and don't have a generalized answer), and include the remaining questions on your FAQ page.
If you use a tool like Gorgias, analyzing your tickets at scale to see the most common issues you encounter becomes much easier.
Providing multiple self-service options for your customers lets them choose the option they prefer. Not only does this create a better customer experience, but it also increases the likelihood that customers will answer their own questions instead of messaging your agents.
Above, we offered a comprehensive list of self-service options you can use to help your customers help themselves. Once you have built your FAQ page and set up your self-service flows in your chat widget, continue adding self-service options based on what makes sense for your business.
If you have a more complex product, you might prioritize a knowledge base and webinars. If you have a strong community around your offerings, you might focus on building a forum and blog to keep them engaged. There’s no one-size-fits-all solution.
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When creating support content — whether it’s knowledge base articles, FAQ questions, or anything else — don't underestimate the power of images, video, and audio to get your point across. Sometimes it's easier to show than tell, and a single image can often do more to resolve a customer's issue than an entire article of text.
For example, if you are helping customers navigate to a specific page on your website in an article on how to track orders, showing screenshots that point out which buttons they need to click makes the process much easier.
Plus, some customers simply don't like to read, and presenting support content in the form of images, video, and audio will make them more likely to enjoy their customer service experience.
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Unless your products and services never change, you aren't going to be able to publish support content once and just forget about it. Even if your overall business is relatively static, the rest of the world is not, and the needs and issues of your customers are sure to evolve over time.
While it's a good idea to try and make the content in your support portal as evergreen as possible, it's also important to continually improve and update your support content anytime there are changes to your product, business, or audience.
You'll also want to regularly improve and add to your content. If you notice that a lot of customers are struggling with a specific issue, then it's probably a good time to publish a new article on the topic to your knowledge base.
Every page on your website should be mobile friendly, including your self-service options. In fact, it's arguably even more important for self-service options to be mobile friendly because many customers search for solutions while they are actively using a product and may only have access to their mobile phones.
Given that mobile searches currently account for about 63% of all online searches, you’ll provide a poor experience to many customers if your self-service pages don't look, load, and function correctly on mobile devices.
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Leveraging automation in the form of customer support chatbots is one of the most powerful customer self-service strategies since it often leaves customers feeling as if they've received immediate help from a live agent.
When integrated with customer service tools such as Gorgias, chatbots powered by artificial intelligence can detect a customer's sentiment and intent, then either answer the customer’s question or direct them to self-service resources where the customer can find what they need.
For example, Gorgias can detect when a customer is frustrated and auto-tag the ticket to trigger an automatic response, letting the customer know someone will be with them shortly. On the backend, that ticket can be prioritized to ensure they don’t wait long and escalate their frustration.
The data above shows us that customers expect and value self-service options when communicating with brands. But why, exactly — especially when the conventional wisdom is that the “human touch” always wins?
Below, we’ll explore a few ways that self-service options directly enhance the customer experience, which can help guide you as you build your self-service strategies.
Unless a support agent picks up the phone immediately, it is almost always going to be faster for customers to solve their own issues — assuming the self-service resources are truly useful. Given the value of swift customer service for today's customers, you cannot overlook the importance of resolving customer issues quickly.
Even if customers have to spend a few minutes to solve their own problem, the fact that they are actively working to solve the problem (rather than waiting on hold) goes a long way toward improving customer satisfaction.
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For the independent (and introverted) among us, reaching out for help can feel like an admission of defeat (or at least an unappealing effort). Some customers simply prefer to solve issues by themselves, and giving them the option to do so is an important part of improving their customer experience. In fact, if given the option, most customers would prefer to solve problems on their own before they go through the hassle of contacting customer support.
You can maximize the customer experience by providing a thoughtful mix of self-service features, so shoppers can choose their method of choice. For example, you could have a help center to help provide in-depth information, self-service flows in the chat to deflect conversations, and automation Rules and chatbot integrations for the customers who still want a more conversational approach.
Providing customers with self-service solutions means you can resolve plenty of questions that would have otherwise turned into support tickets for a human agent. Fewer support tickets to deal with means that your company can reduce the size of its customer support team, allowing you to dramatically reduce the expense associated with providing great customer support.
Most customer support teams spend a great deal of their time responding to mundane, repetitive questions. While these questions and issues typically aren't challenging to resolve, they are tedious and not very stimulating. By eliminating these simple, repetitive issues from your support team's daily routine, you can make their job a lot more enjoyable.
When support agents don't have to answer "where is my order?" a hundred times each day, they are free to focus on resolving more unique and challenging issues. Giving agents more time to tackle challenging issues will enhance their productivity and make their job more interesting and enjoyable.
Customer self-service tools such as knowledge bases and chatbots are available 24/7 without human intervention. Offering customers these tools is a great way to make omnichannel support options more readily available without any additional staffing.
The end goal of automation is not to remove agents from the support process or handle all incoming tickets automatically. Many tickets need a personalized, human touch.
However, your team won't have time to provide a human touch to tickets that need it most — especially as your ticket volume grows. Automating 100% of simple, repetitive tickets is the best way to spend more time on the tickets that matter to your business.
With self-service and automation, you can drive revenue through support and spend more time handling inquiries from VIPs while other companies are busy responding to hundreds of “Where is my order?” tickets.
When given the right resources, customers can often resolve issues on their own in much less time than it takes to get a support agent involved.
First response time (FRT) is one of the major metrics in evaluating customer service, and self-service options will help you decrease it dramatically.
A 2019 Microsoft study found two-thirds of customers try self-service before contacting a live agent. Imagine that kind of reduction in the support tickets coming through your inbox.
Whenever customers solve problems on their own, you don't have to pay a support agent to assist them. This means that companies with effective self-service options are often able to save money by reducing the size of their customer support teams.
Use self-service to trigger an automated sales workflow or present customers with upsell opportunities within your self-service content. Customer support should be an important part of your company's sales funnel, and these tactics can help you put that process on autopilot.
According to data from HubSpot, 90% of customers expect an "immediate" response when they have a customer service question. However, most companies can’t provide immediate responses — especially not around the clock.
Customer self-service tools such as FAQ pages and knowledge base articles are available at all times, enabling swift 24/7 support without staffing support agents at all hours. Rest easy: your self-service options are handling the night shift.
As the team behind the market's leading customer support solution for ecommerce, we at Gorgias designed our self-service flows and portals for online stores, first and foremost. Every feature, process, and design choice was made to serve the specific needs of companies dealing with the shipment of physical goods to their customers.
And while a lot of that process can be unpredictable, you are fully in control of how your buyer moves through delays and issues with your support team.
Our innovative self-service approach includes three main lines of defense meant to deflect time-wasting tickets and save agent time for the tickets that matter.
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This self-service process provides:
The proactive customer service process starts with a customizable help center that can be populated with FAQs, how-to articles, instructional videos, past webinars, and more. This help center is the first page that customers see when they search for support and is designed to deflect support tickets by encouraging customers to first browse self-service options.
The second pillar of our approach to customer self-service includes self-service menus that can answer common ecommerce inquiries — both inquiries that have general answers and inquiries with answers that are specific to the individual customer. Our self-service workflows include the following commands that move the customer into a dedicated menu:
In addition to these customer support commands, Gorgias also offers automated flows designed to answer common pre-sale questions such as "How do I pick the right size?" or "Are there any discounts available?" and help ecommerce stores improve their conversion rate.
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One of the main benefits of these flows is that they keep users on your site to get the answers they need, instead of bouncing to the shipping carrier's website or elsewhere. And maybe they’ll stick around to put in another order.
If customers manage to get past your self-service flows with repetitive questions, a pre-built chatbot can engage them and answer their questions.
Any other advanced queries that aren’t covered by the above self-service options can still be answered automatically. Customizable automation Rules can be tailored to the questions you receive the most, as an additional line of defense against time-wasting tickets.
With intent and sentiment detection powered by AI, Gorgias can detect a customer’s question no matter how it’s worded. Gorgias also allows you to create customizable Rules and flows for each command, making customer self-service a dynamic process that is much more similar to traditional customer support.
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With Gorgias, you can automate the answers to pesky and repetitive questions and deflect up to a third of the tickets in your support process. With a full suite of self-service and automation features, you can provide a mix of options so your customers can choose the ones that suit their needs.
If you would like to improve customer satisfaction while reducing your customer support costs, then Gorgias’s cutting-edge self-service tools are the solution for your business. Find out more about what Gorgias can do to streamline and improve your self-service support strategies.
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TL;DR:
Customer expectations are becoming more demanding as AI technology redefines the meaning of great customer service. Support teams need to catch up, which means monitoring performance with a service level agreement (SLA) to meet efficiency expectations.
In this guide, we’ll walk you through everything you need to know about SLAs, including what they are, why they matter, how to create and measure SLAs in Gorgias, plus some SLA best practices.
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A service level agreement or SLA is a document that outlines the expected level of service a company will provide to customers, how responsive the company will be, and how performance will be measured.
In ecommerce customer service, SLAs typically include metrics like first response time, resolution time, and customer satisfaction score (CSAT).
Brands can create an internal SLA for support agents and display a customer-facing SLA for customers.
Setting clear expectations and measurable goals with SLAs provides several advantages to your brand and immediate customer service team.
Here are some key benefits you gain from setting SLAs:
Create SLAs with just a couple of clicks with Gorgias, no matter your plan. You can use templates based on support channel benchmarks or create an SLA from scratch to customize your first response and resolution target times.
Follow these three easy steps to get started.
Go to Settings → Productivity → SLAs → Create from Template. For a brand new SLA, click Create SLA.
You can select from three templates based on your channel needs:
These templates give you baseline recommended first response and resolution times, allowing you to start supporting customers instead of sweating the details.
Already know the amount of time responses should take? You can specify the time frame for the first response time and resolution time in hours, minutes, or seconds. Ensure the time frames are realistic and achievable for your support team.
Only admins and team leads can activate or deactivate SLA policies. This activation feature can be helpful during peak shopping periods like Black Friday and Cyber Monday (BFCM) when your team needs to switch SLAs to meet faster times.
Navigate to the bottom of the SLA creation page and toggle “Enable SLA” as needed.
Once your SLAs are in place, track your performance to ensure you uphold the terms of your SLA.
Here’s how to track SLA performance on Gorgias:
Find your SLA statistics under Statistics → Support Performance → SLAs.
You will see your SLA performance overview, which includes your Achievement Rate and Breached Rate:
You can filter SLA performance by channel (chat, email, social media, contact form, etc.), ticket tags, and date.
The graph will change based on your activated filters. It sorts tickets by Satisfied, Breached, and Pending tickets.
In addition, you can gain insights into specific tickets and their achievement rate. This detailed view can help you set realistic target times and find out if agents need more training.
Remember that overpromising can backfire. To set realistic expectations, here are seven helpful tips to set up an SLA that delivers and improves customer satisfaction.
Never (ever, ever, ever) copy and paste because an SLA policy is rarely a one-size-fits-all scenario. Your SLA should be designed based on your customer support team’s capacity and target audience.
There are three types of SLAs to consider:
Track performance metrics to ensure you’re committed to your SLA’s terms. Consider the following customer support metrics:
Check it out: How exceptional is your customer service? (Gorgias customer service benchmark report)
Don’t use vague phrases like “as soon as possible,” “fast,” or “quickly.” Instead, use clear measures of time like, “We’ll get back to you within 12 hours.” Concrete, measurable language lets customers understand your policies, avoiding confusion.
Here’s an excellent example from olive oil brand GRAZA. Notice their live chat shows “Typically replies in a few hours,” not “We’ll be back soon.”
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💡 Pro Tip: Avoid intimidating phrases like “we are not responsible for,” “you are required,” or “you must.” Set your boundaries, but also show empathy.
Basing your SLA terms on past support performance data will set your agents up for success instead of trying to achieve unrealistic goals.
Here is some support data to consider:
Want direct insights? Don’t be afraid to ask customers for feedback about your support services. Ask them what you could do better, if your speed is acceptable, and if your service is missing anything.
Most importantly, consult your support agents’ bandwidth and workflow to ensure your SLAs are achievable.
💡 Pro Tip: It might be time to revamp your SLA if you consistently fail to meet it. Are the expectations you’re setting too high? Are support agents facing roadblocks that prevent them from resolving tickets? Should you hire more agents?
