

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.
{{lead-magnet-1}}
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.
{{lead-magnet-1}}
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.
The best in CX and ecommerce, right to your inbox

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.
{{lead-magnet-1}}

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.
{{lead-magnet-2}}

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.
{{lead-magnet-1}}
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.

According to Constant Contact, email marketing offers an average ROI of $36 for every $1 spent, making it by far the most cost-effective digital marketing strategy that businesses have at their disposal. If you’re running an ecommerce store, email marketing can be an incredibly effective way to excite potential customers and re-engage current customers.
That said, sending out individual emails to everyone on your subscriber list is simply too time-consuming to be feasible. Instead, you can leverage automated email campaigns to deliver the right messages at the right time without the manual work.
We’ll help you get started creating an effective email marketing strategy driven by the power of marketing automation. We'll take a look at everything you need to know about email automation for ecommerce stores, including eight examples of email automation series built to attract and retain more new customers.
{{lead-magnet-1}}
Email automation is the process of building emails and setting them to automatically send to your email list based on the criteria you choose. It’s used for both transactional and promotional emails, as part of a broader email marketing strategy.
Automated emails can be sent at specific times and triggered by specific criteria. Triggers might include a recipient’s newsletter subscription, purchase history, clicks on links, time since their last purchase, and more. For transactional emails, a typical automation example is sending a user a shipping update or password reset email.
While email automation is relatively straightforward to set up for businesses of all sizes — which is a big part of why email marketing can offer such a high ROI — there are a couple of things you’ll need to put in place before you can begin sending automated messages.
First, you’ll need to use an email automation tool that will allow you to deliver one-off messages and multi-message campaigns to your subscribers. We’ll cover some of these below. Second, you’ll need to create email templates for your automated campaigns targeted to specific audience segments.
With the right automation platform and high-quality message content, email automation is something that any ecommerce business can leverage for outstanding results. It can help boost your store's conversion rate, reduce cart abandonment rate, improve your customer experience, and beyond.
To help you get up and running, we’ll walk through eight of the most important email automation series for reaching your revenue, customer satisfaction, and retention goals. As you build emails for each of these flows, make sure to read up on email marketing best practices for tips and inspiration.
Given that nearly 7 out of every 10 ecommerce carts are abandoned, salvaging even a small percentage of your store's abandoned carts can yield substantial returns. Turning those exits into sales could be as easy as setting up automated cart abandonment emails. According to Mailchimp, cart abandonment emails yield 34 times more orders per recipient than through standard marketing emails alone.
Many times, simply reminding customers that they still have products in their shopping cart is all that it takes to convince them to complete their purchase. Many ecommerce stores also choose to offer discounts to encourage conversions.
The main goal of abandoned cart emails is to reduce your cart abandonment rate, a metric that should be easy to track via the analytics features of the ecommerce platform you use. Conversion rate and click-through rate can also be used to gauge whether your abandoned cart emails are as compelling as they should be.
Automated email marketing is a great way to present would-be and current customers with personalized recommendations that pique their interest. It pays off: According to Barilliance, average order value (AOV) increases by 369% when prospects engage with a single product recommendation.
In addition to helping you form more robust customer relationships, product recommendation emails can help you upsell or cross-sell a new product to the customers most likely to buy them.
The goal of product recommendation emails is twofold. One, product recommendation emails encourage repeat purchases from customers who have already given your online store the stamp of approval. Tracking clicks and conversions on each recommendation is an excellent way to evaluate these emails.
Two, product recommendation emails let customers know that you’re paying attention to their interests and value their business. No one likes seeing suggestions for products they’d never consider buying. A customer survey could help you measure whether your customers feel your tips are on target.
Strategically sending discounts is one of the most popular ways to utilize automated email marketing. According to Adoric, 44% of consumers check branded emails for discounts and other valuable offers.
To really capitalize on the benefits of discount emails, though, your offers should be triggered based on customer behavior. If a customer has been browsing a specific product, for example, you could send them a discount code as a welcome.
As we touched on above, you can also send discount codes to customers who have abandoned their cart or on their previous purchases. It’s also common to automate discount emails to send if a certain amount of time has elapsed since a customer’s last purchases, whether it’s two weeks or two months. There are endless possibilities when it comes to tailoring discounts.
The goal of a discount email is simple: to encourage conversions by offering customers savings on the products they’re most interested in. This makes tracking the success of your discount emails as simple as monitoring the conversion rate and click-through rate of the discount emails you send out. You can also look at average order value (AOV) and customer lifetime value (CLV) to see how discounts impact overall spending.
Welcome emails that greet your new subscribers have an average open rate of 50%, making their open rate 86% higher than standard newsletters. Wordstream reports that are 320% more revenue is attributed to welcome emails compared to other promotional emails.
Simply saying hello to new subscribers and providing product highlights is an excellent way to get them excited about what your store has to offer and let them know that you’re happy to have them in the fold. It’s also a prime opportunity to offer welcome discounts, planting the seeds for their first or next purchase.
The ultimate goal of a welcome email series is to convert subscribers into loyal, paying customers. This makes conversion rate an important factor to consider when sending out these emails.
Beyond this, welcome emails are also a great way to let your audience know the benefit of engaging with your messages (discounts, exclusive sales, first looks at products, etc.) and make them more likely to open subsequent emails. So, the open rate is an important metric to watch.
One of the most significant benefits of email automation is streamlining and speeding up transactional email sending. Unlike marketing emails, your customers expect to receive lightning-fast order confirmations, receipts, status updates, and more.
For example, email receipts that are sent out when a customer makes a purchase have an average open rate of 70.9%, making these emails more likely to be read than any other type of message. Even small delays may decrease confidence or lead to customer service tickets filling up your queue. Email automation lets you proactively inform customers of changes and get ahead of questions.
The most important objective of update and order confirmation emails is to provide detailed information and answer customers’ questions. You can track email metrics like open rate as well as customer service metrics like the number of tickets related to receipts, shipping status, and so on.
According to data from a Stitch Labs report on customer loyalty, repeat customers make up almost 25% of a store's revenue despite only making up 11% of a store's customer base on average.
This makes it especially important to engage your repeat customers and ensure that they continue coming back to your store. For this purpose, automated email campaigns that are targeted based on the behaviors and interests of your repeat customers can be highly beneficial. Your email series could include interesting blog reads, product ideas or inspiration videos, promo codes, featured customers, and more.
The goal of repeat customer emails is to encourage repeat business from your store's most valuable segment of customers. Open rate, click-through rate, and conversion rate are the most important metrics to track when sending out these emails.
Few things are more valuable or actionable for an online retailer than in-depth customer feedback. With automation, you can schedule email surveys that collect this all-important data on a regular basis, whether monthly, quarterly, or yearly. You can also schedule them to send after key interactions like purchases, returns, or customer service conversations.
Customer feedback emails are also a good opportunity to request that customers leave a review on the products that they've purchased. Small discounts, gift cards, or prize drawings can be valuable incentives for customers to share their thoughts.
While the goal of most ecommerce email marketing campaigns is to encourage conversions, this isn't the goal of customer feedback emails. Instead, the goal of these emails is to gather feedback from your customers in the form of either survey responses or online reviews. This makes open rate and click-through rate the most important metrics to track for these email campaigns.
Eventually, some subscribers may start to ignore the emails you send if they don’t find them valuable. Often, segments of subscribers aren’t even receiving your emails because their contact information is outdated.
If you notice that your open rate is starting to suffer, re-engagement or "win back" email series can help. These emails are all about understanding what drives customers to engage with your emails, confirming contact details, and reigniting the interest of your subscribers. There are many different approaches. You can offer product recommendations and discounts, ask readers to verify their email addresses if they like your content, and more.
The goal of re-engagement emails is to motivate inactive subscribers to take action, whether buying, browsing, or unsubscribing. Monitoring the open rate, click rate, and the number of unsubscribes for these series is crucial. You can also gauge the success of these campaigns by tracking conversions.
Automation begins with great software. You’ll want to look for options that integrate seamlessly with your other ecommerce automation tools, such as your customer service or inventory management platforms. Today, the top email automation tools include the following:
{{lead-magnet-2}}
Automation lets your business enjoy all the unique, worthwhile benefits of email marketing without demanding more human power or a more significant time investment. Here are the specific advantages of automating your email campaigns.
We mentioned earlier that email marketing is unrivaled when it comes to ROI, yielding an average of $36 for every $1 spent. This statistic alone is more than enough to convince most ecommerce businesses to invest their efforts in this channel.
One reason why email marketing offers such a high ROI is that email marketing is an incredibly low-cost marketing avenue. Once you have a list of subscribers, the only real expense associated with email marketing is the cost of paying for a subscription to an email marketing automation platform.
These platforms are available at a variety of price points, including free options with robust feature sets, and let you send to hundreds or thousands of customers every month. When the "I" in "ROI" is this low, there’s potential to achieve a substantial return on your investment.
Automated emails, transactional and promotional, are vital for creating a customer-centric brand.
Fast transactional emails, such as responses to customer service requests, make your subscribers feel heard and valued. They're a great form of customer self-service. Nearly 50% of customers say they expect an email response from businesses in less than four hours. Automated messages speed up your customer service response times.
Email automation is also effective at keeping customers interacting with your brand. For example, 45% of subscribers who receive “win back” (re-engagement emails) will go on to open subsequent emails, according to data from Return Path. By scheduling regular messages, you can retain customers who might have otherwise been lost.
Automated email marketing also allows you to segment your list of subscribers based on factors like web activity, purchase history, and interests in order to create targeted cross-selling and upselling opportunities. Ecommerce platforms and CRMs offer plenty of data to inform triggered campaigns.
Say you have a segment of customers who purchased a winter coat from your store. You can set up an automated, personalized campaign that recommends scarves and mittens to pair with their purchase. This is a great way to raise average order values among your existing customer base.
With the right tools, all of the above benefits of email marketing can be accomplished with minimal manual input from your company's sales, marketing, or customer service staff.
Once you’ve created the necessary email templates and set up criteria to trigger email sends, automated email campaigns practically run themselves. This frees up your teams to focus on tasks that truly need a human touch (and larger projects like SEO for your store) while making them faster and more efficient at repetitive but essential tasks.
At Gorgias, we’re committed to helping businesses make the most of ecommerce automation and hands-free email marketing through our convenient central hub. Our helpdesk platform integrates with popular marketing automation platforms. It makes it easy to manage email communication, SMS communication, and social media messaging, allowing you to provide the kind of customer service that turns visitors and newcomers into loyal shoppers.
Want to learn more about how Gorgias empowers your online store? Book a demo.

