

TL;DR:
If you're wondering what it costs to add AI Agent to your Helpdesk, you're in the right place. This article walks through how pricing works, what counts as a billable interaction, and how to think about the investment before talking to anyone on our team.
The good news: there are no seat fees, no per-message charges, and no token-based billing. You pay for conversations your AI actually resolves. If you've looked into other AI tools for customer support and found the pricing models confusing or hard to predict, Gorgias AI Agent works differently.
A billable interaction is counted when the AI resolves a customer conversation entirely on its own. The customer asks something, the AI handles it, the conversation closes. That's one interaction.
If the AI can't fully resolve a conversation and hands it to a human agent, that ticket shifts over to your regular Helpdesk plan. It becomes a standard resolved ticket. You're not charged for both.
A few things that don't count as billable interactions:
This matters most for brands coming from seat-based tools. With Gorgias, your whole team can work in the platform. Agent seats are unlimited. Pricing scales with what your AI is actually doing, not with how many people have access.
Understand the difference between seat-based vs. usage-based pricing.
AI Agent is an add-on to your Gorgias Helpdesk plan. The two are priced separately but work together. Your Helpdesk plan covers all the conversations your human agents resolve. Your AI Agent plan covers the interactions the AI resolves on its own.
When you choose a plan, you select how many automated interactions you want included per month. Depending on your plan, that ranges from 90 to 2,500+ interactions, with custom interaction numbers available for enterprise. You can see the full breakdown on the Gorgias pricing page.
Each resolved conversation costs $0.90 on most plans. Starter plans begin at $1 per resolved conversation. You only pay for fully automated interactions, meaning conversations the AI handles from start to finish without a human stepping in.
The main input is your average monthly ticket volume. From there, you estimate how many of those conversations AI could realistically handle on its own.
Order status updates, return requests, and shipping questions tend to be the highest-volume ticket types AI resolves well. AI Agent actions shows the full range of what it can handle, which makes it easier to estimate your starting number.
Your actual automation rate, meaning the share of total tickets the AI ends up resolving, emerges from usage over time. Most brands start with their most repetitive ticket types and expand from there as they see results.
Related: Which Gorgias plan should you choose?
You're charged an overage fee for each additional automated interaction if you exceed your plan's baseline in a given month. The exact rate depends on your plan tier and whether you're on a monthly or annual subscription.
Generally, the higher your plan tier, the lower your overage rate. Annual plans also carry lower overage rates than monthly plans. So if you're regularly going over, upgrading to a higher tier or switching to annual often works out cheaper than paying overage fees month after month.
If you're on a Support + Shopping Assistant plan, the overage rate is $1.50 per interaction across all paid tiers. If you're on a Support-only plan, rates range from $1.00 to $2.00 per interaction on monthly plans, and $0.83 to $1.67 on annual plans, depending on your tier.
For seasonal businesses, forecasting your customer service volume before peak periods is the best way to choose the right plan size and avoid unexpected fees.
At $0.90 per resolved interaction on most plans, each AI resolution costs less than a human agent handling the same ticket. Once you know what a human-resolved ticket costs your business, the comparison becomes straightforward.
For brands building an internal case for the investment, how to pitch AI Agent to your boss covers the ROI framing in detail.
To see what results look like in practice, how 10 brands transformed customer support into revenue has real ecommerce examples.
AI Agent comes with everything you need to set it up, customize it, and improve it over time:
The best way to get a sense of what AI Agent will cost is to look at your own ticket volume and the types of questions your customers ask most. From there, the right plan becomes much clearer.
If you want to talk through the numbers with someone from our team, book a demo and we'll walk through it with you.
If you'd rather keep exploring first, here are a few good next reads:
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TL;DR:
Helpdesk 2.0 starts with the people who use it most: the agents.
We spent time understanding customer support from the agent's seat. What do they reach for constantly? What slows them down? What does a better workday look like?
Everything we found is in this brand-new update.
Conversational commerce is the new standard.
In customer support, this means customers expect context to remain intact wherever they reach out, whether a conversation starts on social, moves to email, or ends on a call.
This new approach to support has also changed the agent's role. Recurring tickets, like order status checks, shipping updates, and returns, are now handled by AI. What lands in the agent inbox are edge cases that require human judgment and troubleshooting, or tickets that require the full picture.
However, the original Helpdesk was built for a different era of support.
Context was separated across views rather than built into the conversation itself. It's something one in five Gorgias customers flagged, through support tickets, NPS surveys, and conversations with our team. So, we got to work.
Helpdesk 2.0 is the result.
Here's a look at everything that changed.
Conversations have a natural rhythm, one that’s already found in every messaging tool we use. We brought that same layout into the helpdesk.
Say goodbye to the 2000s email interface and hello to chat bubbles. This updated design changes how quickly you can orient yourself and resolve the ticket in one go.

Chats with customers now look like real conversations, using the speech bubble style you’re familiar with on popular messaging apps.
Checking a customer's history used to mean leaving the conversation, an extra step that interrupted what should have been a smooth workflow.
Now, past conversations open in a sidebar next to the active conversation. You can view a customer’s full history, search through their timeline, and open prior tickets without going to a new page.

Check past conversations, orders, and customer details in the brand-new Customer Timeline.
Order information is easier to reference than ever. Open a ticket, and you instantly see the customer's recent orders, marked with product images and invoice details at a glance. Need to dig deeper? Click on an order, and the expanded information appears in the same panel.
For teams using custom integrations, apps are fixed in a quick-access integration menu on the right.

See order details, product images, and totals at a glance on the right panel, without leaving the conversation.
You shouldn't have to dig through a thread to figure out what AI already tried. Now you don't have to.
When AI Agent escalates a conversation, it includes a concise handover summary that mentions the issue, what actions were taken, and why it was passed to your team.

Escalated tickets include a brief AI-generated handover summary, marked in yellow, for quick reference.
We restructured and simplified the navigation. The left sidebar organizes everything into clear categories: Inbox, AI Agent, Marketing, and Analytics, so anyone on your team knows exactly where to go.
To quickly update your knowledge base or adjust a workflow, both now live right in the sidebar. For teams managing multiple stores, switching between them is just as straightforward, accessible from the sidebar, so agents can move between inboxes without breaking their flow.

Agents can switch between stores and their corresponding inboxes directly from the left menu.
Support comes down to the person on the other end of the conversation. We built Helpdesk 2.0 is to make sure they have everything they need to show up for that moment.
The best way to see the difference is to work in it. Start a free trial today.
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TL;DR:
The page-based shopping experience dominated for decades. Customers would search, browse, compare, abandon, get retargeted, return, and eventually buy (sometimes).
That journey is no longer the only option.
Shoppers are turning to chat, messaging, and AI-powered tools to find what they need. Instead of clicking through product pages or reading static FAQs, they ask questions, have back-and-forth conversations, and get answers that move them closer to a purchase in real time. The path to checkout has changed, and the brands that recognize this are pulling ahead.
Read our 2026 State of Conversational Commerce Report to learn more about conversation commerce trends from 400 ecommerce decision-makers and 16,000+ ecommerce brands using Gorgias.
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The traditional shopping journey was a solo experience. A shopper had a need, searched for options, browsed across sessions, and eventually made a decision — often days later, after being retargeted multiple times. Support only entered the picture after the purchase.

The conversation-led journey collapses that timeline:
What used to take days now takes minutes. Discovery, evaluation, and purchase happen in a single thread.
79% of brands agree that AI-driven conversational commerce has increased sales and purchase rates in their business. When brands were asked to rank the highest-return areas:
Those numbers reflect something important: the value of conversation compounds. Faster support reduces friction. Better retention raises lifetime value. More confident shoppers buy more often and spend more per order.
The brands seeing the biggest returns aren't just using AI to deflect tickets. They're using it to create one-to-one shopping experiences at scale.
Looking at AI-only influenced orders across key verticals like Apparel and Accessories, Food and Beverages, Health and Beauty, Home and Garden, and Sporting Goods, the growth across a single year was significant.





Across industries, ecommerce brands saw AI step into conversations, reduce shopper hesitation, and drive higher QoQ conversion rates.
Learn more about AI-powered revenue generation in the full 2026 Conversational Commerce Report.
84% of brands say the strategic importance of conversational commerce is higher than it was a year ago. 82% agree it will be mainstream in their sector within two years.