In ecommerce, peak shopping seasons like BFCM entail more customer support traffic. Adjust your SLA based on holidays, sales, and shopper behavior. For instance, provide 24/7 customer service during the holiday season to account for the increased shopping activity.
💡 Pro Tip: You may also want exclusive SLAs for high-value, repeat customers. For example, they might get support priority over first-time visitors.
Make information about service availability visible on your website. If your support hours are unclear, customers will assume they can contact you anytime — even when agents are offline.
For example, if you provide support from Monday through Friday during business hours, state it in your SLA. This way, customers know you’ll only handle their service requests during that time.
On Nashua Nutrition’s Contact Us page, you’ll find clear information about their operating hours and holiday closure updates. They also explain how they provide curbside order pick-up for local customers.
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Besides the Contact Us page, you can also show your SLA on live chat, FAQ page, Help Center, or even on the header as Trimleaf does:
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Prepare for the unpredictable, like an outage, website crash, or server maintenance, by outlining what your support team will do if these critical issues happen.
When you’re transparent about your service, you build your credibility, and customers trust you more.
Customer service efficiency and satisfaction are within reach with these SLA best practices. Gorgias offers the tools you need to create and manage SLAs seamlessly while delivering omnichannel communication to your customers.
Ready to take customer experiences to the next level? Book a demo with Gorgias today and drive success for your brand.
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By default, all Shopify themes include a branded “Powered by Shopify” message at the bottom of every page. The branding appears as a link in the footer that takes users to Shopify’s homepage when they click on it.
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If you’ve recently launched a store and now you’re wondering how to remove “Powered by Shopify” from your online store’s footer, you’ve come to the right place. We’ll cover everything you need to know.
Once we explain how to remove this from your footer, we’ll look at some other steps new shops should take to build a custom store that retains shoppers and increases sales.
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The “Powered by Shopify” text is part of your Shopify theme code, meaning you’ll need administrative access to your online store’s dashboard and alter its code. Don’t worry, you don’t need much technical knowledge. Shopify makes it easy to edit code, and you don’t need any special additional knowledge beyond what we’ll share below.
The first thing you will need to do is log in to your Shopify store. Logging in requires your email address and password.
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If you’re reading this before launching your Shopify store, bookmark this page and come back once you’ve set up your Shopify store.
Click Online Store on your shopify dashboard. It can be found near the bottom of the page in the left sidebar. Once you find it, click the button and a dropdown menu will appear. Click the button titled Themes.
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📚 Recommended reading: Our ranking of the best Shopify Themes, based on our analysis of over 13,000 themes.
Depending on how new your store is, you’ll either see the option to Edit default theme content or Edit language. In the image below, you’ll see Edit default theme content, but select Edit language if that’s what you see.
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If you use multiple themes, you’ll want to apply these steps to any themes you wish to remove “Powered by Shopify” from.
There’s a search bar at the top of the page under Theme content. Type in “powered” to the box to see any sections that include this word. (Other guides call this a “translation box,” but that term doesn’t appear in Shopify so no need to worry about that term)
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On the filter results page shown in the image above, you are likely to see more than one result. Only pay attention to the last two results:
This will remove the instances of “Powered by Shopify” from appearing on your site.
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The final step is to click the save button” in the top right of the screen. Now, the theme will display nothing. You also have the option to change it to say something else related to your store.
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If you’re comfortable editing code, go back to the admin dashboard shown in step 2 and click the Edit code option instead.
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On the left-hand portion of your screen, you’ll see a few different folders.
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Now you’ll want to delete instances of “powered”:
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Your theme may also require you to go to the password-footer.liquid file in the section folder and delete “powered_by_link” from there too. This ensures “Powered by Spotify” is removed from your password page as well.
The footer is where you can demonstrate you’re a professional shop who’s organized and cares about the customer experience.
You can replace the “Powered by Shopify” text with your own logo and implement helpful must-haves like the following:
This is a space to showcase anything and everything a potential customer might be searching for. Keep it neat, otherwise you risk overwhelming and confusing users.
Let’s take a look at Princess Polly’s footer:
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This store’s footer is organized and vastly improves the site’s usability. Navigation is clear and customers can easily find what they’re looking for. In addition to the informative pieces, Princess Polly also uses this space to advertise their iOS mobile app, android app, and social media links.
Branding is a major part of any business. And — as a major player in the ecommerce platform game — Shopify does this weel. The point of including the “powered by” link in all Shopify stores is to advertise their product to shoppers who visit a site hosted on their platform.
Let’s examine this a bit further.
Imagine that a shopper lands on Olive and Poppy’s store in search of totes or jewelry.
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Eventually, the shopper may find themself down in the footer of the site looking for more information about how to find the brand on social media or in search of answers to FAQs.
That’s when they see the “Powered by Shopify” branding and think, “Well, what’s this?” And, they click through to find out, which redirects them to Shopify’s homepage where their question is answered.
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The “Powered by Shopify” copy is one tactic Shopify uses to build their business and attract new users who may have an ecommerce site opening soon. Perhaps it’s how you found out about the platform in the first place. So, if it helps them out, why would you want to remove it?
Consider removing this text to make your shop look more professional, remove a path leading shoppers away from your site, and advertise your own brand. You are undoubtedly in a competitive industry and need to leverage every opportunity to keep shoppers shopping.
One thing we all know is that once a customer moves away from your online store, the chances of getting them to come back — especially if they have not yet entered your sales funnel — are very low. All text on your page should educate customers and move them toward a sale — a process called conversion.
In a nutshell, you don’t want any traffic leaving your site once you’ve put all the work into getting them there in the first place. Instead, use every effort to direct shoppers through your sales funnel to place an order.
Keep reading for a step-by-step guide on how to remove the “Powered by Shopify” link from your store to improve the odds of keeping shoppers on your website and placing an order.
In addition to removing Shopify’s branding from your store, there are many other steps you can take to ensure that more sales take place on your site. Let’s explore some of them together.
First, we’ll look at some live chat tips, explore an abandoned cart recovery plan, and touch on SEO basics. Then, we’ll touch on a reviews strategy, social media, and the possibility of upgrading to Shopify Plus. Let’s get started!
Shopify offers store owners a variety of themes, including paid and free themes. With so many to choose from, how do you select the best theme for your store?
Here are some questions to ask yourself when looking for a theme:
You can use Spotify’s theme store filters to narrow down your options. Demo any theme before publishing it to your store, and look at reviews for any additional guidance.
See a theme you like being used by another store? Use our Shopify theme detector to identify it.
Shopify Plus is a Shopify upgrade designed for large enterprises making high-volume sales and shipments. With its higher price tag, Shopify Plus comes with more storefront functionality, support, and integrations than the basic Shopify plan.
Shopify Plus provides users with unlimited staff accounts. If you find yourself in a position where you need more Shopify admin accounts for your team, it might be a good idea to consider upgrading.
Theme design customization is also enhanced with Shopify Plus — the checkout page is fully-customizable as it’s not part of the main theme file. Shopify Plus allows you more control over your ecommerce website, and additional statistics and data like average order value.
With Shopify Plus, you can provide shoppers with a greater number of user discounts, access more detailed reporting, and leverage a higher level of merchant support. These are just some of the advantages Shopify Plus provides to help you scale your operations.
Live chat isn’t just for answering questions. You can also use it to upsell, retain customers, and increase sales. Here are 5 ways live chat helps drive revenue:
Even if you’re a smaller business who can’t staff a live chat 24/7, there are some features you can implement to still answer customer questions as they come in. Try out self-service flows, contact forms, quick responses, article recommendations, or set business hours — all of which are covered in the link above.
Learn how to install a live chat widget and start increasing your customer engagement and satisfaction.
Save your customer support teams time by implementing effective self-service resources like an FAQ page or a help center. Follow these steps to create an effective FAQ page:
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If your website analytics are showing heavy traffic to your FAQ page or you need more room for organization/categorization, it’s likely time to build out a help center.
Help centers are more robust and detailed than FAQ pages. You can either create a help center that expands on what you address in the FAQ section, or make it full-fledged and include images and video tutorials.
Nobody likes abandoned carts — and it’s crucial to understand why customers leave the checkout process mid-way if you want to fix it.
Baymard’s research reveals the top reasons for cart abandonment:
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Streamline your checkout flow and make the shopping process easy for customers. Optimize the checkout process by doing the following:
Check out our detailed list of cart abandonment strategies and tools to implement these solutions on your Shopify store.
Organic website traffic has no upfront monetary investment, yet it yields better ROI than many other paid advertising tactics. The numbers don’t lie, 37.5% of all traffic to ecommerce stores comes from search engines.
Optimize your store’s technical, on-page, and off-page SEO so returning and new customers can find you with ease. To ensure your store boasts great technical SEO, do the following:
Once you’ve checked off those items, you can implement the following into your Shopify store to ensure a fantastic user-experience:
Don’t leave search engine rankings to chance. Most every professional organization has SEO strategies in place — your Shopify store shouldn’t be any different.
Don’t feel like you have to do everything on your own, a solid ecommerce tech stack can optimize many daily business functions for you. You might feel overwhelmed by the seemingly never-ending choices of apps and tools, but it’s easy to find some suitable for you when you define your needs.
Before you start downloading every helpful-looking app, here’s 3 key things to look for:
We’ve done some of the hard work already, narrowing down the best of the best. Whether you’re in need of some marketing help or checkout assistance, here’s some of the best apps out there:
Your ability to quickly satisfy customers is key to customer retention and long-term growth. 58% of businesses actively use a helpdesk, for good reason, as they’re a key component to improving the customer experience.
Choosing the right help desk is crucial for your ecommerce business. It doesn’t only help you provide the best customer support, increase engagement, and convert more sales in the process — but it seamlessly integrates with your current ecommerce platform.
If you want to create a truly valuable helpdesk, include these features:
Don’t fall short when it comes to providing exceptional customer service, or it’ll negatively affect your shop’s success.
Conversion rate is arguably the single most important metric in ecommerce: If you don’t have a high conversion rate, all your brand awareness, web traffic, and marketing dollars never turn into revenue.
Ecommerce conversion rate optimization (CRO) is the strategy of gradually improving the user experience on your site to turn more browsers into buyers. If you’re not taking steps to optimize your conversion rate already, now is the time to begin.
Here are a few quick ways to get started:
Product reviews are a powerful source of social proof, which builds trust and confidence in your brand. You can boost your revenue lift by 1.5% simply by adding reviews to your product pages.
Not only does a reviews strategy let people see what others think of you, it also lets consumers know that you care — especially when you take accountability for negative reviews.
Here’s how you can start receiving reviews and how to strengthen your reviews strategy:
The payment process isn’t just an ecommerce owner’s backend concern, it’s a core part of the customer experience. If your checkout process is complex or doesn’t allow for multiple payment options, customers might go elsewhere.
Offer a one-click checkout on your Shopify store by integrating popular payment methods like Amazon Pay, Apple Pay, and PayPal. These should be included alongside the traditional option to enter credit card information.
For example, here’s how the checkout screen looks like for jewelry brand Jaxxon:
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Happy customers drive your sales. They continue to shop at your store and are more likely to refer their friends and family. A seamless customer experience (CX) and a well-organized shop have a huge impact on your overall revenue.
Drive value at every stage of the customer journey and take advantage of every customer interaction to improve your business and boost your sales.
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For every dollar that companies spend on email marketing, they earn an average of $36 in return. The high ROI of email marketing makes it one of the most lucrative marketing channels to leverage, and ecommerce stores should take advantage of the opportunity to promote their products and brand in every email they send to customers.
But marketing emails aren’t the only kinds of emails you can use for marketing purposes. Email signature marketing is a subtle tactic to make all kinds of emails work harder for your brand. When you send customer support emails, for example, you can use the signature to recommend products, announce new products and promotions, and more — assuming you provide great customer service above the signature.
Continue reading to learn why email signature marketing campaigns are such a powerful addition to customer service emails, plus tips and examples to help you develop email signature marketing designs that drive more website visits and purchases.
Email signature marketing is the strategy of placing marketing messages at the bottom of your customer emails in the signature section. These are not marketing emails: They are usually customer service emails that only use the signature for marketing recommendations.
Common examples of email signature marketing include:
Thanks to the various marketing opportunities they provide, 82% of email marketers use email signatures to boost brand awareness, get more web traffic, and boost on-site conversion rate. So, while email signature marketing may seem overly salesy, customers are accustomed to marketing messages at the bottom of emails. As long as your email provides adequate value to the email recipient, capping it off with tasteful marketing does more good than harm.
From lead generation to raising brand awareness and social media followers, you can expect a wide range of benefits from email signature marketing. Here are a few of the main advantages:

The law of least effort is an important part of great customer support. Once you send an email to a customer, you need to make it as easy as possible for them to contact you back. One simple way to ensure that customers can easily contact you back is to provide your contact information in the email signature. Once the customer is done reading your message, they'll have all the info they need to get in touch right in front of them.
When a customer support team resolves an issue, that doesn’t have to be the end of the conversation. You can use email signature marketing to give customers a clear path to re-engage with your brand and get excited about shopping on your site with a clear call to action (CTA).
Examples of CTAs in email signature marketing could include:
To maximize the click-through rate (CTR) of your CTA, try and keep them short, active, and value-focused.
The bottom of a customer support email could also be a great place to share positive feedback you’ve gotten from others. You could include a screenshot of a glowing review of your brand, a feature in a publication, a link to a case study, or a shoutout from an influencer in your industry to catch the attention of your email’s recipient and get them even more excited about your brand.
Sending emails to announce new products, sales, and other events directly is highly recommended as an ecommerce growth tactic — chances are, you already do this kind of email marketing. But even the emails that aren't specifically discussing these things can still be used to promote them.
Again, since customers have come to expect marketing material in the signature section of a business email, they probably won't mind if you get a little off-topic in this section. By designing eye-catching email signature banners to promote sales and new products, you can turn every email your company sends into a marketing effort.
Announcing new products and sales is one way to drive conversions with email signature marketing, but it's just one of several marketing strategies. Creating a call to action (CTA) for customers to book a demo or free trial is another option for ecommerce companies selling products that can be demoed.
Using promotional banners to promote product recommendations is another highly effective option. By analyzing customer data, you can even make personalized product recommendations for an even better click-through rate. Lastly, offering discount codes can be an effective way to generate sales from email signature marketing, too.
For more strategies on how customer support reps can steer customers toward purchases in support communications for CX-driven growth, check out our CX-Driven Growth Playbook.
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Business emails that include an eye-catching, professional email signature receive 32% more replies than those that do not. Including contact information makes it more convenient for customers to respond. The fact that many email signatures feature CTAs encouraging the customer to contact them back also helps. Whatever the reason, customer replies are always a positive thing — and the fact that email signature marketing can boost them substantially is a compelling reason to consider it.
There are a wide variety of elements that you can include in your email signature. While you probably don't want to include them all in the same email, you can pick and choose different elements depending on your email signature marketing goals.
Here are some marketing and branding elements to consider including in your email signature:

When used correctly, each email signature element presents an opportunity to promote brand awareness, generate sales and other positive customer actions, and make contacting you more convenient for the customer.
Like every marketing campaign, email signature marketing campaigns need to be given careful thought and consideration. It's important to define your campaigns' objectives and then design them step-by-step to reach those objectives.
To create email signature marketing campaigns that actually generate sales and other positive customer actions, here are the steps that you should follow:
Before you decide on the specific branding and marketing elements that you want to include in your email signature, it's first important to choose a design and location for the signature. Starting with location, you'll obviously want to put your email signature at the bottom of the email. However, you've got many options regarding the size, format, and exact positioning of your signature.
You can get as creative as you want with your signature's design, too. The colors you choose, the fonts you use, and any other design elements you include are all key parts of your email's branding — choose wisely.

If you want more instructions on how to create email signatures, check out:
All email marketing campaigns need to have clear and measurable goals, which is also true for email signature marketing campaigns. From driving visitors to a landing page or homepage to promoting sales, you can design email signature marketing campaigns to accomplish many different objectives. Pinpoint the goals you want your campaigns to accomplish and discuss them with your team before you start to email clients with new signatures. This way, everyone on the team can build a signature that aligns with those goals.
The most common metric for successful campaigns is click-through rate (CTR), or the rate at which people click the link included in your signature. Check out this article to learn how to measure CTR in Google Analytics.
Once you choose a basic design for your email signature and determine the goals for your email signature marketing campaigns, it's time to craft your email signature. You can hire a designer to create your signature for you, or you can do it yourself. Choose your email signature elements based on your campaign goals and design around these elements. For example, if your goal is to increase sales on a certain product line, make one of your signature elements a product recommendation from the line. Of course, it's essential to keep branding in mind throughout the design process and ensure that your email signature is consistent with your company's overall branding.
If you need help designing a professional and eye-catching email signature, then email signature templates, email signature generators, and other types of email signature software can all be excellent tools.
Check out this article to see 16 useful customer service email templates.
Now that you've chosen your email signature design and goals for your email signature marketing campaign, it's time to put that campaign into action. You can choose to have every support agent use the same email signature in their messages, or you can design multiple signature designs/campaigns and deploy them both at the same time. Using multiple email signatures will allow you to A/B test which ones deliver the best results, but many companies prefer to utilize a single signature design for brand consistency.
Whether it's multiple signature designs or a single one, rolling out your email signature marketing campaign is as simple as attaching your signature design to the customer support emails you are already sending.
Related reading: 8 plug-and-play email marketing automation sequences to try today.
Email signature marketing might be a relatively passive marketing strategy, but it is still essential to closely monitor the results of your campaign. KPIs such as click-through rate, response rate, and conversion rate will all tell you how effectively your campaign is performing so that you can fine-tune it for better results and greater ROI.
The exact KPIs you want to track will depend on your specific campaign goals. If you are trying to drive sales via product recommendations, KPIs such as click-through rate and conversion rate is especially important. If you just want to raise brand awareness and aren't directing your customers to a product page, the response rate might be a more telling KPI.
The primary reason for monitoring the success of your campaign is so that you can adjust and improve your email signature design as needed. If your campaign isn't delivering the results you hoped for, fine-tuning the design of your email signature or the marketing elements it includes may yield better results.
A/B testing is one great way to test and improve your email signature marketing campaigns. By using multiple signature designs and measuring their performance, you can determine which ones are most effective for different marketing goals and use those exclusively going forward.
A great email signature can be a powerful marketing tool, and plenty of statistics can back it up. Here are a few interesting stats that highly the effectiveness of email signature marketing:
Given how popular email signature marketing has become, there are plenty of great examples of it being put into practice. Here is a customer support email from Dr. Squatch that includes an excellent email signature:

Note that the email signature includes the agent's full name, the company logo, a link to the home page, and a product link. It's a simple design yet one that includes both brand awareness elements as well as marketing elements. The goal of this signature could be to drive conversions via the product recommendation link or simply raise brand awareness via the logo and home page link.
Here's another example of an attractive email signature from Swordfish Communications. Here the agent gives the recipient the information they need to contact them directly as well as multiple methods for contacting the company, and corporate social media profiles for a nice touch of social proof.

Lastly, here are a couple of examples of email signatures featuring banners that are clearly designed to promote sales:

This email signature features an animated banner, a sale announcement, and a clickable CTA and is a great example of some of the unique and eye-catching things that you can do with email signature banners.
Here's another great example of an email signature banner designed to make the signature timely and promote a seasonal sale:

Along with an eye-catching banner that promotes a seasonal CTA, this email signature also features other attractive seasonal design elements such as pumpkin social media icons and a stylish "happy holidays" sign-off.
In Gorgias, you can (and should) create a permanent signature with your name and contact information. But we believe overly-gaudy messages in the signature get in the way of providing excellent customer service. Below, we’ll share how you can create and include a wide variety of subtler marketing messages at the end of your emails.
In Gorgias, you can create a library of templated Macros for all sorts of purposes. The most common templates are answers to frequently asked questions like “Where is my order?” or “Do you ship internationally?” But you can also create Macros for marketing purposes at the end of your email — we call them PS Macros.
Here’s an example of a PS Macro getting added to a Gorgias user’s library of Macros:

Once this Macro is saved, the user can search for the Macro to include in any message to a customer — regardless of channel (email, live chat, social media, and so on).

Here’s what the complete message, including the support information and the PS Macro, could look like:

You can create a library of these Macros for a variety of purposes:
Crafting a professional and eye-catching email signature or PS Macro is an excellent way to turn every email your company sends into an opportunity to promote your products and brand.
With Gorgias, you can design multiple PS Macros and automatically attach those signatures to your customer support emails. Gorgias’s Macros provide a better email signature management solution, letting agents choose among email signature templates for different times of the year, customers, and marketing objectives without requiring your agents to change their signatures manually.
That’s just the tip of the iceberg of how Gorgias can turn your customer service operation into a revenue-generating machine. Book your demo to learn how Gorgias can help your brand grow.
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If you’re like most ecommerce businesses, you’ve already established some form of social media presence. Most ecommerce companies share images and videos of their products to get them seen by more internet users, develop a following, and direct potential shoppers to their website. However, this is only one dimension of a social media strategy .
Here’s our guide on how ecommerce brands can use social media to develop a following, directly influence sales, and improve the customer experience. We’ll share examples from each social media platform, plus best practices and actionable tips to help you get started or refine your existing efforts.
Most ecommerce stores start using social media to share photo and video content with the hopes of growing their audiences. However, that’s only one way you can use social media in ecommerce.

Here’s a more comprehensive list:
Organic social media marketing includes posts from your social media accounts that you’re not paying to promote as an ad. This will be the bulk of your social media posts — your daily updates, photos, and videos. The advantage of organic social media marketing is that it’s free to use on platforms like Instagram, TikTok, Twitter, and Facebook. This kind of non-paid posting is a form of content marketing.
The main goal of organic posts is to build brand awareness on social media platforms. This is an opportunity to showcase your brand, products, and unique voice and build a following.
Organic social media marketing can includes posts about:
For example, here is a post from lingerie brand Parade promoting their sleepwear line. It’s a series of photos modeling the line and a caption that highlights the brand’s unique selling proposition of fun, comfy, and sustainable clothing. Without paying to boost the post as an ad, Parade reached their target audience who know and love the brand.