Finding the best Shopify theme for your business may feel like a huge undertaking — and it is. You have to identify themes, test them, and determine criteria as you go. It can easily start to feel overwhelming.
To make this process a little easier for you, we’ve analyzed 13,191 Shopify stores and hand-picked the 26 most popular themes to help get you started. But before diving in, it’s important to understand how to approach choosing the right Shopify theme for your business.
The top ten Shopify themes we recommend are:
A free theme or a premium one? A template or a custom theme? Which one you should choose actually depends on many factors.
If you’re looking for a Shopify theme for your store but don’t know where to start, answering the following questions might help:
There is no “one size fits all” strategy for choosing a theme because every business is unique, so take time to figure out the questions above to narrow down your options.
Pro tip: Get inspired from established stores by using a Shopify theme detector to identify the theme they’re using. You’ll get a lot of ideas to build your own ecommerce store, for sure.
Shopify hosts a limited selection of themes on their website. These official Shopify themes go through intensive testing for quality and bugs. Usually, they sell at a premium pricepoint compared to non-approved themes — but offer merchants the most effortless and professional-looking stores.
Price: $350
Website: Mojave Shopify Theme
Mojave is a flexible, modern, premium Shopify theme designed by DigiFist. It’s built with fashion, health and beauty, apparel, and clothing brands in mind. Mojave’s modern design features a detailed product page with large images, clean lines, and minimalist fonts that will capture (and hold) your customer's attention. Mojave supports all the new Online Store 2.0 features, such as drag-and-drop sections and blocks to create custom pages in your store without special coding. Mojave comes with flexible, well-designed blocks for images, products, videos, quotes, and more.

Price: $220
Website: Retina Shopify Theme

Developed by Out of the Sandbox, Retina is an ideal choice if you’re selling apparel or furniture and housewares. Retina offers four styles: Austin, Montreal, Melbourne, and Amsterdam, with different color palettes.
Each style includes useful features like product recommendations, multiple home page videos, custom promotion tiles, product image zoom, and slide-out cart. You can also create a self-service FAQ page so customers can find answers to common questions themselves.
If you choose Retina, you can be sure your ecommerce website is mobile-friendly and leveraging Search Engine Optimization (SEO) to reach more Shopify customers.
Price: $350
Website: Flow Shopify Theme

Flow offers three sharp and minimalist designs (Queenstown, Byron, and Cannes) that help your products stand out. This theme is great if you’re selling high-end items or you want to direct customers to unique features of your products.
Flow allows you to feature a YouTube or Vimeo video on the homepage, display your products in a masonry-style grid, and showcase information about a specific collection with a page sidebar. You can also add a slide-out cart so your customers can easily add products to their shopping cart without leaving the current page. There is a promotional banner where you can set up to promote your latest offers.
Keep in mind that you can contact the Flow developers team via email only. The phone and video call support aren’t available.
Price: $260
Website: Paper Shopify theme

Paper is an easy-to-use and modern Shopify theme designed by Brickspace Lab. Paper’s clean and thoughtful design features large imagery with in-depth branding customizations. You will be able to take advantage of new Online Store 2.0 features and build custom templates with expertly designed drag-and-drop sections.
Price: $240
Website: Parallax Shopify Theme

If you want to build a modern ecommerce site, think about Parallax. This theme offers a striking parallax scrolling effect, enhancing your brand’s style and making it more appealing to customers.
Parallax offers four styles: Aspen, Madrid, Vienna, and Los Angeles. These styles share features like parallax effect, a multi-level menu, promotional banner, multiple homepage videos, and slide-out cart.
Parallax is also developed by Out of the Sandbox, so you can be sure you’ll receive excellent customer support from the team.
Price: $350
Website: Taiga Shopify theme

Taiga is a blazing-fast and mobile-first premium Shopify theme for D2C brands designed by award-winning Shopify Plus agency Woolman. It gives you outstanding visual freedom: over 10+ video-supporting sections with unparalleled access to define your design settings. Zero customized code to make your brand feel unique.
Taiga is developed for the needs of modern merchants. Quality code powers winning speed: two components you need as a fast-growing sustainable business.
Additional key features
Price: $260
Website: Testament Shopify Theme

Testament offers four styles (Genesis, Exodus, Revelation, and Deliverance), aiming to help you create a seamless shopping experience for your customers.
Testament supports quick view, multi-column menu, color swatches, collection page sidebar, and homepage video. The theme comes with the sticky navigation feature, allowing you to keep menus fixed to the top of your page as you scroll down.
Price: $350
Website: Prestige Shopify Theme

Prestige is a premium Shopify theme designed for high-end ecommerce businesses and is great for businesses in clothing and accessories, health and beauty, as well as business equipment and supplies. It supports three styles (Allure, Couture, and Vogue) and is great for editorial content, visual storytelling, and physical stores.
{{lead-magnet-1}}
Price: $350
Website: Impulse Shopify Theme

Impulse is great if you often run promotion campaigns because it allows you to display custom promotions in different places in your store.
Impulse allows you to display promotional content on collection pages and promote sales with custom promotion tiles. Its features also include homepage menu lists, collection sub-listing, custom collection sidebar filters, and pickup availability.
Price: $350
Website: Motion Shopify Theme

If you want to use animation and video in your store, consider the Motion theme. It’s a premium Shopify theme designed and supported by Archetype Themes.
Motion includes many interesting features that aim to bring your brand to life regardless of catalog size, including multiple text, image, and page animations as well as multiple auto-play YouTube and videos on homepage.
Price: $320
Website: Symmetry Shopify Theme

Symmetry is another great Shopify theme for stores selling different product categories. It supports four styles: Salt Yard, Beatnik, Chantilly, and Duke.
One of Symmetry’s best features is reorderable homepage rows, allowing you to display products, blog posts, or promotions in any order with customizable rows. Besides, this theme provides slideshow, long-form design, quick buy view, and multi-column menu.
Price: $350
Website: Envy Shopify Theme

Envy offers an intuitive design with four styles: Oslo, Copenhagen, Stockholm, and Gothenburg. It’s perfect for stores that focus on regular promotions and featured products.
Envy features include display discounts, free gifts, and other promotional content with a pop-up or a banner as well as the ability to tag images using image hotspot linking.
Price: $280
Website: Atlantic Shopify Theme

Atlantic is great for high-volume stores. It’s designed to help you grow and scale your business faster.
Atlantic supports four styles (Organic, Light, Modern, and Chic). Features include a multi-column menu, slideshow, quick buy, modular-style homepage, and pickup availability. This theme receives many five-star reviews on the Shopify theme store because of its excellent customer support.
Price: $300
Website: Modular Shopify Theme

Modular comes in three styles (Chelsa, Mayfair, and Hoxton) that are well-suited for a wide range of products. It also focuses on clean and minimalist design.
Using Modular, you can give customers a better experience with scrolling between product pages, adding items to their carts without leaving pages (one tactic to help recover abandoned shopping carts), and quickly filtering products by brand, price, etc. You can also add customer testimonials to build trust with first-time shoppers.
Price: $340
Website: Empire Shopify Theme

Designed and supported by Pixel Union, Empire allows you to create a store that offers customers the same shopping experience as Amazon. Empire comes with three styles (Graphic, Supply, and Industrial) optimized for stores with large catalogs. Empire offers features like homepage menu lists, pickup availability, live search, advanced product filtering, and quick add-to-cart functionality.
Price: $320
Website: Pipeline Shopify Theme

Pipeline is another minimalist Shopify theme with parallax effect scrolling and three unique styles (Light, Bright, and Dark). This theme is best suited for stores with a large number of products.
Like many other themes in this list, Pipeline offers a multi-column drop-down menu, a modular-style homepage, and advanced product filtering. The theme also supports large images, which means those images fit seamlessly into your pages.
Price: $220
Website: District Shopify Theme

No matter what you’re selling, the District Shopify Theme could be great for your shop if you have large catalogs and a desire to showcase featured products and collections. District features Shopify’s Online Store 2.0, which uses drag-and-drop sections to create custom pages without coding.
Price: $260
Website: Icon Shopify Theme

If you’re looking for a Shopify theme to highlight images and other content, Icon may be perfect for you — especially if you’re also in the fashion, health and beauty, or home and garden industries. Icon is also uniquely set up for stores with large catalogs and dropshippers. This theme also features numerous marketing and conversion features like promo banners, in-menu promos, cross-selling, blogs, back-in-stock alerts, quickview, FAQ page, and store locator.
Price: $240
Website: Responsive Shopify Theme