That shift is registering at the leadership level because of what conversational commerce does to the buying experience. Creating one-to-one touchpoints earlier in the journey drives higher AOV, shorter buying cycles, and stronger purchase rates. Shoppers who get real-time answers to their questions are more confident.
TUSHY, known for eco-friendly bidets and bathroom essentials, is a useful example of what happens when you take conversational commerce seriously.
Bidets aren't an impulse purchase. Shoppers have real questions about fit, compatibility, and installation. Those questions used to go unanswered until the CX team could respond, often after the customer had abandoned the cart.
TUSHY used Gorgias's AI Agent and shopping assistant capabilities to automate pre-sales support. AI Agent engaged shoppers in real-time conversations, addressed their concerns directly, and built confidence at the moment of highest intent.
This resulted in a 190% increase in chat-based purchases, a 13x return on investment, and twice the purchase rate of human agents.
You don't need to overhaul your entire operation to start seeing results. The most effective approach is to start where the impact is clearest and expand from there.
A few places to begin:
Want to see the full picture of where conversational commerce is headed in 2026? Read the full report to explore the data, trends, and strategies shaping the next era of ecommerce.
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TL;DR:
The way shoppers buy online has shifted and customers are at the center.
They no longer want to scroll through product pages, dig through FAQs, or wait 24 hours for an email reply. They open a conversation, ask a specific question, and expect a useful answer in seconds. Brands that can’t deliver these experiences at scale are seeing customer hesitation turn into abandoned carts and lost revenue.
This shift has a name: conversational commerce. It's the practice of using real-time, two-way conversations as your primary sales channel, through chat, AI agents, messaging apps, and voice.
What started as an experiment for early adopters has become a key growth lever, with 84% of ecommerce brands treating conversational commerce as a strategic pillar this year vs. last year.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Voice-based purchasing is the biggest bet on the horizon. Only 7% of brands currently use voice assistants for commerce, but 89% expect it to be standard by 2030. The vision is a customer who can reorder a product, check their subscription status, or manage a return entirely over the phone.
Proactive AI is the other major shift. Rather than waiting for a customer to reach out, AI will anticipate needs based on browsing behavior, purchase history, and where someone is in their relationship with your brand. Think of it as the digital equivalent of a sales associate who remembers what you bought last time and knows what you're likely to need next.
Explore where ecommerce brands are allocating their AI budgets in the full report.
The brands winning in 2026 are creating smart, scalable systems where AIhandles volume and humans handle nuance. They’re treating every conversational channel as an opportunity to serve and sell.
The data is clear: AI adoption is accelerating, customer expectations are rising, and the revenue impact of getting this right is measurable.
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TL;DR:
Industry benchmarks for ecommerce are hard to come by. Most of what's out there is self-reported, survey-based, or too aggregated to be usable. Teams are left wondering whether their AI adoption is on par with industry standards or if their response times are costing them revenue.
That's a gap we're in a unique position to close.
Gorgias processes millions of customer conversations across thousands of ecommerce brands every day. This has given us a rare, unfiltered view into how the industry operates. But until now, we’ve kept those insights largely internal.
Today, we're making it public with the Ecom Lab.
The result is years of first-party data from thousands of ecommerce brands, packaged into findings that give teams a real foundation to build their strategy on.
The Ecom Lab is Gorgias's public research hub for ecommerce. It publishes insights and reports on AI adoption, support performance, financial impact, and industry trends.
The goal is simple: give teams a real baseline to measure against and to uncover the industry's inner workings.
Metrics that actually move decisions.
The Ecom Lab publishes metrics that matter to ecommerce professionals, including AI adoption rates, first response times, CSAT scores, conversion rates, and ticket intents, all broken down by brand size, GMV tier, and industry vertical.
For the first time, teams can see exactly where they stand in comparison to the broader market.
AI is Everywhere reveals why roughly 4 in 5 ecommerce brands still haven't deployed AI in customer-facing support.
Stop Benchmarking Against the Average argues that support teams should benchmark response times against their specific industry vertical rather than the overall average.
Most Brands are Overpaying for Support breaks down the actual cost of support ticket volume and what happens when AI handles the load.

TL;DR:
Average response time measures the duration between when a customer submits a support inquiry and when they receive their first reply.
For ecommerce brands, this metric directly impacts customer satisfaction, loyalty, and revenue. 90% of customers rate an immediate response as "important" or "very important" when they have a support request, with 60% defining "immediate" as 10 minutes or less.
This guide covers everything you need to calculate your average response time and understand channel-specific benchmarks. You'll also learn proven tactics to reduce your response times while maintaining support quality.
Average response time (ART) is a customer service metric that measures the time between a customer's inquiry and the first reply from your team.
Average response time applies across all support channels your brand uses:
ART measures the time to first reply, not full resolution. This differs slightly from first response time (FRT), which tracks only the initial contact on a new inquiry. ART includes all replies across the ticket lifecycle, while FRT focuses exclusively on that critical first touchpoint.
You can measure average response time during business hours only or across all hours. Business-hours measurement accounts for when your team is actually available, while all-hours measurement reflects the true customer experience, including wait times outside your operating schedule. Most ecommerce brands track both to gauge staff performance and identify gaps in coverage.
Average response time directly impacts customer satisfaction scores and loyalty. Even if your support team is friendly and helpful, the customer experience suffers when they wait too long for a response. Fast response times reduce frustration and show customers you value their time.
By improving customer loyalty and boosting average customer lifetime value, offering a low average response time can directly benefit your brand's revenue. Brands that resolve their customers' concerns within six hours or less see an estimated revenue lift of two percent.
Response speed also affects your brand reputation.
In competitive ecommerce markets, response time becomes a competitive advantage. When customers compare similar products at similar prices, superior support responsiveness can be the deciding factor. Meeting or exceeding service level agreements (SLAs) also builds trust and sets clear expectations with your customers about when they'll hear back from your team.
You can calculate average response time with a simple formula:
Average response time = Total response time ÷ Number of responses
When calculating, you can measure during business hours only or across all hours, including nights and weekends. Business-hours calculation shows your team's performance when they're actually working, while all-hours measurement reflects the complete customer experience, including wait times when you're closed.
Exclude automated chatbot replies and out-of-office responses from your calculation — these don't represent actual human support interactions. Also, exclude tickets that were spam or never required a response.
Average response time differs from first response time (FRT) and resolution time. FRT measures only the time to initial contact on new inquiries, while resolution time measures the total time from inquiry to full resolution.
When you add average handle time (AHT) and ART together, you get average resolution time. This metric measures the total time it takes to resolve a customer's issue.
Most brands filter their average response time data by team, agent, channel, or time zone to identify specific performance patterns and improvement opportunities.
Let's walk through a real example. If you had four support tickets one week that took 10 minutes, 15 minutes, 25 minutes, and 20 minutes to respond to, here's what your average response time calculation would look like:
Step 1: Add up all response times: 10 + 15 + 25 + 20 = 70 minutes total
Step 2: Divide by the number of responses: 70 minutes ÷ 4 tickets = 17.5 minutes
Average response time = 17.5 minutes
That said, calculating average response time by hand isn't feasible for most brands, especially as your customer base and number of responses increase. Fortunately, most customer service platforms and helpdesks calculate these performance metrics for you automatically.
In Gorgias, you can also break down real-time support metrics (like first reply time, resolution time, revenue generated by support, customer satisfaction (CSAT), and more) by:
The answer to what constitutes a good average response time depends on the customer support channel you use. Each channel has different customer expectations and urgency levels. Average response time benchmarks for email requests will naturally be much higher than those for live chat messages, when the customer is actively waiting for a response.
Your industry can also impact what constitutes a good average response time. A company selling B2B software is likely to have longer response and resolution times than an ecommerce company due to the technical nature of their product and different customer expectations.
Here are best-in-class, average, and below-average response time benchmarks based on the customer support channel you're using, according to our Senior Director of Customer Success, Bri Christiano:
ART benchmarks for email:
ART benchmarks for social media:
ART benchmarks for SMS:
ART benchmarks for live chat:
If your reply times aren't close to these benchmarks, don't worry. It's much more important to continually improve on your current performance than it is to match industry benchmarks. Focus on developing your customer service automations, customer service training, and templates to help your team offer fast replies.
If you want to improve your average first response time, here are proven strategies that Gorgias customers have used to speed up their response times. The key is balancing speed with personalization and accuracy — faster replies shouldn't come at the cost of helpful, accurate support.
Real-time support channels like live chat and SMS inherently support faster response times than social media and email channels. This is likely why, based on Gorgias data, chat is the second-most preferred support channel, next to email.
Adding a live chat widget to your website, such as Gorgias live chat, enables anyone who visits your website to quickly connect with a support agent. Gorgias live chat also integrates with SMS, Facebook Messenger, WhatsApp, and other social media platforms, so you can offer live chat support via these channels as well.
You can also incentivize your customers to use these faster channels by sharing a service-level agreement (SLA) that lets them know they won't have to wait as long if they use live chat or SMS.
Love Wellness, a Gorgias customer, does this brilliantly by pointing customers to their chat for quick answers:

Installing self-service options (like chatbots and automated flows) in your chat widget is an excellent way to ensure customers on your website can get quick answers to common questions. This directly lowers ART by reducing your support team's workload so they can respond to complex tickets that can't be resolved with self-service faster.
Gorgias lets you create automated conversations called Flows to deliver the answers to your most frequently asked questions. Here’s how Gorgias customer, OSEA, uses Flows on their website:
You can use AI to answer simple customer questions that come in via email, social media, SMS, and more. Letting an AI chatbot handle straightforward questions such as "where is my order" and "what is my tracking number" can reduce the volume of support tickets upfront, freeing your team to focus on more complex inquiries.
Take a look at how Gorgias AI Agent handles makeup questions naturally:
Remember that first response time is an entirely different metric from resolution time. You don't have to immediately resolve a customer's issue to achieve faster response times — you just have to respond to the customer's request and let them know you're working on the issue.
One great way to do this is to use autoresponders that acknowledge the customer's request the instant they send it in. This way, customers know your team received their message.
Some examples of acknowledgment messages:
While an automated response doesn’t resolve the issue, it still shows your customers that you’re paying attention and ready to support their needs at any time.
Some tickets demand a faster response than others. If you detect that a customer is upset or angry, then it's important to respond to their request as quickly as possible to prevent them from churning. With intelligent routing, you can automatically send tickets to the right agent based on VIP status, issue urgency, or negative sentiment detected in the message.
Gorgias lets you prioritize tickets automatically so your agents can focus on responding to the most important tickets without manually triaging each one. Since agents aren't required to manually triage tickets that are prioritized automatically, they'll be able to respond to them faster.
With Gorgias's Intent and Sentiment Detection features, you can automatically analyze each ticket using powerful natural language processing (NLP) technology.
You can then create Rules to automatically assign a priority level to each ticket.
Here's an example of a Rule that automatically tags tickets with "URGENT" whenever a customer mentions anything about an address update, flavor change, order cancellation, or mistake:

An easy way to accelerate your ART is to create template responses for your most-asked questions. In addition to reducing ART, these templates can serve as helpful resources for your agents, allowing them to respond without starting from scratch each time.
Gorgias's templates are called Macros, and they're much more powerful than run-of-the-mill templates thanks to variables. Variables are like blanks in the template that automatically populate with personalized customer information pulled from ecommerce platforms (like Shopify, BigCommerce, and Magento) and other ecommerce tools (like Klaviyo, AfterShip, and more).
Here’s a Macro in action:
A comprehensive knowledge base or help center allows customers to find the information they need on their own. While this won't be directly reflected in your average response times, you’ll find that your inbox receives fewer of the same questions. That means agents have fewer tickets to handle and more time to strengthen customer relationships.
Take a look at Princess Polly’s polished Help Center made with Gorgias:

Gorgias automatically tracks average response time and displays it in your Support Performance dashboard. You get real-time visibility into how quickly your team responds across all channels, with no manual calculation required.
You can filter your average response time data by multiple dimensions to spot trends and identify improvement opportunities:
Gorgias also provides SLA breach alerts that notify you when tickets are at risk of missing your response time targets. This lets you intervene before a customer has a poor experience. The platform tracks related metrics alongside ART, including first response time, resolution time, customer satisfaction (CSAT) scores, and revenue generated by support, giving you a complete picture of your team's performance.
Use this data to coach agents on response speed, identify training opportunities, and refine your support processes. For instance, if you notice one agent consistently has faster response times, study their workflow and share those best practices with the rest of your team.
Reducing your average response time is a crucial part of providing a great customer experience — and it's one of the many goals we help ecommerce brands realize.
See how Gorgias can help your brand improve response times and deliver faster, better support. Book a demo today.
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Online shopping is at an all-time high. Unfortunately, so is the rate of returned items.
In 2021, online shoppers returned over 20.8% of all merchandise ordered, according to the National Retail Foundation. Added up across all ecommerce businesses, this means $761 billion of merchandise gets sold but doesn’t actually become revenue.
We’ll cover some of the top reasons for customer returns below but most of the reasons boil down to one thing: a poor customer experience. If customers feel misled, duped, or unsupported, they’ll quickly send back an item and take their business elsewhere.
In this post, we’ll share 10 actionable strategies (including tools and examples) to help you develop a return-proof customer experience.
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No brand can completely eliminate returns, and that’s because customers return items for a wide variety of reasons — some of them outside of your control. The top reasons that customers choose to return products purchased via online shopping include:
When exploring how to reduce returns, examining these common reasons for online store returns and how they apply to your own business is an important place to start.
According to data from the National Retail Federation, U.S. consumers returned an estimated total of $761 billion in merchandise in 2021 alone. Thanks in part to supply chain challenges and rising prices, processing the return of a $50 product is now expected to cost ecommerce stores an average of $33 according to Axios.
The cost of having a high return rate goes far beyond lost profits. In addition to losing out on a sale, processing a returned product also means that you have to pay return shipping costs as well as any labor costs associated with your returns process, like assisting customers with returns and restocking returned products. When you consider the fact that ecommerce return rates can climb as high as 30% or higher, these expenses can quickly add up. This makes reducing your number of returns an essential goal for your ecommerce brand.
Offering high-quality products is the first step to reducing your return rate, but great products are just the beginning. Below, read more about the 10 additional ways to boost your customer experience and reduce returns.
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Encouraging customers to exchange products rather than return them for a refund won't eliminate all of the expenses associated with processing a return. Even with exchanges, you still pay for return shipping and any labor costs associated with your returns process.
However, exchanging a product rather than refunding it does mean that you get to keep whatever profit margins you earn from the sale, which can sometimes be a big boost to your company's bottom line. Plus, you still have a chance to delight the customer with a product and hopefully build up loyalty from there.
How you go about encouraging exchanges is ultimately up to you. Some online stores only offer store credit for returns, and state in their return policy that they will not provide cash refunds. However, refusing to offer refunds altogether may yield a returns experience that leads to a lot of unhappy customers. Another option is to encourage product exchanges with carefully-crafted messaging or incentives, like an additional store credit.
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If you look at Jaxxon's FAQ page, you'll see the brand has a standard 14-day returns and exchange policy that allows customers to get a refund or new product for any reason. But Jaxxon uses Loop Returns as a self-service return portal, which has two major benefits:
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Bonus credit is exactly what it sounds like: Customers can have more in-store credit than they would get as a refund in the original form of payment. This strategy is effective: Shopify stores that use Loop issue 15% fewer refunds than brands that don’t. As a result, Jaxxon rescues a sale and keeps the opportunity to delight the customer for greater customer retention.
Learn how the Gorgias + Loop integration unites your helpdesk and returns management software.
Jaxxon also uses live chat support on their returns portal page, which is yet another line of real-time defense against an avoidable return. If customers are considering a return, they may instead reach out to customer support to resolve whatever issues drove them to the page.
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The customer service agent on the other end of the live chat might be able to fix the issue, especially if it came down to user error, and lead the customer to keep the item. Or, the live chat agent gives recommendations for products that won’t have the same issue to steer toward an exchange instead of a return.
Adding live chat to your returns portal is one of the revenue-generating tactics from our CX-Driven Growth Playbook, which is based on research of over 10,000+ top ecommerce brands. Check out the playbook for 17 more actionable tips to drive revenue by improving your CX.
One of the biggest reasons why online purchases have a higher return rate than products purchased from brick-and-mortar stores is the fact that customers cannot examine products in person. This makes it much more likely for a customer who purchases a product online to end up returning their purchase due to it not meeting their expectations.
The best way to combat this is to make your product descriptions as in-depth and accurate as possible. When customers know exactly what to expect from the product they are purchasing, the odds of them being dissatisfied when it arrives are much lower.
This is especially true for apparel: size charts, size guides, and any other information to help the customer avoid buying the wrong size. Likewise, any sort of furniture must include clear dimensions, and any sort of technology must include detailed specifications.
Marine Layer is one example of an online store that has in-depth product descriptions to minimize returns. To help customers choose the right clothing and accessories, Marine Layer offers details information in their product descriptions such as the exact dimensions of the item, the size of the model who is wearing it in the product images, and helpful size charts.
The brand uses tabs to include more information without making the page too long. Here’s the description for a pair of pants:
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Keeping with the theme of letting customers know exactly what they are getting, there is no element of your product description more important than your product images.
Along with using high-quality product images that display your products in the most appealing way possible, it is also a good idea to use product images that provide context about the product. For example, you may wish to display photos of your product in action to show its intended use. Or, you can show your product next to household items to give customers a better idea of the size and dimensions. Even better, you can include product videos to show the product in action.
By displaying multiple high-quality photos that offer context, you can ensure that there are no unwelcome surprises when your customer uses your product for the first time.
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Native Union’s online store sells tech accessories such as charging cables and phone cases. They make use of multiple photos on each product description, including photos that display how the product is meant to be used. For example, the charging pad shown above clearly shows compatibility with iPhones, AirPods, and Apple Watches.
Customer reviews are one of the most powerful sales tools that ecommerce stores have, since they provide customers with social proof and an unbiased source of information to guide their purchase decision.
Along with helping online retailers boost their conversion rates, customer reviews can also be leveraged to reduce return rates. Displaying reviews that provide greater details and context regarding a product — such as how an article of clothing fits certain body types or how the color of a product in-person compares to its photos — can go a long way toward helping your customers make informed purchases that they are much less likely to return.
Steve Madden is one company that makes excellent use of product reviews. Each product page features searchable, filterable product reviews to set customer expectations. Steve Madden is an apparel brand, so they let you sort reviews by sizing, whether they contain images and videos, the age of the reviewer, the pros of the product (like “cute,” “comfortable,” or “value,”) and whether the reviewer recommends the product.
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They also have a section where shoppers can ask questions that people who previously purchased the product can answer (e.g., “Can you exercise in these shoes?”) as well as an overall sizing scale, which shows whether reviewers tend to think the product is true to size:
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One common reason why a customer may choose to return a product is that the product showed up late and they no longer need it. To keep your customers as satisfied as possible post-purchase, optimize the accuracy and speed of fulfillment to make sure that every customer receives the exact products they purchase within the promised timeframe.
There's no better example of an ecommerce platform that has optimized its fulfillment process than Amazon. Offering two-day shipping on the vast majority of its products is just one way that Amazon can prioritize customer satisfaction and limit returns.
However, most brands can’t match Amazon’s speed of delivery, at least in-house — that appealing offer is only possible for massive-scale, high-GMV companies. One strategy to reduce shipping-related returns is to provide accurate shipping estimates for all customer orders: clear expectations are better than nothing at all.
Another strategy is to work with a fulfillment partner like the Shopify Fulfillment Network or ShipBob to achieve Amazon-like shipping. Both of these fulfillment partners help DTC brand offer expedient shipping that can both drive sales and reduce returns.
Receiving a damaged product is another common reason why online shoppers make returns. While good quality control can ensure that a damaged product doesn't leave your warehouse, there's only so much you can do to prevent a product from becoming damaged en route to the customer. What you can do is protect your product as much as possible by using high-quality packaging. For some products, this might not be much of a concern. However, if your products are fragile or prone to damage, put some extra padding or structural protection into the packaging to protect them in transit. Reducing the risk of damage during transit can go a long way toward lowering your return rate.
Apple’s packaging is renowned for its minimalist, yet immediately recognizable design. While it looks simple from the outside, Apple’s product packaging features multiple layers of sturdy cardboard and styrofoam padding to thoroughly protect Apple devices en route to the customer.
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An amazing pre-purchase experience is essential for optimizing your store's conversion rate. But the buck doesn’t stop when a customer completes the purchase. A clear post-purchase experience can drive repeat business and proactively minimize your return rate.
There are several ways to offer a positive post-purchase experience for your ecommerce customers. You use self-service automation flows that let customers know about the status of their order, create and share help center articles that explain how to use the product, schedule a call to walk customers through the ins and outs of their new product or offer discounts — just to name a few.
Warby Parker lets any customer try on a pair of glasses before confirming the purchase. In the post-checkout email, they include tips for the home try-on kit.
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While this is a little different than most use cases, since it’s a try-on shipment instead of a purchase, the step-by-step tips provide a strong example of the type of guidance that can set customer expectations, reduce avoidable issues when the customer receives the product, and directions for where to find support if an issue does arise.
The majority who return products have a legitimate reason for doing so. However, there are those known as “serial returners” who abuse ecommerce return policies. These dishonest customers purchase products with no intention of keeping them, essentially renting products for free at the expense of the store they purchased them from. If you can identify customers who are abusing your return policy in this manner, the best thing you can do is ban them from making further purchases from your store.
Most companies choose not to publicize their policies for dealing with serial returners. However, here is an excellent resource from Shopify on how online store owners can address this common problem.
It may sound counterintuitive, but giving customers a longer window to return products can actually reduce the return rate for your ecommerce site. If you only give customers a short period of time to decide whether they want to keep or return a product, they often feel rushed to make a decision. Giving your customers more time to become comfortable with your product before they are forced to decide whether they want to keep or return it increases the likelihood that they will choose to keep it.
New mattresses tend to take a little getting used to. To prevent customers from returning mattresses before they have the chance to break them in and become used to them, Mattress Firm allows customers to return their mattresses up to 120 days after the date of purchase.
At the end of the day, returns will always happen. One strategy is to mitigate losses from returns by doubling down on a customer loyalty effort like gift cards and loyalty points.
In addition to driving long-term loyalty and repeat purchasers, loyalty points and gift cards can also be offered in place of a cash refund for returned products. This enables you to offset some of the expenses you incur when a product is returned, because it encourages customers to exchange their product rather than return it for a refund.
There are plenty of examples of companies that leverage gift cards and loyalty programs in a variety of different ways. The North Face's loyalty program, however, stands out because customers can earn points for many reasons — not just making a purchase — and the brand’s rewards are custom-tailored to each individual customer.
Product returns can be a massive expense for ecommerce stores due to the high rate at which ecommerce products are returned and the high cost of processing online purchase returns. By following the 10 tips outlined above, you should be well on your way to reducing this frustrating expense.
As you read, improving your customer experience helps you lower your return rate and process returns more efficiently. Gorgias’ customer service platform helps you do just that. With Gorgias, you can limit product returns and boost customer satisfaction by offering fast, omnichannel, and self-service customer support.
Learn more about how Gorgias can integrate with returns management software and help you reduce your ecommerce store’s return rates with outstanding customer service — contact us today.

In the quest for ever-increasing efficiency, it’s easy to lose sight of a core business reality: Your customers are humans, and they still like to be treated as such.
Customer service departments certainly should leverage automation technology and work toward greater efficiency — but not in a way that frustrates customers. Instead, businesses should use automation to enhance a personalized customer service approach.
In this guide, learn personalized customer service is a top trend in customer service. Then we’ll give you nine ways to start providing more personalized customer service that you can implement right away.
Personalized customer service is the strategy of using individual customer information to tailor customer interactions. This information can include the customer’s name, purchase history, past support tickets, and anything else that your business might already know.
Personalized customer service can be delivered throughout the whole customer journey, from the pre-sales stage to post-purchase. Here are five fantastic examples of personalized customer service:
Providing excellent personalized customer service can seem overwhelming for many businesses, especially during periods of rapid growth. It’s true that developing a comprehensive personalization strategy takes resources and effort, but there are all sorts of simple ways to start transitioning to a more personalized approach:
Proactive customer service anticipates when customers might need assistance, and offers help before they reach out. For example, some brands use proactive support as part of their marketing strategy. They might use an automated live chat pop-up to share product recommendations, offer to answer questions or help new customers make a purchase, or share that a live chat support option is available, should they need it.
Proactive support has many forms, like providing self-service resources like an FAQ page to answer repetitive questions or help with common pain points. It also might be an email that says “Can I help you with anything?” Offering help before people need it feels infinitely more personal than forcing the user to comb the website and find the right contact information.