Every major social media platform has an option to place ads. This can be done by either boosting an existing post from your feed or by crafting a brand new post to be placed as an ad.
The cost of this varies by platform but they all offer sophisticated metrics to track the success of your ads. Platforms typically also let you select and refine a target audience to make sure the right people see your ad.
While ads used to be a major strategy for direct-to-consumer ecommerce brands, this is no longer the case due to the rising cost of advertising on Instagram, Facebook, and other social media platforms.
Paid social media advertising may cost money, but the advantage is that the ads are promoted beyond your existing following to social media users who may not have even heard of you. It’s a great way to expand your following and reach potential new customers. Paid ads can be used to promote products or sales.
Here’s an example from Facebook of an ad from plus-size retailer Torrid promoting their Black Friday sale. Note that the post is marked as “sponsored” which tells users this is a paid-for ad.

Major ecommerce service providers such as Shopify and BigCommerce have integrations with social media platforms that allow merchants to list products for sale right on the platform.
The goal with social commerce is to make it easier for followers to convert to customers. Rather than seeing an item in an Instagram post and having to navigate to the website and search for it, social media users can find the item on Instagram itself and make a purchase, leading to faster conversions.
That seamless shopping experience is incredibly valuable. According to Insider Intelligence, social selling sales are expected to reach $45.74 billion in the US for 2022. As well, half of US adults are expected to make a social commerce purchase.
This is an example from jewelry brand Mejuri. On this Instagram post, they have tagged products from the photo that they’ve uploaded to their Instagram catalog.

When a user clicks on one of these product pins, they’re brought to another page where they can easily navigate to a purchase link either on the ecommerce website.

Social media can be used as another channel to connect with customers and solve issues or give customers the information they’re seeking. This can be done through comments or direct messages (DMs) on various social media platforms.
Many customers prefer to contact brands directly on social media rather than going through traditional channels like calling or sending an email. Responding to these messages meets customers where they’re at, creating a more seamless customer service experience.
Many brands use Twitter, for example, as a place to provide customer service. Have a look at David’s Tea. While their main feed is organic posts promoting products and brand awareness, their replies show them engaging with customers.
Here are two examples. In the first reply, they help a customer find a location. In the second, they help a customer track down their order.

📚Recommended reading:
Social listening is tracking mentions and discussions of your brand on social media. This can be achieved with something as simple as searching for your brand name on social media or by using a more sophisticated social listening tool.
Customers won’t always tag your brand directly on social media, so social listening will reveal more than simply checking your mentions. You can take this a step further by also looking for mentions of your industry and competing products and brands.
The purpose of social listening is to see how users talk about your brand, whether good or bad. This provides valuable insight into what customers want from you, what problems you can address, and what your competitors are offering that you don’t.
For example, if you sell matcha powder, you could keep track of mentions of “best matcha powder” on Twitter. Looking at the results, you would see:
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📚Recommended reading: How to Track and Monitor Social Mentions
Influencer marketing is engaging with social media personalities to promote your brand to their audience. Typically influencers are offered either payment or free product in exchange for showcasing your brand.
Influencer marketing gets your brand in front of new eyeballs but it’s also a proven way to convert new customers and build trust. According to Matter Communications, 61% of buyers are more likely to trust a recommendation from a friend, family member, or influencers on social media.
For example, here’s a sponsored post from beauty influencer Mikayla Jane. She’s promoting Briogeo hair care and tagged the post #briogeopartner.

📚Recommended reading: Forming Partnerships to Grow with Influencer Marketing
It seems like a new social media platform pops up approximately every few months, and it can be a lot to keep track of. Every ecommerce business has to start somewhere, and that place is probably on the list below.
If you’re a smaller brand, choose one or two platforms based on your target audience’s preferences (which we share below). You’re far better nailing one platform than barely gaining traction on five.
These are the most attractive social media platforms for ecommerce marketing.
Most people are on Facebook, even if they don't actively post. Parent company Meta’s recent earnings report reveals almost 3 billion monthly active users on Facebook alone. Yes, billion — that’s quite an audience.
If nothing else, it's great because more than a third of the earth’s population is active on the platform monthly. Facebook may have its problems, but there’s no arguing with that reach. Facebook Shops are also worth investigating for on-platform social commerce.
The videos not only showcase the capabilities of the product but gets customers excited at the possibility of having their videos shared to GoPro’s huge audience.

Born as a short-form, text-driven social platform, Twitter is more about ideas and conversations than it is about ecommerce. It was very late to the ecommerce game, officially launching Twitter Shops in 2022. The platform also has a smaller user base and a very skewed demographic (heavily male, urban, and college-educated).
Twitter is great for connecting with fans and building brand awareness (Remember Wendy’s?), but it’s not the best sales platform unless you’re selling products that really resonate with Twitter's specific demographic.
This is a great place for organic social media marketing and engaging in trends, like this meme format, builds brand voice.

Pinterest calls itself a “visual discovery engine” where users can find all kinds of stuff and pin it to one or more boards. People use it to store recipes, fashion inspo, décor trends, and all sorts of other things — including your products if you leverage the platform properly.
Social media marketing on Pinterest is vital, but it’s a little different than on the biggies listed above. Shopify put together a Pinterest Marketing 101 guide that’s worth a look. Key highlights include that 90% of Pinterest users use the platform as a part of their purchasing decision process. Be aware that Pinterest users skew heavily female.
It’s a great use of the platform because Pinterest is all about inspiration and Ruggable posts collections that tie into different decor aesthetics.

The visual-first sibling to Facebook is heavy on photos, carousels, and videos and is comparatively light on text. Its user base is also in the billions, though not as large as Facebook’s. The visual-forward nature makes it a great fit for social ecommerce.
Businesses can create an online store on Instagram and include products in collections. U.S. customers can purchase directly from this store without leaving the Instagram app. Stores can also show off their products in attractive ads that take up the entire dimensions of the news feed.
Instagram is all about aspirational imagery and these posts inspire potential customers to purchase the products to recreate the looks they see.

TikTok is the new king of short-form video content, which can be extremely easy to create — but very complicated to create in controlled, professional ways. It’s a great platform to generate buzz and has high virality potential.
TikTok is about exposure, connection, and virality. It’s not about direct ecommerce, as it recently shelved its attempt, TikTok Shop. However, you can link your online store to your TikTok for Business page and sell via advertising and social sharing.
Getting users to laugh is a great way to have a TikTok go viral and these videos also showcase Gymshark apparel without directly selling them, which doesn’t play well on the platform.

Snapchat’s original differentiator, messages that disappear after a time, doesn’t seem like a natural fit for ecommerce, but the platform has evolved quite a bit since launch. With a smaller, younger user base, Snapchat isn’t for every ecommerce seller. But its advertising tools are flexible and robust, ranging from photos and videos to ad-based lenses and filters.
If you’re marketing to Gen Z and the youngest portion of the millennial cohort, Snapchat is worth a look because its user base is concentrated in those ages.
This takes advantage of Snapchat’s “shop” button so potential customers can immediately purchase the items they see.

Why use social media marketing at all for your ecommerce store? The obvious answer is sales, but there are several other benefits, too.
Social media marketing can:
Getting your brand on the right networks is the first step, but real success requires doing the right things once you’re there. Follow these best practices to enhance your ecommerce marketing efforts on social media.
Social media networks typically offer you only one place to put a link to your ecommerce website in your bio.
Rather than simply linking to the front page of your store, you can use a “link in bio” tool to maximize the potential of that one link. Tools like Later, Linktree, and Shopify’s LinkPop let you curate a list of links on a landing page. Using this, you can link to particular sections or product pages..
When it comes to writing your bio, keep it short and snappy but also by include keywords relevant to your brand for good search engine optimization (SEO).
Ohh Deer’s Instagram is a great example that:

📚Recommended reading: Learn how Ohh Deer generates $12,500 per year through great customer service with Gorgias.
Repurposing social content across networks is a good idea, but simply republishing content isn’t. Facebook users have seen the Reels that clearly came straight from TikTok, and screenshots of Tweets make the rounds elsewhere. But for the greatest reach, build your repurposed social content in native formats for each social media platform.
Reels are huge on Instagram, for example, but are ancillary at best on Facebook. Vertical video is just right for Instagram but looks off on Facebook, etc.
Are your fans talking about you on social? Share those posts (with permission, in some cases)! Real people love seeing other real people more than yet another social ad (sorry, but it’s true), so use it if you got it.
Social listening is the best way to find user-generated content, so regularly search for your brand on social media platforms or make use of a tool like Hootsuite to keep tabs on your mentions.
For example, skincare brand Blume uses before and after photos taken by users to show the effectiveness of their products.