Looking for a focus on your products? You may want to check out the Responsive Shopify theme as it puts your products and brand at the forefront, utilizing full-width imagery. Responsive is ideal for fashion, beauty, and sports and recreation shops with large catalogs. Even better, the Responsive theme looks stunning on every screen across devices.
Merchants can also find themes that aren’t in Shopify’s official theme library. These themes are often high-quality (especially those with a many reviews and high ratings, like the ones below) and usually a bit less expensive. But they aren’t vetted by Shopify, and therefore may be a little rougher around the edges.
Price: $77
Website: Vendy Shopify Theme

Vendy is a premium multipurpose Shopify theme for fashion. It’s developed for comfortable use and flawless online store creation. Even if you are not tech-savvy at all, with Vendy you can launch a store of any complexity. Plus, this theme is perfect for dropshipping
What’s more? Vendy is a synonym for “responsive clean design.” Also, Vendy allows flexible editing in the Shopify Visual Builder and the number of pre-made layouts. Without a doubt, you will like varied page templates, catchy web forms, product wish lists and lists, and other perks. As well, this Shopify theme for fashion is packed with unique lookbook and blog templates. Just try it and customize it as you prefer!
Price: $89
Website: Ella Shopify Theme

Ella offers +17 homepage layouts, +16 child themes, +7 category pages, +10 product pages, multiple headers and footers, and more. It’s an all-in-one Shopify theme, ideal for any stylish fashion and clothing stores.
Ella allows you to design your store using features like quick shop, quick edit cart, quick update car, multiple languages, multiple currencies, product recommendation, upsell bundle, etc. This theme also includes smart search and suggestion features, enhancing the shopping experience.
Price: $79
Website: Shella Shopify Theme

When it comes to Shopify themes for fashion, Shella can be considered one of the best. This theme is developed with fashion in mind, meaning everything on it is optimized to help you get your fashion stores noticed.
Here is what makes Shella worth checking out:
Price: $99
Website: Basel Shopify Theme

With plenty of design options, Basel allows you to design your store in many different ways. For example, Basel supports the drag-and-drop page builder, making it easy for you to add/remove/replace elements on pages. It also comes with several header variations, colors, and backgrounds.
Price: $99
Website: Porto Shopify Theme

Porto is a popular Shopify theme used by more than 45,000 ecommerce merchants. It’s built with amazing UI and UX experience and is continuously being updated.
Porto’s highlight features:
Price: $89
Website: Wokiee Shopify Theme

As a Premium Shopify theme, Wokiee is not your basic theme; it can act as a powerful design tool to help your business grow. Even with its in-depth premium features, it is still easy to create fast, responsive, and mobile-friendly websites to provide a top-notch user experience.
Price: $59
Website: Roxxe Shopify Theme

The Roxxe Shopify theme is a versatile choice for a shop that wants options but also desires a robust yet modern look. Roxxe has over 70 pre-built homepages, as well as 50 pre-designed layouts with sections you can rearrange and combine as you see fit. Needless to say, Roxxe is a fairly simple theme to use that also comes with plenty of easy-to-follow instructions.
There you have it! We hope this list of the best Shopify themes made it easier to find what you need to get your online shop up and running. And check out our guide on Shopify vs. Shopify Plus if you're interested in additional ways to customize your site beyond these themes. As you continue building your brand and updating your website based on the needs of your customers, you’ll also want to review your customer service process.
Luckily, you can tap into a Shopify helpdesk app like Gorgias to level up.
Gorgias’ customer service platform is uniquely positioned to help Shopify owners with all of their customer service needs, from automating your most common tasks to using machine learning to better help customers.
Learn more about Gorgias for Shopify stores.
{{lead-magnet-2}}

TL;DR:
Shopping cart abandonment is one of the biggest revenue leaks in ecommerce. Customers browse your store, add products to their cart, and then disappear before completing checkout. With abandonment rates averaging around 70%, the impact on your bottom line is real.
But abandonment isn't random.
It's driven by friction in your checkout flow, unexpected costs, trust gaps, and limited payment options.
This guide shows you how to diagnose abandonment causes and streamline your checkout. You'll learn to build shopper confidence and recover lost sales through proven strategies.
Shopping cart abandonment is an event that occurs when a shopper adds items to their online cart but leaves the website before completing the purchase.
It's distinct from checkout abandonment, which refers specifically to customers who enter the checkout flow but exit before finalizing their order. While checkout abandonment is a subset of cart abandonment, both represent significant lost revenue opportunities.
According to a Baymard Institute study, the average shopping cart abandonment rate for ecommerce stores is about 70%. The metric varies across industries, with the automotive industry reporting the highest shopping cart abandonment rate (89.11%), according to Statista.
What does that mean in terms of revenue? Reducing cart abandonment by 33% is equivalent to growing your customer base by 23%. Completely eliminating cart abandonment (while not feasible) would in theory triple most online stores' revenue. Reducing cart abandonment may not be easy, but it's a whole lot easier and less expensive than acquiring tons of new customers.
The cart abandonment rate formula is straightforward:
Cart abandonment rate = (1 - (completed purchases / initiated checkouts)) × 100
"Initiated checkouts" refers to the number of shopping sessions where a customer added at least one item to their cart, while "completed purchases" counts the transactions that were finalized.
For example, if you had 1,000 initiated checkouts and 300 completed purchases, your cart abandonment rate would be (1 - (300/1,000)) × 100 = 70%.
Understanding the causes of cart abandonment is the first step to reducing it. Most abandonment happens for predictable reasons that fall into four main categories:
Unexpected fees are the number one reason shoppers abandon their cart. These include surprise shipping costs, taxes, and handling fees revealed at checkout. When the final price doesn't match expectations set earlier in the shopping journey, buyers lose trust and leave.
Checkout friction from long forms, multiple checkout pages, and forced account creation slows buyers down and makes the process more difficult. Every additional click or required field increases the risk that a shopper will give up and navigate away.
Trust signals like Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) certificates, recognizable payment gateways, and clear return policies are essential for converting hesitant shoppers. When these elements are missing or unclear, customers worry about security and legitimacy, leading them to abandon their cart.
Payment flexibility matters: missing a shopper's preferred payment method (digital wallets, buy now pay later options) or offering only slow or expensive shipping options creates friction. When customers can't pay or receive their order the way they want, they're more likely to shop elsewhere.
Before implementing fixes, you need to diagnose your specific abandonment drivers. Analytics, session replays, and customer feedback reveal where and why shoppers drop off. This data allows you to prioritize the changes that will have the biggest impact.
Funnel analysis helps you identify which stages lose the most shoppers — product page, cart page, or checkout. Track behavior signals like rage clicks (repeated clicking on non-functional elements), error messages that block progress, and unusually long time spent on checkout pages. These patterns reveal specific friction points.
Tools like Google Analytics, Shopify Analytics, or dedicated helpdesk platforms let you track:
Session replays let you watch real user journeys to spot friction points you might miss in aggregate data. Heatmaps reveal where users click, scroll, and hesitate, showing you which elements draw attention and which are ignored. Voice of Customer (VoC) tools like exit-intent surveys and post-purchase feedback let you ask shoppers directly why they left or what almost stopped them from buying.
Effective VoC methods include:
A/B testing validates which changes — like removing a form field, adding trust badges, or reordering checkout steps — actually reduce abandonment. Test one variable at a time for clear results, and let tests run long enough to reach statistical significance. Continuous testing helps you iterate and improve over time.
The goal is simple: make checkout as fast and frictionless as possible. Reducing steps, fields, and clicks directly lowers abandonment.
A one-page checkout or minimal-step flow keeps shoppers moving forward. Every additional page or click increases drop-off risk. Where possible, combine shipping and billing information on one screen to minimize navigation.
Remove unnecessary fields like phone numbers or dates of birth that aren't essential to completing the order. Enable browser autofill and address verification to reduce manual typing and speed up completion.
Forcing account creation adds friction and drives abandonment. Offer guest checkout as the default option, allowing customers to complete their purchase without setting up an account. For even faster completion, integrate accelerated wallets like Shop Pay, Apple Pay, and Google Pay that enable one-click checkout for returning customers.
Popular accelerated payment options include:
A progress bar shows shoppers how close they are to finishing, reducing anxiety about checkout length. Inline validation provides real-time error messaging so users can fix mistakes immediately instead of hitting a wall at the final submit button.
An editable cart lets shoppers adjust quantities, remove items, or return to browse without losing their progress. Locking users into checkout without easy navigation back to the store increases frustration and abandonment.
Mobile abandonment rates are typically higher than desktop, often reaching 85%. Use mobile-first design principles: large tap targets, minimal typing requirements, and fast load times. Test your checkout on real mobile devices, not just desktop browsers resized to mobile dimensions.
Eliminate doubt and surprise so shoppers feel confident buying. Trust signals, clear policies, and upfront costs reduce hesitation at critical decision points.
Displaying upfront costs — including shipping, taxes, and fees — on the product page or cart page prevents sticker shock at checkout. According to research from the Baymard Institute, unexpected costs like shipping and taxes are the top reason customers abandon their carts.
One option is to charge a flat rate for shipping and taxes. This lets you display final costs on product pages, so customers don't have to wait until checkout.
While this might have a higher upfront cost, the reduction in cart abandonment could more than make up for the investment.
Another option is to design your cart page or checkout page so that customers can input their address immediately, allowing your system to calculate shipping costs and taxes right away.
Showing delivery estimates on product pages or in the cart helps shoppers decide if the item will arrive in time for their needs. Unclear delivery dates create doubt and increase the likelihood of abandonment.
A generous, easy-to-find return policy reduces purchase risk, especially for first-time buyers. Money-back guarantees build confidence by eliminating the financial risk of trying a new product or brand. Shoppers return 30% of all products ordered from online retailers. For this reason, a clear and customer-friendly return policy is key to building trust.
Parachute includes a clear label to show off their free and carbon-neutral shipping and returns:

To make returns and exchanges even easier for your customers and agents, consider a dedicated returns management app. Our favorite apps are Loop, Returnly, and ReturnLogic. They are comprehensive, affordable, and integrate with Gorgias for a centralized returns process.
Display trust badges like SSL/TLS certificates, Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard (PCI DSS) compliance seals, and payment processor logos (Visa, Mastercard, PayPal) near the payment button. These visual signals reassure shoppers that their payment information is secure.
Social proof like customer reviews, star ratings, and testimonials on product pages and checkout reduces doubt about product quality. Real-time social proof (e.g., "10 people bought this today") creates urgency and validates the purchase decision.
Payment flexibility means offering multiple payment methods to accommodate different shopper preferences. Customers expect to find their preferred payment method at checkout, whether that's credit cards, digital wallets, or buy now pay later options.
Popular payment methods include:
Choosing a payment processing solution that can accept various payment methods is the simplest way to offer your customers this level of flexibility. For example, with PayPal, ecommerce stores can accept credit card payments, debit card payments, payments via a PayPal account, and payments via PayPal credit cards.