Proactive support helped Gorgias customer Loop Earplugs increase their revenue by 43% with pre-sales flows. “When customers get a quick and honest answer, they often end up buying more than one product in a short span of time,” says Customer Service Manager Milan Vanmarcke.
The first step towards implementing a proactive strategy of your own is to take a look at past customer conversations and look for common threads. Once you identify your most frequently asked questions, create an FAQ page with them. Be sure to link to any policies you have as well, like shipping, returns, exchanges, and where folks can reach out to get more help if needed.
📚Recommended reading: Our complete guide on proactive customer service.
There’s a reason that car salespeople learn prospective customers’ first names within the first few seconds of an encounter. It’s a science-backed approach that builds trust and familiarity.
Using specifics like a customer’s name or last order number goes a long way toward making the customer feel trust for your brand. It also shows that you’re listening, that you care, and that you have accurate information in front of you. Though this type of approach can be more time consuming, using templates with dynamic variables can help. Plus, it’ll lessen the need to go back and forth with customers to get that information in the first place.
Consider signing up for a centralized helpdesk. Some helpdesks allow you to use templates with dynamic fields that pull in customer data like tracking information or the date their recent order shipped. On Gorgias, these templates are called Macros, and you can use them throughout your communication channels, on chat, or via email.

As you work to further customize your approach, refine the way you use the customer data you already have from your other ecommerce tools to inform the kind of care you provide.
Analyzing data from your CRM (customer relationship management system) can help you identify trends and common issues. This data can help you find common questions that are better handled via a FAQ or knowledge base, or that can be generated through automated chatbots or emails, saving your CS teams and your customers time.
Take a look at the demographic information you have about your audience to learn more about what might be most important to them. Use metrics like CSAT to understand how your support is performing, or retention numbers to see how many customers make second and third purchases, especially after requesting support.
With a helpdesk like Gorgias, you can use the Customer Sidebar to pull customer data from different app integrations. Pull loyalty information from LoyaltyLion, get insight into reviews from Yotpo, or get marketing data from Klaviyo.

This type of information can aid in your personalization efforts by providing further insights into how customers are feeling and what kind of support they’re looking for. For example, you might find some negative reviews and be able to send those customers a follow-up email to see how you can help.
Personalization at scale requires the use of tools that keep your customer data safe, centralized, and accessible so that agents can answer questions with a consistently high level of care.
Unifying all your customer touchpoints in one helpdesk platform lets reps see all past interactions and information, so they avoid asking customers to repeat themselves. They’ll be able to see information like past order history, returns, past support conversations and resolutions, and how long someone has been a customer.
That’s been a key differentiator for Gorgias customer Absolute Collagen. "We hear all the time in a Facebook group or on the phone how much customers trust us because they know we'll get back to them and resolve the issue quickly,” says founder Maxine Laceby. “It's a real point of difference for us that our customer service team can do that. And the reason they can do that is that all of our channels are in one place."
Gorgias is an all-in-one platform for ecommerce merchants looking to improve their customer service and helpdesk functions, from chatbot-like menus to customer self-service. It’s the perfect place for DTC ecommerce brands to start scaling their personalization efforts and drive more revenue.
Customers want to interact with your brand in different ways, and an omnichannel approach to customer support takes customers’ preferences into account. By offering support across all channels, like social media, email, phone, live chat, and SMS, you can better meet customers where they are and give support on their terms.
To do this effectively, you’ll need to ensure that all of your channels connect (a helpdesk like Gorgias will do this for you). And, that you have a support strategy for each channel.

Unifying platforms into one place helped the team at Lillie's Q, a shop that sells authentic Southern barbecue sauces and rubs, offer a true omnichannel experience to its customers. Before using Gorgias as its centralized helpdesk, messages on different platforms were getting passed manually to customer support, a tedious task with a big room for error.
"We received comments and questions from Instagram and Facebook, organic and paid. Our digital content manager was passing a lot of these questions and comments on to our customer service team before we were with Gorgias," says Nicole Mann, the Marketing Director at Lillie’s Q.
📚Recommended reading: Check out our guide to omnichannel customer service.
Support requests come into social media channels for many reasons. For example, angry customers might send a direct message or comment on a post because it feels more immediate, especially if a brand is active. Or, they could respond to a post asking for more information about a featured product they’d like to purchase.
Whatever the reason, people spend 147 minutes on social media per day, which means that by offering support there, you’re able to engage with people directly within the apps where they already spend time. This also allows you to engage with people in positive ways by sharing relevant content with them, posting packing videos of their orders to make them feel special, or reposting a picture of them using your products in real life.
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According to The Effortless Experience, only 4% of customers who had a high-effort customer support experience will return to make another purchase from that brand.
When a customer decides to contact support, they’re already likely a little bit frustrated to have to put in any effort at all. But actions like having to go back and forth with a support agent to give simple information like order numbers, shipping address, or email can increase the time it takes to get a resolution.
This effort increases with the amount of time it takes for the agents to respond each time, and whether support even responds at all the first time a shopper reaches out. These high-effort experiences ignore the customers’ needs, which drives disloyalty and can make a big impact on revenue long term.
Self-serve resources or automated responses can get people an immediate response, which means a lot less effort for them, and takes the burden off of your team.

"We realize the impact of building relationships and trust with our customers,” says Caela Castillo, the Director of Customer Experience at jewelry shop Jaxxon. “Quick Response Flows help us do that by allowing us to provide a customer experience that meets expectations and drives lifetime value (LTV) up per customer."
Other options include using a centralized system that shows a customer’s information all in one place, eliminating the need for timely back and forth.
Customer feedback is valuable data collection for your customer service team. It can help you provide more personalized support based on the information you get.
All you have to do is make it easy for your customers to provide feedback, and take action on the notes you do receive, especially if they cite negative experiences.
A quick way to ask for feedback is to send an email survey that takes less than 2 minutes to fill out. A simple star rating on the experience and comment box should be enough to give you some valuable insight into where you can improve.
📚Recommended reading: Our Director of Support’s guide to collecting customer feedback from your helpdesk.
Prioritize customer service requests to provide faster, more bespoke service to VIP customers. With customer acquisition becoming more costly and time consuming, keeping existing, loyal customers around can produce more revenue for your business overall.
These customers, especially those with a high lifetime value, should get your most real-time support. Other high-priority conversations include very angry customers and time-sensitive requests.
A helpdesk can help you assign value to tickets, and bring the most urgent ones in front of agents so that they can treat them with high priority.