Hashtags work a little differently on each platform, but they’re worth using anywhere that accepts them. On many networks, hashtags are clickable or tappable, allowing users to discover other posts sharing that hashtag. This means that people clicking a hashtag from another brand’s post could end up on yours, no advertising dollars required.
Similarly, tagging customers featured in user-generated content, celebrities seen using one of your products, or other brands can expand the reach of your social media profile.
For an example, look at this post from cereal brand Magic Spoon on Instagram.

In a separate comment, they’ve inserted a series of hashtags to help those who follow certain diets discover their post.

Many social media networks allow brands to add tags or links to let customers directly shop for products from posts.
Shopify, for example, allows brands to upload a catalog of their products to Instagram and Facebook and tag products as shoppable links. That seamless experience means a faster checkout and higher conversions.
According to a Sprout Social report about pandemic shopping habits, 68% of customers made a purchase directly from social media in 2021. Also, virtually all shoppers — 98% — plan to make a purchase through social shopping or influencers in 2022.
Organic social traffic happens based on user actions: shares, likes, comments, and discovery-based clicks (reels, pins, hashtags, and more). You don’t pay for that traffic — beyond what it costs to create content. Paid social strategies are (can you guess?) anything you pay for in terms of ads.
Both have strengths and weaknesses, but the best approach is to combine them to yield better results.
For example, you might use paid advertisements to boost posts beyond their organic traffic. Then you might personalize interactions via direct messages with the users that contact you after interacting with a boosted post.
Social media marketing strategy is important, but it’s only the tip of the iceberg for how your brand can grow with social media. Consider leveraging social media to improve your brand's customer experience.
Below are several tips for accomplishing this. Note that some of these tips won’t be possible with the stock tools various social networks provide to businesses; you’ll need to add external apps. Shopify store owners should check out these 11 powerful social media apps for Shopify.
Social media has made brands even more available to consumers, so much so that people expect near-instant availability from most brands. Not only that, customers want to reach brands on any and all channels — whichever is convenient at the moment.
A helpdesk like Gorgias streamlines this by pulling in comments and messages from Facebook and Instagram, into one shared inbox. That means your customer service team can quickly respond to customers from one location.

Social monitoring looks at brand mentions on social media beyond the scope of direct messages. Sometimes, in your social monitoring efforts, you’ll notice a complaint or a flat-out inaccurate claim about your ecommerce business being blasted online.
It’s often worthwhile to reach out to these customers in a visible way (such as a tweet reply or comment reply). Doing this gives you the chance to set the record straight on any factual inaccuracies, and you just might turn a frustrated detractor into a satisfied fan.
📚Recommended reading: Social Media Customer Service: How-To Guide & Useful Tools
Explain that customers are likely to share bad experiences online, and when they’re escalated, you want to manage the interaction privately. Acknowledge their issue in the public channel but move it to DMs or email ASAP. To avoid violating privacy policies, ask customers to send you a message to start the conversation.
When a new customer follows you on social, it usually means they’re expressing interest in your brand. They’re statistically much more likely to be potential customers (or existing ones) than the average social user, so don’t leave them in the cold!
Rather than waiting for them to reach out, you can proactively make the first move.
Our own research and platform data show that ecommerce businesses that send this kind of welcome DM increase brand revenue via social by 4%.
Read our post on welcoming customers proactively with a DM to learn how beauty brand Glamnetic lifted revenue with this digital marketing strategy, and how you can pull it off, too. Not sure what to say? Just say hey, introduce your brand, and sweeten the deal with a new follower discount code.
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Social media marketing for ecommerce stores is a broad discipline with significant potential to increase sales and revenue, build social trust, and enhance your brand’s presence online. Mastering social media marketing isn’t easy, but the results tend to pay for themselves many times over when you do it right.
One thing you’ll need to succeed in social media marketing and social commerce is the right set of digital tools. Without them, posting and interacting via social at scale can quickly become overwhelming.
Gorgias is the customer support and helpdesk platform built for ecommerce platforms. Gorgias helps brands respond to social media support messages and comments from within an all-in-one customer service platform, with access to rich data on existing customers, powerful automations and scripts, chatbots, and more.
Gorgias also integrates with social media marketing apps like Recart and ShopMessage, helping you leverage your social efforts even further.
Ready to see what Gorgias can do for your CS, CX, and social media marketing efforts? Sign up now and see Gorgias for yourself.