Offering free shipping — or a clear free shipping threshold (e.g., "Free shipping on orders over $50 USD") — reduces abandonment significantly. Showing multiple delivery options (standard, expedited, same-day) gives shoppers control over speed versus cost trade-offs.
Read more: Want to reduce shipping costs? Read our guide on how to offer free shipping.
Live chat on product pages and checkout helps shoppers get instant answers to questions that might otherwise cause abandonment. Ecommerce customer service that can catch customers at critical moments is key to reducing online shopping cart abandonment. AI-powered chatbots can handle common questions 24/7, ensuring customers receive timely support even outside business hours.
A customer support platform like Gorgias lets you add live chat to your website. This enables customers to instantly connect with a support agent. This timely support can nudge shoppers toward completing their purchase.
Having live chat support ready is especially important when high average order value (AOV) customers are on the fence.
Check out our customer story on CROSSNET, a Gorgias customer that once secured a whopping $450,000 through a live chat conversation:
Re-engage shoppers who left without buying through proven recovery channels. Email, SMS, and retargeting ads bring customers back to complete their purchase.
Abandoned cart emails remind shoppers of items left behind and encourage them to complete checkout. Send the first email within 1 hour while intent is still high, then follow up at 24 and 48 hours if they don't return.
Best practices for abandoned cart emails:
Many email marketing solutions like Klaviyo and ActiveCampaign make it easy to create automated abandoned cart recovery campaigns.
As far as the copy, check out the cheeky email our friends at Braxley Bands send to customers who leave items in their cart:

They also follow this email up with a text message that offers a 15% off discount.
SMS and WhatsApp messages have higher open rates than email, often exceeding 90%. These channels work well for time-sensitive reminders (e.g., "Your cart expires in 2 hours") and should include a direct link to the abandoned cart.
Dynamic product ads (DPA) on Facebook, Instagram, and Google show shoppers the exact items they left behind as they browse other sites. Retargeting keeps your brand top-of-mind and provides additional touchpoints to bring customers back. For best results, combine retargeting with email and SMS for multi-channel recovery.
Exit-intent pop-ups detect when a shopper is about to leave and offer a discount or free shipping to keep them on-site. Urgency messaging (e.g., "10% off if you buy now") can convert hesitant shoppers. Use this tactic sparingly to avoid training shoppers to wait for discounts.
Our analysis of 300 Shopify store owners showed 50% of online stores use website pop-ups to engage visitors. This isn't surprising since pop-ups can yield a conversion rate of between 3% and 11%, compared to standard rates around 2%.
Your ecommerce platform will have pop-up tools like SmartPopup or Pixelpop available for integration. If you use Shopify, check out our list of Shopify pop-ups for a complete rundown of the best tools.
Continuously improve checkout and recovery tactics through testing and optimization. What works for one store may not work for another, so ongoing experimentation is essential.
A/B testing lets you compare two versions of a checkout page or recovery email to see which converts better. Test one variable at a time (e.g., CTA button color, number of form fields, email subject line) and wait for statistical significance before declaring a winner.
Slow page load times increase abandonment — every second counts. Core Web Vitals (Largest Contentful Paint, First Input Delay, Cumulative Layout Shift) are Google's benchmarks for page speed and user experience. Use tools like Google PageSpeed Insights or real user monitoring (RUM) to track performance and identify bottlenecks.
Many tools can optimize page load speeds, including Google's PageSpeed Insights. Ensuring that you are using an ecommerce platform or checkout solution that offers an optimized UI and fast loading times is also crucial.
Recovery apps and integrations available on ecommerce platforms like Shopify and BigCommerce automate cart recovery workflows. Email automation tools, SMS platforms, and retargeting pixel integrations reduce manual effort while increasing recovery rates. Gorgias integrates with Shopify and other platforms to centralize customer data and automate recovery flows across channels.
Gorgias is a conversational commerce platform built for ecommerce brands that need to scale support, drive revenue, and reduce cart abandonment. Here's how Gorgias helps:
Gorgias's AI Agent can handle up to 60% of support inquiries, freeing your team to focus on high-value conversations that drive revenue.
To try our customer service platform free for seven days, sign up for Gorgias today.
{{lead-magnet-2}}

Your job doesn’t end once a customer makes a purchase.
Of course, the marketing work you do pre-purchase plays an important role in establishing a well-rounded shopping experience, but there's a world of tactics to employ after your customer hits the “buy” button that can help you entice first time shoppers to make a second purchase.
Remember that without designing an inclusive experience that encourages customer retention, you may struggle to create a solid growth path for your business. If you want to keep new customers coming, reengage past shoppers, and reduce returns, here are six tips for delivering an outstanding post-checkout experience.
First and foremost, let’s make sure you’re offering great customer support before we explore other options for improving your post-checkout experience. While you might already be doing everything you reasonably can to ensure your customers don’t experience disruptions or problems after a purchase, sometimes hiccups happen. It’s not so much about avoiding problems entirely but rather how you deal with them when they occur.
Sometimes your shoppers will reach out to you after a purchase with questions about their item’s delivery or how to return something. (This is much easier with the right returns management and order management software.) And they may be frustrated or impatient. Make it easier for them (and ultimately better for you) by offering ways to contact you on the channels they prefer. Also, offer proactive customer service in the form of FAQ pages and clear return policies to confusion (and save your agents time).
For instance, if your analytics tell you that your audience is most active on Facebook, make sure your page makes it clear how to reach your support team. You can do this by including the relevant links in the About section and of course, be turning on a chatbot function.

Caption: Dollar Shave Club offers multiple options for contacting their support team in their page’s About section
But even so, customers may make contact simply by posting on your page or commenting on your posts. Employ a catch all approach by integrating your Facebook page to your Gorgias helpdesk and you’ll be able to automatically publish personalized answers in the comment threads.
And if you don’t have one, get live chat on your site! Gorgias can also help with that by allowing you to seamlessly integrate a live chat into your website, with also a list of customizable rules. The live chat button will show consistently on all pages of your site, both on mobile and desktop.

Your customers don’t need to hunt down a special contact page or dig up an email address. They always know exactly where to go when they need help. Also, using live chat is useful to create a personalized, human-centric, accessible, and fast shopping experience, which the value of can’t be discounted!
While the confirmation email should always include basic information (think an order summary and delivery timeline), you can add a few extras to empower your customer to make the most out of their experience with your brand.
If you’re working with a recommendation engine and already produce editorial content, this would be a great opportunity to attach one or two relevant blog articles to the lower third of your confirmation email. Not only serving as a helpful encouragement to spend more time on your site, but sending relevant content helps to reinforce the idea that you are an expert in your field.


Caption: The order confirmation email from Warby Parker includes tips on how to be sure you’ve picked the perfect frames for you
You may also wish to consider including a promo code as a thank you for ordering - it can be a small expense that ensures a customer returns.
Once your customer purchases an item from your site, you would benefit from having a system in place that allows them to review their item’s delivery status. This could be as simple as a “vanity” order confirmation page that appears once the purchase is confirmed. Show a simple timeline that displays where they are at in the delivery timeline starting with an origin destination and ending with their home address.
Even if they didn’t register on your site and never return to this page, showing them such an order tracking timeline leaves a good impression on your customer by reinforcing the concept that what they’ve purchased really exists and is on its way.
{{lead-magnet-1}}
You may have been under the misconception that setting up remarketing ads was reserved exclusively for your bounced traffic. While that’s certainly an effective way to recapture lost traffic, you can also use them to remind previous customers about your products when it makes sense to do so for you.
For example, let’s say you’re a cosmetic company and you’ve just launched a new moisturizer. By setting up a remarketing ad that targets those customers who purchased a similar product from you three months ago, you’re finding them again just as they may be in need of restocking. This helps place customers who may have otherwise forgotten about your brand back into your marketing funnel with the goal of getting them to buy from you again.
Let’s embrace the fact that we’re living in the age of social media by applying it to your shipping experience. Make your orders feel like the gift that they are by packing your product in a customized box and filling the empty space inside with fun, yet recyclable fillers like crinkle paper or business cards, personalized notes with instructions on how to leave a review or something simple but enjoyable like brand stickers. When relevant, you may also want to consider including a sample of an upcoming item into your box, or a flyer advertising its existence.