The four benefits of personalized customer service
98% of companies say that personalization increases customer loyalty and 83% of customers agree, according to a 2022 study by Twilio. Continue reading to understand why personalization is such a key aspect of delighting your customers, making it an undeniable best practice for customer support. A more personalized approach to customer support can help you:
Regardless of whether a customer’s chatting with human customer service agents or some automation tool like an artificial intelligence (AI) chatbot, nearly 70% of them want to receive personalized communications. Personalization starts with simple steps like including the customer’s first name in email correspondence. Because that’s how people communicate with each other — by name.
Fun fact: While people want personalized communication, they would rather have prompt, helpful customer service. 90% of customers expect a near-instant response to questions, according to a HubSpot survey.
The takeaway? Only use personalization if you can do some promptly.
📚 Recommended reading: Our tips to improve customer service response times and resolution times.
Personalization matters for another crucial reason: It makes potential customers more likely to place an order. As many as 80% of respondents to an Epsilon/GBH survey indicated they were more likely to make a purchase after a personalized message than a non-personalized one.
For example, imagine a customer asks a video game distributor’s customer support team which game they should get for their child for Christmas. Without personalization, you’d either have to ask follow-up questions or provide a generic recommendation. With customer data, however, you might be able to:
This is just a short list of potential ways to personalize a message, but it’s clear that personalization offers the best customer experience and gives the customer a much shorter path to a confident purchase.
Joseph Piazza, Senior Customer Experience Manager at messenger bike bag brand Timbuk2 says it best: “Increased customer support should go hand in hand with revenue growth. We want to turn customer experience into a profit center.”
Learn how Timbuk2 raised overall revenue by 35% with Gorgias.
Personalized customer service greets your customers quickly and personally. It also reduces the time to problem resolution because your customer service agents have better information at the point of first contact.
Absolute Collagen saw firsthand how fast, personalized service can raise customer satisfaction (CSAT) to near-perfect levels (4.9/5), thanks to mitigating non-personalized “pre-determined, pre-scripted” responses:
When businesses improve their customer service efforts through personalization, they typically see an increase in brand loyalty. HubSpot found that 93% of customers were more likely to return as repeat customers at businesses they categorized as having an excellent customer service experience.
Customer retention doesn’t just lead to more repeat business. A loyal customer base also leaves reviews, refers new customers through word of mouth, and places larger orders than new customers. That’s why repeat customers generate 300% more revenue than first-time shoppers.
📈 Want to gauge the impact of your customer support? Read our take on the importance of customer service and check out our guide to customer service ROI.
Most businesses would agree that personalizing interactions is wise. But we all know from numerous personal encounters with airlines, warranty call centers, and maybe even healthcare providers that personalized customer service is far from universal. Many businesses have yet to find a way to successfully bring that personal touch, tailoring their efforts to the individual customer — especially at scale.
Local and small businesses tend to have an easier time offering personalized customer service because they have fewer customers. Think of a local coffee shop or boutique retail outlet that sees regular, repeat traffic: Staff at stores like these tend to learn their customers’ names and preferences and can offer a level of service that big-box stores can’t match.
Digital-first businesses and large ecommerce brands can’t develop these in-person relationships so they need an alternative approach to offer personalized experiences. Specifically, they need tech solutions that collect and use customer data. This means storing customer data in customer relationship management (CRM) software, surfacing that data throughout the customer journey, and implementing it in smart ways.
If you’re ready to offer personalized customer service, the right tools will help you get there. Gorgias empowers ecommerce businesses to deliver world-class personalized customer service and helpdesk services faster than ever, thanks to deep integrations with Shopify, Magento, and BigCommerce — plus dozens of other ecommerce tools — to put customer data front-and-center.
Book your demo to learn more about how Gorgias can transform your customer support into a revenue-generating machine.
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Ecommerce product categorization is an excellent way to streamline the online shopping process and optimize customer experience. But if your ecommerce company offers more than just niche products, then separating those products into different categories can be time-consuming — and your team's time is better spent on tasks that tie directly to revenue generation.
To help you organize your product listings to make it easy for customers to find the types of products they are looking for, let's take a look at everything you need to know about ecommerce product categorization.
Product categorization, also called product taxonomy, aims to create an organized and searchable shopping experience by breaking products down into intuitive categories and subcategories.

Product categorization isn't usually a concern for ecommerce stores that offer just a handful of products. But stores with large-scale catalogs of different products need a way of organizing them so that it's easy for customers to find what they need. Product categorization can also be strategic: Your product taxonomy can promote certain product types (e.g. “Accessories”), occasions (e.g. “Father’s Day”) boost average order value (e.g. “Best Sellers”), and more.

Today, the process of ecommerce product categorization is often done using machine learning and natural language processing (NLP). When fed with the right training data, these algorithms allow ecommerce platforms to categorize products based on their descriptions and customer behavior — without having to organize their catalog manually. We won’t go too in-depth into these advanced tools in this post, but will recommend additional tools and reading if this is the kind of information you’re looking for.
Overall, proper product classification and categorization create a better user experience — which, as we know, is mission-critical for any brand. Customers can easily find similar products, search for products using common keywords, and enjoy a more organized and streamlined shopping experience. Some of the top benefits of ecommerce product categorization include:
Create a path of least resistance for your customers. Better organized ecommerce sites make it as easy as possible for them to find what they’re looking for. When you can eliminate obstacles that might otherwise keep them from buying, you have a better chance at generating more sales.
Plus, effective product categorization can act as a kind of upselling or cross-selling strategy. If customers are looking for adorable earrings, for example, they’re more likely to buy two or three pairs if they see an entire category page full of great options.
If you have a search function on your store (and you should), then organizing and categorizing your store's products improves its functionality and accuracy.
Along with optimizing your website's search functionality, proper product categorization can help optimize your website for search engines like Google and boost its SEO. While the number of product searches that originate from search engines instead of marketplaces is shrinking as marketplaces like Amazon and eBay have come to dominate the ecommerce space, it still accounts for 19% of all product searches.
Breaking your products down into categories enables you to monitor which category pages get the most visits and which ones have the highest conversion rate instead of doing this for product pages alone. This provides additional data that you can use to generate more insights into customer behavior. If your ecommerce store uses Shopify, you can pull these metrics out of your Live View analytics:

Imagine walking into a department store to find products scattered randomly with no organization: dishware next to gardening supplies, cosmetics on the same shelf as cat food, sports equipment on the same aisle as canned goods. Organizing these products into categories helps users find what they’re looking for quickly or discover new products based on their interests or the occasion. For example, tech accessory brand has categories based around collections (on top of more standard categories), which could catch a browser’s eye and draw them onto a product page:

If you want to organize and categorize your store's products in a way that will create an optimized shopping experience for your customers, here are the steps that you should follow:
Product data includes any information that can be used to organize your products: brand, material, size, color, and any other important product attributes. If you don’t have updated product information from which to source this data, you can request it from your suppliers.
Once you have gathered all available product data, a Product Information Management (PIM) system like Jasper PIM (available as a Shopify app) lets you organize and analyize product datasets automatically and provides a centralized environment for managing product data over time.

However, before you dive too deep into your data, take a step back and brainstorm some taxonomy structures that might work for your shoppers.
Creating a baseline for product categorization is pretty straightforward. Before diving into a teched-out process, put yourself in the shoes of the shopper and brainstorm ways But if you have a wide range of products for sale, it can get a little tricky. Here are a few tips for creating great product categories:
Putting carefully chosen keywords in your product descriptions and category pages can improve your store's product search functionality. It can also improve your site's SEO, bringing in more traffic from search engines.
You can find the best keywords for your store using keyword research tools like SEMRush, Google Keyword Planner, and Ahrefs. These tools let you see the search volume for common keywords and provide keyword suggestions based on your input.
Based on our analysis of data from 10,000 ecommerce merchants, sorting your product categories based on user behavior (like past purchases) using tools like Crossing Minds and Wiser can increase revenue by up to 10%.
Here are a few examples:
Merchology, a corporate apparel brand, uses customer data to create “Gifts” and “Ideas” categories for products that are commonly purchased for specific reasons. They sort by user behavior by categorizing products into “Top 10s” for many occasions:

Similarly, Adika has a category called “Best Sellers” to promote its products with the highest conversion rates:

Categorizing your products based on user behavior is an excellent strategy, but user behavior sometimes changes over time. Therefore, don't be afraid to adjust and rearrange your product categories over time based on what your metrics tell you.
On top of your standard categories, you can also include “facets,” which operate more like tags that categories. Facets are details about a product that may not be in the product title or significant enough to be its own category. For example, the cut of or material of a dress:

Facets act like keywords to give your shoppers another way to browse your store and find the exact kind of item they want. As your store grows (and your products change), keeping up with facets — especially because it’s difficult to anticipate all the ways customers might go about searching for products.
As you scale your categorization efforts, it’s also important to be careful not to overcomplicate your store’s navigation. New products may require new categories, but it may also become necessary to combine and condense some categories to avoid overwhelming your shoppers.
Product Information Management (PIM) systems, which we mentioned earlier, will also likely offer automation and other features to manage product data and keep your store up to date. For example, you can use your PIM as a single source of truth for listings across your ecommerce platform (Shopify, BigCommerce, Magento, etc.) and marketplaces like Amazon and eBay. That way, you can iterate on product descriptions and categories in one place, rather than changing them in the backend of each platform.
As you go about organizing and categorizing your ecommerce products, here are a few best practices to keep in mind:
You don't want to show products to customers who can't purchase them. If you don't ship certain products to certain states or countries, then you will need to categorize your products based on geo locations using a product like Advanced Store Localization or Geo Targetly.
Shakti is one Gorgias customer that uses Advanced Store Localization to adjust their product categories based on the customer's location. Because Shakti doesn't ship all of its products to all countries, they use the tool to hide certain products from viewers in those countries.