Ecommerce inventory management often seems simple enough on the surface: Make sure that you have enough products to meet demand without being overstocked, and you're good to go — right? Not quite.
In reality, striking this balance is challenging. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, U.S. retailers sit on $1.26 of inventory for every $1.00 of products sold. Of course, even worse than overstocking is not having enough available stock to meet customer demand.
Creating an effective inventory management strategy is key to building a successful ecommerce business and leads to an optimized supply chain.
To help you create an ecommerce inventory management strategy that works for you, we'll take a look at both warehouse management tips as well as the top inventory management solutions.
Inventory management is the process of ordering, storing, and selling inventory for your company. It also includes tracking amounts, pricing, and location for all your products and your workflow for keeping tabs on it all.
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A good inventory management process should ensure that you always have enough inventory on hand to meet customer demand without overstocking.
It may come as a surprise to learn that 43% of small businesses in the United States do not track inventory or do so using a manual system, according to Conveyco Technologies.
If you would like to position your ecommerce store ahead of the competition, identifying your reorder points — the pre-determined level of inventory at which you order a restock — as well as improving inventory forecasting and supply chain management, are great place to start.
There are several methods for dealing with inventory management for ecommerce businesses. Compare the following types to determine which is best for you.
Also simply called JIT, just-in-time inventory management is like it sounds. Rather than keeping a large inventory on hand, the JIT method is when a business receives goods only as they’re needed.
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In ecommerce, for example, that could mean only ordering in a supply of Halloween decorations in time for expected demand in October, rather than stocking them all year.
The goal of JIT inventory management is to keep inventory — and the cost of that inventory — to a minimum. This can be a great benefit for your expenses but the tricky part is being able to accurately predict demand.
Not having enough stock if demand goes up means upset, empty-handed customers. Having too much stock defeats the purpose of the entire method. Therefore, JIT inventory management only works if demand is very predictable.
📚Read more:
This is the opposite of JIT inventory management. Just-in-case, or JIC, inventory management means keeping more stock on hand than you might need to be able to respond to unpredictable demand.
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Also called safety stock, having extra products means it’ll be no sweat if there’s a sudden uptick. Say, for example, an influencer surprises you with a great review and hundreds of orders flood in for a product. It sounds like a dream, but only if you can meet the demand.
The upsides of this type of inventory management are obvious, but so are the downsides. This method can lead to deadstock — items sitting in your inventory that you can’t sell.
Classifying your stock-keeping units (SKUs) based on ABC analysis is one of the best ways to determine which products deliver the most value to your business, a key inventory management consideration.
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Under ABC analysis, three categories of products deliver the highest value to a retail business:
Of course, it's also possible for a product to not fit into any of these categories. For instance, you might have a low-value product with a low frequency of sales. In this case, it might be best to remove this product from your catalog altogether.
ABC analysis is meant to help you manage inventory levels for your ecommerce store’s most important products, and any product that falls under one of the following categories deserves special emphasis in your inventory management strategy.
Products that yield an especially high profit can be incredibly valuable to a company, even if they have a low frequency of sales. For instance, a product that generates $1,000 of profit offers just as much value as selling 100 products that generate $10 in profit each.
It's recommended that products in this category constitute 10-20% of your total inventory.
The second category of high-importance products is moderate-value products with a moderate frequency of sales.
It's recommended that products within this category constitute 30% of your total inventory.
Low-value products with a high frequency of sales is the final ABC analysis product category — and the one that most retail products fall under.
It's recommended that these products constitute 50% of your total inventory.
📚Resources:
This is a no-inventory inventory solution. Ecommerce dropshipping is when a business doesn’t hold its own stock. Instead, orders are passed directly to the manufacturer or wholesaler who takes care of fulfilling those orders.
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This completely eliminates the cost and space needed for keeping your own inventory or restocking shelves, making it great for first-time operations or for testing a concept.
The downside is that order fulfillment — and all the ways it intersects with the customer experience — are left to a third party. If you want complete control over orders from beginning to end, this isn’t the method for you.
First in, first out, also called FIFO, is an inventory system that prioritizes the products that have been in your inventory the longest to be shipped out first.
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FIFO is, of course, a great method for ecommerce businesses selling perishable goods like food or cosmetics. It lowers the risk of a product expiring while still on your inventory shelves, leaving you to eat the cost of unsold goods.
However, this method can be used by any type of business to keep goods moving.
📚Read more:
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Exactly how you manage your inventory is an important business decision, including which method you choose to implement.
If you would like to create an inventory management strategy that is sure to boost your retail business's bottom line, here are six inventory management optimization tips worth considering.
Today, many excellent inventory management software solutions are available to business owners. Their useful automation features can help streamline your inventory management process and eliminate human error.
Many also include inventory tracking features that make it easy to follow what flows in and out of your warehouses.
We’ll cover some of the top inventory management software later on. For now, it's important to understand that leveraging inventory management software solutions is one of the simplest ways to optimize an ecommerce store's inventory management process.
Understanding product demand is key to effective inventory management. If you place purchase orders for all of your products in equal amounts without considering customer demand, you will likely end up with too much of some products and not enough of others.
Instead of falling into this trap, base your inventory replenishment strategy around in-depth product demand research.
Utilizing a tool such as Google Analytics is a great place to start your product demand research. Under the "product performance" section of Google Analytics, you will find a wealth of metrics on how your various products perform, making it easy to estimate product demand.
However, if your online store is relatively new and does not have a lot of past sales to analyze in this manner, research on product demand might be a little more of a guessing game at first. In this case, estimate product demand based on your best analysis of which products will sell the fastest until you generate more sales.
We've already mentioned that analyzing past sales via a tool such as Google Analytics is the best way to forecast future demand. As you begin to analyze this information on a regular basis, you'll have more data to build your forecasts from.
When forecasting future demand based on historical data, there are several important factors to consider. For one, it's important to identify outliers and anomalies that might lead to inaccurate projections.
For example, let's say that a viral marketing campaign leads to a large number of sales for a particular product. Based on these results, your forecasting demand for next month's sales might lead to overstocking once your marketing campaign winds down.
Similarly, forecasting demand for January based on December sales without considering the holiday season's impact might also lead you to order more products than you should.
As long as you perform a thorough analysis of your inventory data and pinpoint any outliers that might skew your forecast, analyzing historical data is the most effective way to achieve accurate inventory demand projections.
The next step is to determine your reorder levels and minimum viable stock levels.
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It's also important to consider production times and order fulfillment times. The lead time for products to arrive at your warehouse and the time it takes to process, prepare, and ship products can both impact your minimum viable stock level calculations.
For example, let’s say you know it takes about six weeks after a purchase order is placed before those products are ready to ship to customers. You will need to place a purchase order for new stock at least six weeks before the date you project you'll run out of inventory.
It's also important to note that meeting minimum viable stock levels does not mean stocking the bare minimum product needed to meet forecasted demand. No matter how much research you conduct or historical data you analyze, no demand forecast is 100% accurate.
Only stocking enough products to just meet forecasted demand means that you will run out of stock if actual demand ends up being higher than what you forecast. To prevent this, companies purchase "safety stock," or extra inventory beyond what they forecast selling.
To calculate how much safety stock you should purchase, you first need to determine your desired service level. Service level indicates the percentage of time a retailer has products in stock.
Using this chart, you can use the desired service level to calculate a service factor. Multiplying this service factor by your demand forecast will tell you how much stock you need to order.
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According to SKUVault, most retail companies aim for a service level of 90-95%. Assuming that you would like to achieve a service level of 90% and that you forecast selling 100 units per day over the next month, then your minimum viable stock level calculation will look like this:
Minimum viable stock = 1.282 (the service factor for a 90% service level) x 100 units per day x 30 days
Minimum viable stock = 3,546 units
By plugging your own numbers into this formula, you can determine exactly what your minimum stock level needs to be to achieve your desired service level for a given period.
A company selling pool supplies is likely to see much higher sales during the summer months, while a company selling Christmas ornaments may generate almost all of its sales during the holiday season.
In these two examples, it's easy to determine how seasonality will affect demand. In other cases, strategizing around seasonality isn't always straightforward.
While it's helpful to analyze your products and customer base to determine obvious reasons for seasonal demand fluctuations, the best way to strategize around seasonality is to examine historical inventory data.
Suppose you notice demand trends based on seasonality and determine that these trends are due to the time of year and not some other anomaly. In this case, you should certainly take these seasonality trends into account in your inventory control strategy.
📚Related reading: Our guide to Black Friday logistics (for beginners).
Here are a few challenges your ecommerce business may face when managing your inventory.
When you start small, it seems to make sense to simply track everything manually on spreadsheets or even written documents. But if you dream bigger, you need systems in place to match.
As your business scales up, your inventory management process needs to scale with it. Manual management just isn’t going to cut it when you’re processing hundreds, thousands, or even millions of orders and tracking inventory along the way.
These are two sides of the same coin. Overstocking means having deadstock you can’t sell, which equals wasted money. But overselling without enough inventory means not being able to fulfill orders, or missing out on orders altogether.
Accurate product demanding forecasting requires historical data or at least a trends forecast to give you some insight. Just going with a gut feeling could lead to over or understocking.
Ecommerce inventory management software can help with this, as we’ll discuss later.
Keeping an eye on your inventory when you’re running your business out of your garage and selling on a single website is one thing. But as your business gets more complex, so will your inventory management needs.
Having multiple sales channels — such as selling on your own ecommerce website, Amazon, and eBay at one time — means your inventory records need to sync across all those places. If not, you could sell out on one platform, but have plenty available elsewhere.
The same is true if you’re large enough to have multiple warehouses. You need to be able to track inventory across all of them in sync.
Again, inventory management software can help with both these challenges.
If you would like to improve your inventory management and warehousing processes, using inventory and order management software solutions is one of the best approaches to take.
Several inventory management solutions are offering high-quality tools with exceptional functionality. If you would like to start using inventory software to help you streamline, automate, and improve your overall inventory management process, then here are seven great tools.
📚Read more: 12 Best Software Tools for Ecommerce Stores
QuickBooks Commerce is an inventory management platform that is ideally suited for multi-channel ecommerce businesses.
With QuickBooks Commerce, you can manage product listings across multiple sales channels from a single platform, easily track products from inventory to fulfillment, integrate across multiple ecommerce platforms, and access a wealth of insightful sales data.