When you create an “unboxing experience” you’ll not only trigger those loyalty-building positive emotions in your customer’s brain but you’re also encouraging them to post about your brand on their social feeds - free advertisement to a similar audience of future customers!
Reviews are one of the most effective ways to increase sales and encourage new customers to shop with you. You need them to grow your business. But not everyone, even happy shoppers, are hardwired to follow up a purchase with a review. In this instance we like to follow the simple manta: ask and you shall receive.
Asking for reviews doesn't have to seem desperate (even though we all desperately want them). Start by building a review request into your post-checkout email workflow that automatically delivers a request to review the purchased product after delivery occurs. Play around with the sound of your email and don’t be afraid to employ a curious but humble tone that expresses your genuine desire to know that they enjoyed what they bought or how they like to see it improved in the future.
We hope you find these six tips useful when it comes to making the most out of your post-checkout experience. As always be patient and in time, you’ll reap the rewards of a job well done. Keep an eye on your retention rate to measure your post-checkout success.
{{lead-magnet-2}}

You may know Zendesk as the first (and the biggest) customer service software. It’s usually evaluated against Freshdesk, Gorgias, Help Scout, and other ticketing systems (also called helpdesks).
But, is it the right customer service tool for you? The answer depends largely on your type and size of business:
For some customers, the sheer size and scale of Zendesk could be hugely appealing. For others, it may indicate a lack of focus and specialization.
As you choose a customer service platform for your business, take a closer look at Zendesk, its features and functions, and whether it will create the best customer experience for your business (at the best price).
{{lead-magnet-1}}
Zendesk is one of the oldest cloud-based customer service platforms sold on a software-as-a-service (SaaS) model. It offers an enormous array of tools, including a helpdesk, email marketing, live chat, sales, employee engagement, and customer engagement software.
Zendesk recently streamlined its product offerings, combining them into three separate tiers, each with its own pricing structure. You can choose three Zendesk Support plans, three Zendesk Sell plans, and five Zendesk Suite plans — a total of eleven pricing tiers and packages. Each of the pricing tiers and packages has its own collection of products and services, which can get confusing.
Below, we highlight some of the main customer service features Zendesk offers. Certain features are only available for Suite customers and Professional or Enterprise level customers, so double check before you sign a contract.
Some people call Zendesk “the godfather of helpdesk tools” because they have been around for a long time. In that time, they have built tons of features onto their ticketing system:
Let’s zoom in on a few features for your customer support needs.
Zendesk has two types of live chat: Zendesk Live Chat (legacy) and Zendesk Messaging.
Zendesk Messaging is a larger app that, on top of live chat on your website, lets you have conversations on messaging apps like Facebook Messenger and WhatsApp. The tool centralizes all of these conversations so the agent can quickly switch channels. However, centralized chat is only available through their Messaging app, a separate tool that connects to Zendesk’s Agent Workspace, which involves some additional billing to set up.
Zendesk Live Chat, on the other hand, is a legacy product that only lets you have conversations on the website. In other words, it doesn’t centralize messages from Facebook Messenger, WhatsApp, or other messaging apps.
Once you have figured out which solution is right for you (and navigated some nickel-and-diming), Zendesk allows you to add chat to your website and talk with customers across messaging apps in real-time:
![]() |
Like many other helpdesk solutions, Zendesk offers you features to build a scalable support system, primarily through FAQs and community forums.
With the basic plan, you can create, organize, and share help center articles in one language. You can also embed support articles, which they call embeddables, as web widgets.
More advanced customer self-service features and support for over 40 languages are only available for customers of higher pricing tiers. And the community forums feature is only available for the Pro and Enterprise customers.
A support and helpdesk solution needs to have a way to collect support tickets, and Zendesk's support ticket system takes a pretty traditional approach to ticketing. In general, their ticketing aims to:
Some helpdesks group tickets into broader conversations; for example, we at Gorgias consider each customer interaction over three days in one channel as a single “billable ticket,” which we believe better reflects the nature of customer service in ecommerce.
However, some businesses may prefer using a tool that sticks to the old-school method.
Zendesk offers Zendesk Explore, which is an arm of their product that gives you a base for collecting, measuring, and analyzing data about your customers and their customer experience:
Zendesk Gather, which is available for Suite Professional, Enterprise, and Enterprise Plus plans, is Zendesk’s community forum solution. You can build online communities that relate to your company or your products, which can help with your branding and give you additional feedback:
Zendesk Sell is the tool's CRM system. It helps improve your sales team's productivity and visibility by storing the full customer account, in context, in one central location:
Like most apps, Zendesk has both pros and cons. As you decide if it's the right tool for you, you’ll need to weigh both to make an informed decision. Below, we’ll cover some of the most significant pros and cons of using Zendesk.
![]() |
Zendesk currently has over 170,000 paid customers, operates in 160 countries around the world, and has a 4.3 out of 5 stars rating on G2, which helps businesses find helpdesk software choices. It clearly works well for many companies.
![]() |
Zendesk may be right for your business if you have:
Zendesk is a behemoth, which is right for behemoth companies. Specifically, companies with 500+ employees and complex product offerings.
One of the biggest benefits of Zendesk for such large teams is that it comes bundled with so many features and backed by so much staff. When Zendesk leverages its entire toolset and consulting, it can service companies that wouldn’t get adequate support from a smaller, more dedicated helpdesk. Think airlines, hospitals, and other enterprises.
If you are large enough to have seven-figure budgets for customer support and expect to work with Zendesk consultants to migrate onto the system, Zendesk may be the right choice for you.
At its core, Zendesk is an enterprise product designed for enterprise organizations that require detailed, advanced reporting and analytics. With the Zendesk Explore add-on, you can have a dedicated product solely for reporting and analytics.
And if you want to pay for more insight, Zendesk consultants will work with your developers and reporting team to streamline insights, build customer configurations, and push analytics to enterprise resource planning (ERP) tools like Oracle and Salesforce.
Zendesk has over 1,000 integrations. It integrates with enterprise-level programs like Oracle, Microsoft Teams, and Salesforce. Most tools helpdesk provide integrations suited for customer service teams at online stores and small businesses, but few connect to the kinds of mammoth software needed for banks, airlines, and other businesses with high regulation.
As mentioned earlier, Zendesk scores very well on Capterra, which indicates many customers are very happy with the service. But many of those customers are not ecommerce businesses. Based on reviews on other platforms, Zendesk may be too much for some ecommerce businesses.
Shopify is one ecommerce platform that is integrated with Zendesk. There are many Shopify helpdesk apps that help ecommerce businesses manage the communication they receive from customers, including Zendesk.
If you take a look at the reviews for Zendesk on the Shopify App Store, you'll find that ecommerce store owners rate the app as 3.6 out of 5 stars, on average. Of the 134 reviews, 39 were rated 1 star.
![]() |
Some of the reasons for low ratings included:
One of the concerns many users have about Zendesk’s customer support software is its complex pricing tiers. And while complex plans could indicate a host of options to best suit your needs, they could also make it difficult to understand what each plan includes (leading to a surprising lack of features down the line.)
It’s difficult to sum up Zendesk’s pricing since there are so many plans and packages, but you can see the cost (billed monthly) for the eight support-related plans below, plus the price of main add-ons below that:
![]() |
If you can't see the pricing on images above, check out the information below:
Plan options listed below with pricing:
Add-on features listed below (listed for each pricing plan) with pricing:
Zendesk Foundational Support plans include just the helpdesk software and ticket systems. It has three pricing tiers:
If you want all of the products Zendesk offers, you'll want a Zendesk Suite plan. Here are the pricing tiers:
We didn’t go into much detail for Zendesk Sell, since we’re evaluating Zendesk’s features as a customer service platform. But if you're looking for a product to manage just your sales team, here's how much you’ll pay for Zendesk for Sales:
![]() |
"What has been really great (and different from Zendesk) is that Gorgias has allowed us to grow tremendously. It allows as many seats as needed. That is really great to be able to flex up the roles of agents as needed.
Cody Szymanski, CX Manager, Shinesty
Zendesk’s designs focus on the needs of enterprise clients of all industries, rather than ecommerce businesses. This means many should-be core features for online stores come at an extra cost. If you're running an ecommerce business, you might find yourself resonating with what some ex-Zendesk customers have to say about Gorgias, an ideal alternative to Zendesk.
Take a look at a handful of reviews that mention Zendesk and Gorgias:
![]() |
Princess Polly is one of the fastest-growing online women's fashion brands in the US and Australia. They used to use Zendesk until they switched to Gorgias: "After migrating to Gorgias, we saw a 40% increase in agent productivity,” says Alexandria Collis, Director of Operations at Princess Polly. “It's an amazing tooI. I was able to see an opportunity, grab it by the reins and take control of our ticketing system without working through some of those silos which we experienced with our old helpdesk."
The switch to Gorgias wasn’t just great for agents; the tool helped Princess Polly improve the customer experience they offered. “Gorgias knows the best ways to address customer issues and build the right tool to help meet those needs,” Alexandra says. “I'd recommend Gorgias to anyone that is highly focused on the overall customer experience. Really the experience from the start to finish, and then beyond."
Read Princess Polly’s customer story to learn more about their swap from Zendesk to Gorgias.
![]() |
Like we said, Zendesk is a powerful product that offers certain enterprise-level features and integrations no other tool in the category can match. But for many ecommerce brands that want dedicated support for their exact type of business, it can be overwhelming and pricey.
Want to see our focus on ecommerce in action? Check out our public feature roadmap. You can see that we’re always improving Gorgias (based on feedback from ecommerce customers). We spend our time making Gorgias the best tool for online stores — that’s it.
Learn why Gorgias is an excellent alternative to Zendesk for ecommerce businesses, including a side-by-side feature breakdown between Zendesk and Gorgias.
{{lead-magnet-2}}
.avif)
Anyone who recognizes that ecommerce customers have high expectations these days also recognizes that fast shipping is part of what keeps those customers happy. We’ve seen non-essential items on Amazon be delayed because of COVID-19, and that’s cause quite a bit of grumbling from both customers and ecommerce businesses. While guaranteeing fast shipping to your customers is definitely a good thing--16% of people have abandoned a shopping cart if the estimated delivery time is too slow--it’s a double-edged sword. Your customers will love getting their order in one or two business days, but it can also be cripplingly expensive.
The solution is complicated. If shipping faster costs more, do you pass the cost along to your customers? Do you let it eat into your profit margin? Believe it or not, there are other options. Is it possible to have your cake and eat it too? Yes, but you’ll need a crash course in logistics if you’re going to find affordable ecommerce shipping. Let’s dive in!
If you’ve ever had to ship your inventory cross-country and had the accompanying jaw-drop when you discovered how expensive that was going to be, you’ve encountered shipping zones before. The further you ship your products, the more it’s going to cost -- obviously -- so how do you get around it?
The answer is zone skipping. To skip zones, you need to store your inventory strategically so that you can choose which location to ship from (and pick the closest one). For example, if you get an order from a customer in Los Angeles and you have inventory stored in Miami and Las Vegas, you’ll want to send them that product from Vegas to save a bunch of money on shipping (and ensure that the order gets to them speedily).
Whether you store and manage your own inventory or rely on a national fulfillment network of warehouses, zone skipping is a smart money saving solution. For example, you’ll probably keep some inventory in a warehouse in Miami, have a location in Pennsylvania to hit the northeast, maybe one in St. Louis for the midwest, and one in Las Vegas to cover the west coast.
Shipping carriers don’t just measure the weight of your packages in pounds and ounces anymore - if this is news to you, this could be a major opportunity to decrease your costs. When a carrier determines the cost of shipping, they charge you the greater of the two weights - dimensional and actual. Actual weight is just what it sounds like, but dimensional weight measures the size of your package. The bigger it is, the more it costs to ship, even if it’s as light as a feather. It makes affordable ecommerce shipping tough for businesses with large or bulky packages, because they always get charged the dimensional weight.
The good news is if your dimensional weight is greater than your actual weight, you can decrease the size of the package to save money. The more you can minimize the volume of your package the more you can save. Think about how to streamline your packaging experience, whether it’s removing unnecessary infill, using boxes that are more specifically fit for your inventory, or getting rid of any bulky extras that you’re throwing in. Making any one of those changes, even if it seems small, can add up to be huge over time.
For something that claims to simplify the costs of shipping, it is a lot more complicated than it seems at first glance. However, offering flat rate shipping has the potential to save you money, so let’s go over what kinds of businesses can save big with flat rates.
Each carrier has its own flat rate shipping system, so it’s well worth your time to check out a full explainer of flat rate shipping. However, it boils down to a few specific instances in which flat shipping could help you save big.
The first is if your products are small, but heavy - this means you’re getting hefty shipping charges due to the actual weight of the product, and shipping in a flat rate box that doesn’t charge by weight could save you a lot. The second is if you ship from coast to coast frequently - for example, if you have a warehouse on the east coast but a lot of your orders come from the west coast. When you ship with UPS or USPS, the flat rate shipping charge doesn’t change depending on distance, so you’d likely save big there. It could also be a good choice if you need to charge your customers a flat rate, or if you fulfill your orders yourself (and then you could take advantage of the convenience).
If you don’t fall into the above categories, though, stay away from flat shipping. It will likely cost you more in the end.

Buy more, pay less. That’s the dream, right? It is when you can manage to get a bulk rate discount from your shipping carrier. If you’re selling a high volume of products and you haven’t looked into getting a bulk discount, you need to get on that ASAP. However, it can be kind of confusing to figure out how to get that discount, as it’s not exactly something that the shipping carriers freely advertise.
There are a few ways you can try to get discounts for more affordable ecommerce shipping from carriers. If you’re a small business and you’re fulfilling everything yourself, you’re most likely to get bulk rates by using a platform like ShipStation or Shippo. They’ll let you compare prices and figure out the cheapest way to ship your items as quickly as possible, and they’re able to take advantage of bulk rate discounts by negotiating with carriers on behalf of all of their clients. Shopify offers a very similar service through their own platform, called Shopify Shipping.
However, unless you’re an enterprise-scale company, the chances are good that the best rates are going to come if you partner with a 3PL fulfillment company. They typically ship a huge volume of packages and are thus able to negotiate a discounted rate - without you having to do as much work.
{{lead-magnet-1}}
The last mile - metaphorically speaking, anyway - is the last step between the warehouse and the customer. This last step can sometimes take the longest. If you’ve ever tracked a package on its way to your house, you may have noticed the significant gap of time between it being out for delivery and actually being delivered. That’s because this step is complicated and relies on a lot of different cogs spinning together as one machine. It can depend on the third party you work with, how busy they are, where their facility is located, what courier they use, and many other factors that are completely out of your control.
As you can imagine, cutting down on the time and cost spent in the last mile is critical. But how can you do it?
First, don’t be afraid to A/B test different courier services to see which one does better. Something like a drone delivery service, while very cool, is probably way too expensive. But trying different companies can help you find that sweet spot between costly and quick. While Fedex and UPS frequently outsource to USPS for the last mile because of their coverage, other options have popped up in the last few years. Just like Uber Eats or Lyft, drivers contract with companies and use their car to complete deliveries - in this case, getting your package to the customer’s door.
You can also consider a pick-up option, which cuts out that last mile entirely. Make the customer come to you! If you have brick-and-mortar stores, setting up in-store pickup is an easy choice. If not, you may even want to consider participating in something like the UPS Access Point program.
In general, the more items you can ship in the same box, the more you can save on shipping. And when you’re saving on shipping, you can give some of those savings back by offering upgraded fast shipping or free shipping. But how?
A common way to encourage larger order sizes is to offer free shipping once they hit a certain minimum (like $50). However, you can try a new take on that, which is to offer upgraded shipping once they hit the minimum, which will reward them for ordering more by getting it to them faster. To set your minimum, look at your average order amount and set it a bit higher than that, which should bring your overall average order amount up over time. To do a trial run, try doing a customer appreciation campaign with upgraded shipping at your new minimum to gauge the popularity.
Another option is to sell in kits or in bulk when you can. By packaging best-selling or complementary products together you can easily increase the size of the order (and it’s an easy upsell for your customer as well). Ultimately, the more items you can fit in one shipment, the cheaper it will be to get it there quickly. This is a great way to balance affordable ecommerce shipping with fast shipping speeds.

Hot take: no one cares about your inserts. Not-so-hot take: the unboxing experience is a crucial part of the impression you make on your customer. Both are true; how?
It’s true that unboxing is a big part of your image, and it takes on a life of its own on social media. The problem is that when companies think of unboxing, they think the more the better - and that’s not necessarily true. Practically, those materials take up valuable space and weight in the box, leading to marginal increases in shipping cost that become significant at scale. They also take longer to assemble, and all of the inserts you throw in will be tossed in the recycling bin (or the garbage) eventually, even if they do bring in an extra lead or two. It’s not worth it.
What is worth it is designing smart. Your unboxing experience doesn’t have to be over the top and filled to the brim with extras - a smart, thoughtful experience is just as meaningful for your customers, and packaging trends are moving that way as well. Consider talking to a package design company to see how you can really wow with design and ditch the inserts, or think about how using less can actually be more effective (like moving towards a more environmentally-friendly image).
Lastly, fast shipping does not have to be an all-or-nothing game. With the U.S. being the size that it is, at a certain point, you’re going to have to make some exceptions to where you can get to quickly. Just ask anyone in Alaska or Hawaii-- they’ll be the first to tell you that it takes ages for shipments to arrive. Finding fast and affordable ecommerce shipping for the entire U.S. is going to be pretty difficult, especially if you’re not working for a 3PL, so you’re going to have to make some sacrifices. Sorry Alaska and Hawaii.
To make conditional fast shipping work for you, you can set parameters that will allow you to offer fast shipping where it is reasonable and affordable to you. This could be within major urban zones, or areas within a certain radius of the warehouse(s) that store your inventory. You can consider shipping to more remote areas, or places a certain distance outside of your core shipping radius, to be like shipping outside the lower 48. Even if you can’t offer fast shipping to all of your customers, you can at least increase your conversion rate where you do offer it without breaking the bank.
Related: Our list of the 12 best shipping softwares for ecommerce.
Fast shipping and low costs are a balancing act. With customers expecting everything faster than ever (and freer than ever) it can feel overwhelming to try to make everyone happy. In reality, you’re going to be best served by cutting your own shipping costs as much as you can, and taking advantage of any deals you can get by using special services. Hope that cake tastes good!
{{lead-magnet-2}}