Like QuickBooks Commerce, Sellercloud is a comprehensive inventory management platform that enables ecommerce businesses to manage listings across multiple sales channels from a single dashboard.
With Sellercloud, you'll be able to sync inventory across multiple marketplaces and automatically track your inventory from receiving to shipping.
Lastly, Sellercloud's purchasing features make it easy to manage your relationships with vendors by enabling you to manage purchase orders, track the cost of purchased products and raw materials, and stay ahead of customer demand with automated predictive purchasing.
📚Read more: 9 Best Returns Management Tools for Easier Returns
ChannelAdvisor is an inventory management platform capable of syncing numerous catalogs of products across multiple marketplaces.
ChannelAdvisor makes it easy to streamline and automate your order fulfillment process with support for numerous third-party shipping solutions and warehouse integrations.
This software also automates purchase order management for both wholesale and dropshipping vendors and includes forecasting features to help you determine just how much inventory you need to order.
Along with these inventory management and order fulfillment features, ChannelAdvisor also offers powerful digital marketing features that make it easy to create and manage marketing campaigns for multiple sales channels.
nChannel is a cloud-based SaaS solution that enables ecommerce stores to sync data and automate processes between their ecommerce platforms and ERP, POS, and 3PL systems.
You’re able to integrate with 3PL suppliers and dropshipping vendors for automated purchase order management, sync inventory levels across sales channels, syndicate product catalogs and product listing updates, and eliminate the need for manual data entry.
DEAR Systems is a cloud-based ERP system designed to help companies connect their sales channels, manage their supply chains, and scale their operations.
The platform gives you instant visibility into stock levels and order status, allows you to create a branded B2B portal for retail and wholesale customers, sync orders and stock levels across multiple marketplaces, and much more.
Ordoro is a well-known order fulfillment and inventory management solution that provides several noteworthy features.
To start, Ordoro enables online stores to utilize barcode scanning for fast accurate order fulfillment. Ordoro also consolidates inventory and orders across sales channels and makes it easy to set up automated rules to dictate where orders will ship from.
Lastly, Ordoro automatically tracks inventory levels to eliminate the need for spreadsheets and manual data entry.
If you are looking for a multi-channel inventory management solution that offers an especially impressive range of features, you will find a lot to like about Orderhive.
With Orderhive, ecommerce store owners can utilize preset triggers to automate a number of inventory management and order fulfillment tasks.
View and manage inventory across multiple marketplaces from a single dashboard, create automated purchase order triggers, access insightful inventory and order fulfillment insights, and do much more within this platform.
If you are looking for a well-rounded and feature-rich inventory management solution, one of Orderhive's four available plans may be a great option.
📚Read more: 10 Ways To Reduce Ecommerce Product Returns With Great CX
Inventory management and customer service are often two processes that go hand-in-hand.
A clear and executable inventory management process means faster service, fewer fulfillment issues, and higher customer satisfaction. No inventory management solution is complete without a robust customer support solution to back it up.
Gorgias's comprehensive customer support platform allows you to manage customer inquiries regarding order tracking, returns, and order status from a single dashboard — effortlessly keeping your customers looped into your order fulfillment process.
In the help desk itself, you can track inventory numbers across all your products in real time, and even edit orders right withing the helpdesk. Here’s what your product inventories — separated by store, if you have multiple — will look like within a ticket in Gorgias.
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This is helpful when making product recommendations, processing returns and exchanges in Gorgias, and more. Plus, when you edit orders within Gorgias, your Shopify (or BigCommerce) inventory levels will automatically reflect the change:
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This powerful feature comes in addition to a broad range of other capacities Gorgias provides, including live chat support, rules and macros to automate time-consuming customer support processes, intent and sentiment detection, and much more.
To learn more about how Gorgias can help you optimize your store's inventory management and customer service, check out Gorgias for Shopify stores, Gorgias for Magento stores, or Gorgias for BigCommerce stores.
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In customer service, few things are as valuable as great self-service.
The most central hub for self-service is the Help Center. It’s a powerful knowledge base for customer support articles, supercharged with a customizable Contact Form and (if you use Gorgias Automate) advanced order management and Article Recommendations.
We sat down with Toby Moors, Customer Happiness Specialist at Loop Earplugs, a Belgian DTC company that’s redefined what earplugs sound, look and feel like. We discussed their Help Center — one of the top 10 most visited Help Centers of any Gorgias merchant.
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We’ll share what makes Loop’s Help Center so successful, and give you actionable tips you can implement to drive more of your traffic toward this self-serve channel to improve CX and make your customer service program more efficient.
Before we dive into how Loop set up and optimized its Help Center, you might wonder why this particular Help Center is worth emulating.
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Now, let’s take a step back. Here’s the story of how Loop chose to migrate to the Gorgias Help Center and set it up for success.
Before using the Gorgias Help Center, Loop used a Shopify app for FAQs. They decided to switch after realizing a few advantages of the Gorgias Help Center:
The old FAQ page had plenty of useful content, but customers had a much harder time finding it. Like the Gorgias Help Center, it was broken down into categories. But beyond that, there was no structure — just a long list of questions and answers.
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This was a great start, but Toby from Loop said customers had to “doomscroll” to find the right question, a big barrier to accessible self-service. He said customers often ended up contacting the support team anyway because they couldn’t find the answer to their questions.
This is especially problematic for brands like Loop Earplugs, with innovative products that customers often have questions about both before and after a purchase.
With the old helpdesk, Loop had to build custom Google Analytics queries and export them to Excel spreadsheets to understand the Help Center’s performance.
With Gorgias, Loop has more insights about the impact of their Help Center. For instance, customers can leave feedback on each article (with a thumbs up or down) so the team understands which articles need more work. Plus, they can see which articles get sent to customers with AI Article Recommendation in the chat (more on that later).
Note: We’re hard at work to make Help Center Statistics even more powerful and easy. Keep an eye on our product roadmap for updates.
For Loop, the ability to consolidate tools and manage knowledge base content within Gorgias was a great incentive to switch. And because content management in the Help Center happens within Gorgias, they can update it themselves instead of relying on the website team to update a separate FAQ page.
Loop also has websites for the US, Europe, Japan, and Australia. Each of these domains needs a Help Center with a lot of overlapping content, but some localized elements — like local language and policies specific to each region.
With the old system, Loop had to manage each website’s FAQ page independently. This led to a lot of copy-pasting for every single website, plus plenty of room for human error and accidentally missing an update on one of the Help Centers.
With Gorgias, Loop has control over whether they want to mirror changes across all 4 Help Centers (for global updates, like a new product) or just edit one domain’s Help Center (for local initiatives, like supporting Klarna in Europe but not elsewhere).
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Once they decided to switch to the Gorgias Help Center, Loop took the following steps to make sure it's effective.
Once Loop chose to migrate, the Customer Happiness team went through the customer journey themselves to design a standout Help Center. Quite quickly, they identified a major theme: accessibility.
Accessibility is important to Loop for two reasons:
This theme of accessibility comes through in a few ways:
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For Automate subscribers, the Help Center has extra functionality: Your customers can easily track the status of their order, request returns and cancellations, and report issues.
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Order tracking deflects one of the most common questions in ecommerce customer service — where is my order? — by giving customers real-time information about the status of their orders.
And when customers request returns and cancellations or report issues, they are prompted to fill out forms that give your team all the context they need up front to resolve the issue without additional back-and-forth.
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These order tracking and management features are available to customers in the Help Center as well as the chat widget, for customer ease and accessibility:
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The Help Center is a turnkey solution for most brands, but it is customizable for brands that desire.
“Gorgias gave us a great wireframe, and we adapted the look and feel from there. The code was easy to adapt and implement — shoutout to our Shopify developer Nathan, who turned our Help Center from good to great in one day.”
— Toby Moors, Customer Happiness Specialist at Loop Earplugs
Nathan was able to develop HTML code to easily modify the Help Center within Gorgias:
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Using this built-in editor, Loop made two major customizations:
First, Loop added icons to each of the categories to make the Help Center more visual and accessible. We think this is a brilliant decision — so much so, that we’re excited to share that you can now add images to articles and categories in your Help Center.
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Second, they embedded the Contact Form directly in the Help Center. Normally, the Contact Form is just one click away from any page in the Help Center. But with Loop’s customization, it’s available on every page of the Help Center.
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With a highly accessible Help Center customized to fit Loop’s standards, they were off to a great start. But a great Help Center might not have great results if it’s not in the right spots.
Here’s how Loop turned a Help Center with a lot of potential into a Help Center with high-impact performance.
While many brands simply link the Help Center in the website footer, Loop prominently links it in the top navigation, greatly improving the Help Center’s discoverability. Keep an eye out — embedding your Help Center directly on your website will soon be much easier.
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Before embedding it on the homepage, Loop’s Help Center received about 16k monthly visits. Now, it’s up to 70k — that’s 70k customers learning more about the product, resolving pre-sales objections, resolving issues with their earplugs, or get the basic information they need to submit a support ticket with a more advanced question.
Plus, it’s 70k customers not turning to the support team as the first line of defense.
If you’re currently trying to make your Help Center more discoverable, also consider linking it in your customer support email signatures and any order confirmation emails.
The content in Loop’s Help Center is valuable outside the Help Center, thanks to Automate’s Article Recommendation feature. When customers send a question in the chat widget, AI scans the message’s contents and suggests a relevant article from the Help Center when appropriate.
If customers still have questions, the support agent is only a click away.
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Over the last two months, nearly 16,000 articles were recommended to customers in chat, most of which were successfully deflected (meaning the customer did not have any follow-up questions).
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The success rate of Article Recommendations are 15% higher for Loop than the average merchant. That means 70% of customers who receive an article recommendation click through and don't answer follow-up questions, compared to an average of 55%. This is thanks to Loop's robust, clearly labeled Help Center.
Plus, remember how Loop has 4 domains, spanning different languages? Each of those domains has its own chat portal (hosted under one Gorgias account), linked to the appropriate Help Center. So customers get served article recommendations in their language, and associated with their region’s Help Center.
Loop is on the cutting edge of customer experience, so the team is always looking for new ways to improve. Toby had a couple of ideas of what’s next to explore:
First, they’re excited to take advantage of Quick Response Flows in The Help Center, a recently released Automate feature. With this new feature, your Help Center can provide instant answers to FAQs, just like the chat widget. Plus, Quick Response Flows can be interactive, providing personalized answers based on customer inputs.
For example, you could create a product quiz that suggests the right product based on each customer’s unique goals, challenges, and preferences. Here’s a mock-up:
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Last, Loop is excited that Gorgias is exploring features that let users generate responses with AI trained on Help Center content. Loop’s got a great head-start here, thanks to their robust library of Help Center content.
Feeling inspired? Your Help Center is just a few clicks away. Go to Settings > Help Center (under Channels) to get started. Reach out to our customer support team if you need help along the way!