TL;DR:
Organic visibility is the difference between scaling profitably and burning through ad budgets just to stay visible. Every day, Google processes roughly 3.5 billion searches, and a significant portion are product-related searches with high purchase intent. Millions of ecommerce stores are competing for the same audience.
This guide covers the strategic foundations that matter most: keyword research that targets buyers, site architecture Google can crawl efficiently, on-page optimization that converts, and technical foundations that prevent traffic loss. Whether you're optimizing product pages or rethinking your entire approach, these tactics will help you rank where it counts.
Ecommerce SEO is the process of optimizing online stores to rank higher in organic search results for product and category searches. Unlike general SEO that often focuses on informational content like blog posts, ecommerce SEO zeroes in on people who are ready to buy. This means optimizing product detail pages (PDPs), category pages, and the technical infrastructure that supports them.
The core components include:
Although paid ads will attract more people as well, SEO will cost you a lot less and yield better results in the long run. Paid ads are hindered by things like ad blockers and ad blindness — and they only work when you're investing money into them.
Ecommerce search results are visually distinct and designed for shoppers ready to buy.
The key features of ecommerce SERPs:
Informational queries (like “how to tie running shoes”) typically show blog posts, guides, and how-to content in traditional blue-link format. Ecommerce queries prioritize visual, transactional elements that push organic listings further down the page.
[img: A side-by-side comparison screenshot showing an informational SERP (left) vs. an ecommerce SERP (right) for related queries—for example, "how to choose running shoes" vs. "running shoes"—to visually demonstrate the difference in layout and features.]
Search behavior also varies by specificity. A broad search like “running shoes” surfaces category pages from major retailers, while a specific query like “Nike Air Zoom Pegasus 40” pulls up individual product pages and direct purchase options.
Organic traffic compounds, paid traffic doesn't. Every dollar you spend on ads stops working the moment you pause the campaign. But ranking organically? That's an asset that keeps generating traffic and revenue long after the initial work is done.
The first page of Google captures nearly all the traffic. A study by Chitika found that the first organic result on Google gets 95% of traffic. Positions one through three capture the majority of clicks, and anything beyond page one gets very little traffic.
SEO builds brand authority and trust. Customers trust organic results more than ads — they see you as a legitimate player in your space, not just someone paying for attention. This translates to lower customer acquisition costs (CAC) and higher lifetime value.
Two key metrics show whether your ecommerce SEO is working: click-through rate (CTR) and how much you're spending on paid advertising. Here's how SEO directly impacts both.
Click-through rate (CTR) is the percentage of people who organically see your listing in search results and click it. Paid spend refers to the money you invest in advertising, like Google Ads or pay-per-click (PPC) campaigns.
When it comes to CTR, organic search consistently outperforms paid ads. While paid ads might get 2-5% of searchers to click, the top organic position can capture 25-30% or higher. The main difference is that each organic click costs you nothing, while every paid click comes with a price tag.
The advantage goes beyond individual clicks. When you optimize your site — whether through keyword research, improving product pages, or fixing technical issues — that work continues generating traffic for months or years. In contrast, paid advertising only works while you're actively spending. Stop the ads, and the traffic disappears immediately.
Category |
Organic Search |
Paid Ads |
|---|---|---|
Cost per click |
No cost per click |
Pay for every click |
Click-through rate (CTR) |
25–30% CTR for top positions |
2–5% average CTR |
Effort required |
One-time optimization effort |
Continuous budget needed |
Time to results |
Takes time to see results |
Immediate traffic |
Brand perception |
Builds long-term brand authority |
Seen as promotional content |
Customer trust |
Higher trust from customers |
May face ad blockers and ad blindness |
ROI over time |
Compounds over time |
Requires ongoing investment |
Keyword research is the foundation of ecommerce SEO. It's the process of identifying the exact words and phrases your potential customers type into Google when they're looking to buy. Get this wrong, and you're optimizing pages that no one is searching for. Get it right, and you're positioning your products exactly where buyers are looking.
The keyword research process has three phases: discovery (find potential keywords), intent analysis (understand what searchers want), and selection (choose keywords based on search volume, competition, and business relevance).
For ecommerce, focus on transactional intent or keywords that signal someone is ready to buy. These include phrases like “buy,” “best price,” “free shipping,” or specific product names and models.
Here are three practical strategies to find the right keywords for your store:
Start by entering a broad product term into Google — let's say “dog food” — and watch what appears. You might see suggestions like “organic dog food,” “best dog food for puppies,” and “dog food delivery.” Each of these is a potential keyword target that reflects actual search behavior.
Amazon's autocomplete is even more product-focused. The suggestions there tend to be highly specific since people are typically ready to buy. Compare “dog food” on Google versus Amazon, and you'll notice Amazon surfaces brand names, specific formulations, and package sizes much faster.
Pro Tip: Don't forget the “related searches” section at the bottom of Google's search results page. These are semantically related queries that help you understand the broader topic landscape and discover long-tail variations you might have missed.
Competitor keyword gap analysis is one of the fastest ways to find opportunities. Tools like Ahrefs and Semrush let you enter a competitor's domain and see exactly which keywords they rank for that you don't. This reveals gaps in your own strategy and shows you what's already working in your market.
For example, if you sell camping gear and a competitor ranks for “ultralight backpacking tent under 2 pounds,"” but you don't, that's a clear opportunity to create or optimize a page targeting that specific query.
Pro Tip: People speak differently in communities than they do in broad product searches. Browse subreddits related to your niche — r/camping, r/fitness, r/skincareaddiction — and pay attention to how people speak. The terminology you find there often translates directly into long-tail keywords that tools miss.
Once you've gathered potential keywords from the top search engines, you need to prioritize which ones to actually target. You can't optimize for everything. The three factors that determine whether a keyword is worth your time are search intent, keyword difficulty (KD), and search volume.
Search intent is what someone is trying to accomplish when they search. Understanding intent helps you focus on keywords from people ready to buy. The three main types are:
Prioritize transactional and commercial investigation keywords for ecommerce.
Keyword difficulty (KD) shows how hard it will be to rank based on competition. Most SEO tools use a 0-100 scale. If you're a new or smaller site, target moderate difficulty keywords (KD 20-40) where you can realistically rank within 6-12 months.
Search volume tells you how many people search for a keyword each month. A keyword with 10 monthly searches likely isn't worth targeting, but 500-1,000 searches could drive meaningful traffic — especially with low difficulty and high intent.
The ideal keyword combines transactional or commercial intent, moderate difficulty, and sufficient search volume.
Site architecture is how your website's pages are organized and connected to each other. Good architecture helps Google find and crawl your pages efficiently, helps customers navigate your store easily, and distributes ranking power to your product pages.
As a rule of thumb, keep all products within three clicks of your homepage. That means homepage → category → subcategory → product. Any deeper and products get buried for both customers and search engines. The number of clicks to reach a page from your homepage or “click depth” is important in signaling to Google how important a page is.
Structure your main navigation around your top categories. If you sell headphones, your structure might look like: Homepage → Headphones → Wireless → Onyx Wireless Over-Ear Headphones. Each level should be meaningful and help customers narrow their options.
This is also called breadcrumb navigation, showing users where they are in your site's hierarchy. It appears as a clickable trail at the top of a page, like “Home > Headphones > Wireless > Sony WH-1000XM5.” Breadcrumbs also appear in search results, making your listings more prominent.

Pro Tip: Avoid creating unnecessary subcategories just because you can. Every additional layer adds friction and dilutes your site's ranking power across too many pages.
Faceted navigation refers to your website’s product filters for color, size, price, and brand. They're essential for user experience but create SEO problems if not managed properly.
The problem: Each filter combination creates a new URL. For example, filtering headphones by “red” and “Sony” might create “/headphones?color=red&brand=sony”. With multiple filters, you could end up with thousands of nearly identical pages. This confuses Google and wastes your crawl budget — the limited number of pages Google will bother checking on your site.
The solution: Tell Google which pages to pay attention to and which to ignore. You have two options:
This keeps your site organized in Google's eyes while still giving customers the filtering experience they need.
On-page SEO is optimizing each element of a webpage to rank higher and convert better. Product and category pages are your revenue drivers, so they deserve the most attention.
Focus on these elements: title tags, meta descriptions, URLs, product descriptions, heading tags (H1, H2, H3), internal links, and schema markup.
Title tags are your most important on-page element. They appear as the clickable headline in search results and in browser tabs. Include your primary keyword (stay under 60 characters to avoid getting cut off) and add modifiers that increase clicks like “buy,” “sale,” “free shipping,” or the current year.
Compare these examples:
Meta descriptions appear as the summary text below your title in search results. They don't directly impact rankings, but they heavily influence whether someone clicks your result. Include your keyword, highlight benefits or unique selling points, and keep it under 160 characters. Think of it as ad copy competing against nine other results on the page.
Compare these examples:
Your URLs — the web addresses for each page — should be clean and easy to read. Clear URLs help Google index your site quickly and help visitors understand where they are on your site.
Compare these examples:
URL best practices:
Using the same manufacturer's description that appears on 50 other websites gives Google no reason to rank your page over competitors. Thin, duplicate product descriptions are a major SEO problem.
A strong product description includes:

Pro Tip: Don't forget alt text for product images. Alt text is the descriptive text added to images in your site's backend. It helps Google understand what's in the image and improves accessibility for visually impaired users. Describe what's in the image using natural language and include your product name when appropriate.
Now we're getting into the less visible parts of your website, or the behind-the-scenes elements that shape how both shoppers and search engines navigate your store.
Internal linking connects pages within your own website. When done well, it's invisible to shoppers but logically guides them where they need to go, like naturally suggesting “You might also like these running socks” on a running shoe page. Link related products together, category pages to featured products, and blog posts to relevant products to build up link equity.
Schema markup is like the infrastructure beneath a city — you don't see it, but it's what makes everything work smoothly. It's code added to your pages that translates your content into a language search engines easily understand. Think of it as labeling everything in your store so Google knows exactly what each piece of information means.
For ecommerce, the two most important types are:
Review schema is especially valuable because those gold stars next to your listing significantly increase click-through rates. Most ecommerce platforms have plugins or built-in support for adding schema, so you don't need to code it manually.
Technical SEO covers the behind-the-scenes optimizations that ensure search engines can crawl, index, and rank your site effectively. Poor technical SEO can prevent even the best content from ranking.
HTTPS is non-negotiable. It's a confirmed ranking factor, and browsers now flag HTTP sites as "not secure," which destroys trust and conversions. If you're still on HTTP, migrating to HTTPS should be your first priority.
Core Web Vitals are Google's metrics for page experience:
Poor scores hurt rankings and frustrate users. Speed matters: 52% of mobile shoppers will leave if your site doesn't load immediately, and a one-second delay can reduce conversions by 7%.
Try these optimization tactics:
An XML sitemap is a file (e.g., at domain.com/sitemap.xml) that lists all your important pages and helps search engines discover them efficiently. Most platforms like Shopify and WooCommerce generate sitemaps automatically, but you should still submit yours through Google Search Console to ensure Google knows about every product and category page.
Canonical tags consolidate duplicate content signals. If multiple URLs show the same or similar content (like filter pages), a canonical tag points to the preferred version and tells Google "index this one, ignore the others."
Noindex tags prevent pages from appearing in search results entirely. Use them for low-value pages like thank-you pages, account dashboards, and certain filter combinations. You want Google spending its crawl budget on pages that actually drive revenue, not administrative pages.
Content marketing for ecommerce is about creating content that captures people close to making a purchase, including comparison guides, “best” lists, buying guides, and educational content that positions your products as solutions.
Here are some strategies to create content that drives sales:
Comparison and “best” product lists target commercial intent keywords like “best wireless headphones.” These attract people ready to buy but just need help deciding. Structure posts with feature comparison tables, clear pros and cons, and direct links to your product pages.
Product-led content features your products as solutions. Instead of "10 Best Leather Boots" (which could feature competitors), create "How to Clean and Condition Leather Boots" that demonstrates your leather care products. Or "How to Set Up a Home Office for Under $1000" featuring your desks, chairs, and accessories.
User-generated content (UGC) is social proof that includes everything from reviews and testimonials to customer photos. Reviews often include natural language variations of product terms you'd never think to optimize for. Encourage UGC by sending post-purchase review requests or asking customers to share product photos on social media.
Link building is the practice of earning one-way hyperlinks from other websites to yours. Backlinks are votes of confidence — the more high-quality sites that link to you, the more authority Google assigns to your domain.
While it’s one of the most effective techniques for improving search rankings, there’s a catch: many websites don't want to link to commercial product pages, so you need to get creative.
Here are proven link building strategies for ecommerce:
Even experienced ecommerce teams make avoidable mistakes that damage their SEO performance.
Here are the key mistakes to avoid:
Search is changing fast because of AI. Google now uses AI to create answers directly in search results by pulling information from multiple websites. When someone searches “best lipgloss” Google might show a comparison table with recommendations before anyone clicks a link. These are called zero-click results, where users get their answer without visiting your site.
To stay visible, focus on quality and authority. Structured data helps Google understand your product information clearly, so use it extensively. Your content should fully answer customer questions, not just brief descriptions. Trust signals like customer reviews and links from reputable sites matter more than ever.
Above all, high-quality content still drives traffic even when the playing field has changed.
See how Gorgias helps ecommerce brands optimize customer conversations for SEO and conversions. Book a demo to learn more.
{{lead-magnet-2}}

Almost 50% of consumers depend on ecommerce influencers to guide their purchasing decisions.
Partnering up with an influencer your target audience resonates with can help you attract new customers, cultivate your community, and grow your sales.
We've discussed the benefits of social media for customer service, but in this blog we'll discuss using social media influencers to expand your brand's reach. Here’s what you’ll learn in this guide:
Influencer marketing is the process of working with social media influencers to advertise your ecommerce products on their social channels to their followers. Usually, you'll work with influencers whose followers are within your target audience.
{{lead-magnet-1}}
You know how it works, how to use it, but you’re still not sure how to create an influencer marketing campaign. Don’t worry, it’s not that complicated.
Here’s what you need to know about launching an influencer campaign.
You can’t pick a partner if you don’t know who you want to attract. That’s why creating a “marketing persona” needs to be the first thing you do. Determining what age, gender, and interests of your average customer can help you a lot.
Let’s say you’re selling women's clothing. You do your homework and find out that most of your visitors are ladies in their 40s from North America and Canada. This knowledge narrows your search down. You need an English-speaking influencer that appeals to middle-aged women.
That can get things going.
Once you get to know your audience, you’ll easily find out what are some of their social media platforms on the Internet. Consider platforms like TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, or LinkedIn.

If you’re looking for a universal solution, then you should reach out to Instagram influencers, since the platform has one of the most diverse user-bases. According to Social Media Today, Instagram is the most active influencer platform.
You of course want a partner with a good reach. Contacting a person with less than 1,000 followers doesn’t make any sense, correct? That person can’t be even called an influencer. But you shouldn’t get stuck on every metric.
Engagement is what you’re looking for.
Sometimes, smaller is better. You might be surprised to know that micro-influencers are far more effective than big ones. In fact, an average micro-influencer gets 7X more engagement than a far-reaching one.

As soon as you nail what type of audience you’re targeting and what kind of person would suit your store best, you need to start getting in contact with influencers. However, you can’t just reach out to one and hope you get a response right away.
You need to contact a few social media personalities at the same time. Using a platform such as FameBit, or #Paid you’ll be able to contact several influencers, sort them by followers, age, and other metrics that can be helpful for your marketing campaign.

As we keep saying, you need to find someone that your buyers will find relatable. Relatability is twice as important as popularity if you want to attract the right kind of people.
Talk to the influencers, see what their values are, do they align with your values, and see whether or not they’d shop at your store if you didn’t reach out to them.
Like any other form of marketing, your influencer strategy can and has to be measured. You can’t expect to have a successful strategy without some tweaks along the way. And you can’t really make any corrections to your strategy if you don't know how it’s performing in the first place.
According to research from the Digital Marketing Institute, these are the biggest KPIs for measuring your effectiveness:
Your KPI choice depends on your needs and ambitions. Sit down with the rest of your team, discuss in which direction you want to take things, and only then select important KPIs.
For three-quarters of business owners, measuring ROI is the biggest challenge of an influencer marketing campaign. Nonetheless, measuring success should be one of the most important parts of your campaign.
You need to have the right tools if you want to get the job done right. NeoRech can help you track referrals and monitor the effectiveness of every single influencer you have, while TapInfluence can help you measure your ROI more effectively.
Once you have your influencers in place, your KPIs all set, and all of the measuring tools in place, you can give your partners permission to start the campaign.
For the first couple of days, the surge of visitors might not be huge. However, after a month or so, you can expect to see some serious results from the campaign.
This is a perfect opportunity to get some content for your website. You can always ask for a couple of testimonials from the people you’re working with and place the quote alongside their pictures on your website.
Now your visitors can see who works with you.
Every person that visits your website will know that the influencer vouches for your store, products, and organization. That testimonial will allow you to build your brand, establish credibility, and boost trust among your consumer base.
Last but not least, try to make the partnership mutually beneficial for both parties. By that we mean, consider offering the influencer some discount codes or some of your products.
The influencer can and will send a good number of users your way. That shouldn’t be a one-and-done deal. More than a third of influencers like to work with brands long-term. If the first campaign turns out as planned, why not do it a few more times?
A business can’t rely only on influencers to increase sales. You should look at this as an enhancement tool for your current marketing strategy.
It’s a great, cost-effective way of improving marketing efforts. Nearly 90% of marketers feel that influencer marketing has a better ROI than other, more traditional marketing channels.
Let’s look at a few more ways influencer marketing can help your store…

While a niche influencer may not be able to reach millions of people, they can still have a lot of influence over a small group of users. Niche influencers attract are comprised out of users who share the same interests, buy the same products, and visit the same stores.
Therefore, by working with an influential person, you’ll be able to reach that small amount of people and turn them into regular customers. You just need to find a person that caters to your target audience. For example, if you go into a random gym in your area, you’ll probably find someone wearing Gymshark clothing. The company is huge. At the moment, it’s valued at about $200 million.

And how did the company manage to find the right influencers? By knowing their target audience.
Their gym clothing was aimed at millennials. As soon as Gymshark launched a line of women’s clothing, they sought out young fitness influencers like Nikki Blackketter to team up with them. Soon after, their “Flex Leggings” became a huge hit among millennials.
As we established, while celebrities may be influencers, they’re usually seen as spokespeople for certain brands and companies. Why is that? That’s because celebrities live completely different lives than 99% of us.
Simply put, the average person can’t relate to most celebrities. Relatability is everything if you want your campaign to generate real results. Almost 90% of Gen Z-ers and Millennials follow influencers because they’re relatable.
If you’re selling niche products that aren’t considered mainstream, you may have trouble finding success with mainstream advertising. For instance, anything that Google deems “dangerous advertising” is heavily prohibited.
Everything CBD and marijuana-related products to martial arts equipment and hunting gear all fall into that category. Stores that sell similar products can get a healthy amount of visitors and brand exposure from influencers.
If you want to partner up with an ecommerce influencer to grow your online store, you should start by thinking about how that partnership can help your store increase sales and help your brand become more known. Here are a few things to keep in mind:
And remember: even though influencer marketing is still new and always adapting, it’s just a regular marketing strategy that needs to be monitored and measured. For that, you need the best tools. Speaking of which, check out our post on the best social media integrations for Shopify.
If you are starting out with an influencer campaign, especially on Instagram you may see a spike in engagement on your Instagram feed. If those users are commenting on your posts - especially your products, don’t just ignore them, welcome them to your community.
{{lead-magnet-2}}