Instead of creating an “other” category (which will only confuse your shoppers) simply put products into the category where they fit most naturally. Use keywords to ensure that customers can easily find them — even if it isn’t all that clear which category they should search.
Having products appear in multiple categories often makes for a confusing product catalog that is difficult to navigate. Instead, keep products limited to a single category at a time. While this can sometimes be a little tricky for products that could fit in multiple categories, assign the one that fits best and use keywords within the product description to make up the difference.
The only exception to this is special categories, like Best Sellers, Valentine’s Days, Last Chance, etc. These categories aren’t based on product or customer types, so overlap won’t be confusing.
Keep your product categories as simple as possible to avoid overlap and confusion. For example, having an "athletic apparel" category and a "sports apparel" category is redundant and unnecessary — choose one or the other. There's no benefit to having a larger number of categories, so don't feel the need to force them if they don't already cluster naturally.
But branding doesn’t just apply to color schemes and company logos: It’s your messaging, too, so keep it in mind when developing your product categories and product descriptions.
Categories and descriptions need to communicate key product information above all else, so be sure that you aren't sacrificing clarity for the sake of branding. Include the basics (color, dimensions, materials, size, and any other relevant descriptive information) and use simple, jargon-free language. ASOS product descriptions do this particularly well, balancing their conversational writing style with clear, useful keywords.

Ninety-three percent of marketers agree that interactive content like product quizzes are effective at helping educate customers. Product quizzes designed to identify a customer's tastes or needs can be great tools for further helping customers find what they're looking for.
Dr. Squatch is one example of an ecommerce company that uses these quizzes effectively. If you want to create your own branded product quizzes, consider using a tool like the Product Recommendation Quiz app.

Large catalogs of ecommerce products are typically separated into different categories and subcategories to build a hierarchical category tree. For a pair of women's sneakers, the level-categories might look like: Clothing & Apparel > Women's Footwear > Women's Sneakers.
After separating products into different categories and subcategories, you can further break them down with product attributes and facets.
Going back to our last example, the pair of women's sneakers might be assigned product attributes like size and color. You can then assign values to those attributes (7, 8, or 9 for the attribute "size," and red, white, and black for the attribute "color").
Jaxxon’s online store, which sells mens jewelry, is one example of a great category tree. There you will find numerous product categories, subcategories for each, and attributes that allow customers to filter their search further. For example, Rings breaks down further into Best-Selling Rings, Tungsten Rings, Iced Out Rings, and Wedding Bands:

With the right tools and strategy, you can create a categorization system optimized for customer happiness and revenue generation.
With Gorgias' industry-leading customer insight tools, you can fine-tune your ecommerce store to give your shoppers exactly what they want. On top of product categorization, you can provide self-service resources like FAQ pages, Help Centers, and automated Quick Response Flows so customers have more answers, faster.
Providing instant, self-service answers to customers is how customers like Loop Earplugs lift revenue by up to 43%:
“We’ve seen 43% increase in revenue from customer support since we launched pre-sales flows. Quick response flows give us the ability to build trust with our customers and that’s priceless. When customers get a quick and honest answer, they often end up buying more than one product in a short span of time. Seeing customers live the life we’re aiming to create for them in Loop Earplugs is extremely rewarding for us.”
- Milan Vanmarcke, Customer Service Manager at Loop Earplugs
Get started with Gorgias to get on track to an organized ecommerce store that converts more shoppers into buyers.
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Handling returns isn’t the most enjoyable aspect of running an online store. However, every ecommerce business needs to create a clear, thoughtful return policy and keep customer satisfaction and customer loyalty levels high.
Want to create a returns process that’s ideal for both your ecommerce website and customers? Below, we’ll explore ecommerce returns data and factors to consider as you build or re-examine your policy, and then go over 10 best practices for handling customer returns.
Table of Contents
Although every ecommerce website deals with returns, return policies look very different from one site to another. Some businesses choose to offer a full refund on online returns, while others offer store credit in exchange for returned products. Some businesses provide free return shipping on product returns, while others pass shipping costs to customers.
Ultimately, a good return program fulfills the goals of your company without being too costly to operate or too difficult for your customers to find, understand, or use.
Enterprises and large businesses are more likely to offer free, no-questions-asked returns as a means of brand-building and promoting a better customer experience at scale. It may also be more profitable and productive than operating a stricter or more complex program. Customer service teams save significant time, which is key with a larger customer base and inventory volume.
Smaller businesses, by contrast, may benefit from a less generous program. According to data from CNBC, the average return represents 30% of the purchase price. For businesses operating on tight margins, this cost may be too much to swallow. Instead, many smaller businesses choose to offer stricter return policies, such as charging for shipping or only offering store credit.
Of course, there are downsides to stricter return policies. Namely, many customers expect hassle-free returns, and 79% of consumers want free return shipping. If you choose to implement a stricter ecommerce return policy for your online store, maintaining customer satisfaction and a high customer retention rate may be more of a challenge.
In the end, there's no one-size-fits-all return program. You’ll need to crunch the numbers and take into account how much each aspect of your policy could impact your bottom line. We’ll examine some of these costs in the next section.
Once this is done, enter the details into our return or refund policy template generator and edit your new policy as needed.
Let's take a closer look at the most important factors to consider when it comes time to create or update your store's return policy.
According to The National Retail Federation (NRF), ecommerce returns are a “major driver of the overall growth of [retail] returns.” Online returns more than doubled from 2019 to 2020, with consumers returning nearly $102 billion in merchandise bought online.
Although the COVID-19 pandemic and rise of online shopping can explain some of the increase, ecommerce returns have been rising for years. There are four main categories of return-related expenses that combine to make up the high cost of ecommerce returns:
If you’re looking for fresh ideas to reduce the cost of returns and exchanges, read our blog to learn how gift cards and loyalty points could be key.
According to data from Invesp, 30% of all products ordered online are returned, compared to only 8.89% of products that are purchased from a physical store. Here’s a snapshot of retail return rates by industry (online and in-store) from an NRF and Appriss Retail analysis of 40,000 stores:

As you can see, the data varies widely by industry, among other factors. A good general benchmark for ecommerce returns is 20-30%. The important takeaway here is that if your return rates are much higher than these averages, there may be issues you need to address.
Here are the leading reasons why customers say they return products according to Invesp:
There’s also the fact that 58% of consumers intentionally buy more items than they plan to keep. Customers are increasingly using return programs as an easy way to test out or try on ecommerce products, which leads to more returns overall.
Looking at these statistics, it’s evident that it's possible for ecommerce stores to drastically lower the number of returns with the right adjustments. By ensuring that you're shipping quality, undamaged products, providing detailed descriptions and images that perfectly match the product, and shipping the right product to the right customer, you could potentially reduce or eliminate up to 65% of all online returns.
Certain aspects of your store's return policy aren’t up to you to decide. According to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), if a customer receives a defective product, you’re required by law to issue a refund.
There are also a variety of state laws governing how returns and refunds must be handled. The major requirement is that you have to post your return policy in a clear, conspicuous place, but some laws go further.
In Minnesota, for example, stores are required to display their return policy in a boldface font set at a minimum size of 14 points. If these standards aren’t met, the store is required to offer cash refunds for acceptable returned items, regardless of their policy.
Research your state’s or country’s laws or work with a lawyer while designing your ecommerce return policy to avoid legal issues.
According to data from Invesp, 67% of shoppers check a store's return page before making a purchase decision. Whatever your ecommerce return policy happens to be, you need to make it easy for customers to access, whether they’re on a mobile device or desktop.
Creating a dedicated return policy page on your website — and providing a link to this page on every product page — ensures your return policy is highly visible. You can also add it to your FAQ page and your chatbot scripts. Briefly informing customers of your return policy at checkout is another effective option to consider.
Product pages are the heart of any online store, and it’s essential that they provide customers with a complete and accurate description to reduce returns. As we noted earlier, nearly one-quarter of returns are due to products not meeting customers’ expectations or lacking key information in the first place.
Make sure your description includes size, dimensions, color, weight, care instructions, and any other relevant info. Beyond written text, you can show customers exactly what they’ll get with tools like interactive 360-degree images or videos. You can also provide your products next to other common items to give an idea of size and scale.
In addition to making your return policy easy for customers to find, it's also important to design a return policy that’s easy to skim and understand quickly. No customer wants to hunt through 20 pages of fine print to see whether there are return shipping fees.
Even if you decide to publish a lengthier, more complex policy somewhere on your website for legal purposes, you should still provide customers with a condensed version of your return policy. Think about the key bullet points like return shipping instructions, deadlines, and criteria they have to meet to qualify.
Making sure that customers fully understand your return policy before they make a purchase helps avoid confusion — and angry customer emails — later on.
When over two-thirds of shoppers pause to check out a store's return policy before buying, your policy may be their first accurate impression of your brand. So, a strict or unforgiving return policy could end up hurting your customer acquisition goals. It could scare away first-time customers that don't yet trust your business enough to purchase without knowing they’ll be able to easily return products if they’re dissatisfied.
By contrast, a transparent and thoughtful return policy can go a long way toward fostering trust with your customers and ultimately boost the number of new customers that your store acquires. Think about your buyer personas and acquisition goals to develop the right program. This can also inform your brand’s tone of voice throughout the policy.
A straightforward way to reduce the return and refund expenses is to offer an exchange-based return policy or promote alternative refund options like store credit via gift cards or loyalty points.
Although exchanges may come with reshelving fees, they keep the customer’s dollars circulating in your ecommerce store. Gift cards, for example, offer an opportunity to increase your customer’s average order value (AOV).
Imagine a customer with a $25 gift card. They want to use the full value of their card in one transaction, so they buy something slightly more expensive, like a $26.50 sweater. With that, you’ve raised AOV by 6% on a simple credit-based return, and you can scale this up across your business for hundreds or thousands more per year.
We mentioned earlier that 79% of consumers value free return shipping when making a purchasing decision. Nearly half of online retailers currently offer this no-cost option. While it can be painful to absorb these costs, offering free return shipping is important if you want to meet customer expectations and keep up with the competition. If you're looking for ways to reduce your return expenses, requiring that customers cover return shipping should likely be a last resort. Another option is to set a threshold for free shipping, such as a $40 pre-tax order value.
Tracking the costs of your returns can also allow you to make informed decisions around your return process, from hiring more customer service team members to trying different shipping carriers. This figure should be estimated before your policy is implemented and re-evaluated on a regular basis afterward when you have real data to crunch.
By carefully tracking the cost of your returns, you can determine whether you need to make adjustments. For example, if you determine that your return policy is eating up too much of your store's profits, you may test a shorter return window or store credit options. Or you may determine that a reverse logistics process could streamline work and lower costs as well.
Customers love a convenient, hassle-free returns process, and if that’s something you offer, you can use it to promote your brand and earn a reputational boost.
Consider Amazon’s return policy. Customers shopping on Amazon know that they have the option to return products — no questions asked — for a full refund. The peace of mind that comes with this guarantee is a big part of why Amazon has been able to build such a high degree of trust with its customers. It should come as no surprise then that Amazon actively promotes the benefits of its return policy to attract potential customers.
If your business boasts a generous, transparent, or stress-free return program, let your customers know about it. This could be an incredibly effective email or social media message during shopping-heavy periods like Black Friday and Cyber Monday.
If you have an online store as well as a brick-and-mortar store, you'll want to make it possible for customers to return products by either shipping them to you or bringing them to your physical location.
The reasons why this is beneficial are twofold. For one, offering customers more return options will only help improve your customer satisfaction rates. Convenience is top of mind for online shoppers. Second, returns processed in-store are less costly than returns that are processed online since you don't have to pay for return shipping.
The right ecommerce return software can go a long way toward making your return process more efficient and affordable. Here are some of the top-rated tools:
For more recommendations, check out our list of the top returns management software.
If you’re ready to build an efficient and effective returns process for your online store — that’s also backed by the latest returns software — Gorgias can help.
Our platform streamlines your returns process, integrating return software solutions like Loop, Returnly, and ReturnLogic and empowering you to offer top-quality customer service from a single, convenient hub. We also provide detailed developer documentation to build your own Gorgias integrations.
To learn more about how Gorgias can help you create a returns process that leverages the power of automation and in-depth analytics, book a demo today.

When customers reach out to your support team, they expect their problems addressed promptly and accurately. Providing an effortless experience for your customers is one of the best ways to nail customer support — it may be the difference between keeping that customer for years and never seeing them again.
The best customer service agents can solve issues quickly and provide high-quality, personalized customer support without delay. But since many issues crop up repeatedly, written and call center scripts are a smart way to empower agents when they're dealing with frustrated or angry customers.
Not all customer service interactions can (or should be) scripted. But by developing scripts for your most repetitive questions you can give more time and attention to complex and high-impact tickets that need a human touch.
Below, we put together customer service scripts for 29 common scenarios, inspired by top ecommerce brands that use Gorgias, like Steve Madden, Timbuk2, and Vinter’s Daughter.
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Customer service scripts are pre-written answers to questions that customers commonly ask. By proactively writing out answers, or creating scripts, companies prepare team members with thorough, correct answers, thereby helping them build strong problem-solving skills. This creates a more helpful, supportive experience than expecting customer service reps to think of good answers on the fly, especially if they’re dealing with frustrated customers.
Scripts can be useful at any point in the customer interaction, however, they’re particularly useful during situations that recur often: calming angry customers, directing customers to resources like your returns policy, and answering frequently asked questions just to name a few. These are responses that will change very little from one customer to the next, so using a script can save time and provide a consistent customer service experience.
Customer service scripts can live in an internal knowledge base or standalone document library. However, scripts are most helpful when they’re integrated into your helpdesk or customer service platform. This way, your customer service agents can pull up, populate, and modify scripts without any copy/pasting or tab switching — no matter which customer support channel they’re using, from social media and email to live chat and SMS.
Related: Read our guide on omnichannel customer service to learn how to unite all these channels.
On Gorgias, scripts are called Macros and include variables that automatically populate with customer information, like the customer’s name, order number, and more:
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Customer service scripts are a highly effective way of keeping your team members on the same page and providing quick resolutions for customer issues. However, you do need to take some time upfront to create different scripts that specifically address common issues and questions. Otherwise, they won't be valuable or hit the mark.
Below, we’ve categorized several common potential customer service issues and provided several sample scripts for each one. Feel free to use them as inspiration as you create your own templates, but remember to adjust the language to fit your branding — no two companies have the exact same style.
These scripts deal with lost or slow shipments, questions about shipping costs, and needing to change the shipping date after an order has been placed.
Hello! Thanks for reaching out! Here is the link that you can use to track your shipment: [support agent pastes tracking number for last order]. Alternatively, we have also sent a follow-up email with your tracking information. Look for the subject line, “Your order has shipped!”
We are here if you need more information!
Using a customer helpdesk connected to your ecommerce platform, you could insert customer variables like the last order ID and tracking URL dynamically into your answer. Here is what could look like the previous template:
Hello! We are happy to help! Your tracking number is {{Tracking number of last order}}, and I have also included a link to track your package below for your convenience: {{Tracking URL of last order}} For further questions regarding your shipment or anything else, please feel free to contact us!
We are terribly sorry about the delay in the shipment! Sometimes, the delivery is out of our hands and unfortunately we cannot speed things up. We do appreciate you and we are always transparent about any shortcomings from our side. For your convenience, we are sharing the tracking link {{Tracking URL of last order}}. Please let us know if there is anything else we can do for you!
To thank you for your patience, here’s a $10 coupon off your next order.
Thank you for reaching out! Our team is so sorry to hear that you were unable to locate the missing package. Rest assured we will remedy this situation for you.
We can offer two options: we can ship a replacement to you or a full refund for the order instead. In case you prefer a replacement order, we kindly ask that you please confirm the shipping address of where you would like the replacement order sent. We are looking forward to receiving your reply.
I understand that you want to change your shipping option so you can receive this order as quickly as possible. If this is correct, not a problem :) We just cancelled the order and can re-order the item with your desired shipping option. Please note that the additional cost is [$]. Let us know if there is anything else we can do for you!
Few things get under a customer's skin quicker than having trouble placing an order. Dealing with these customer interactions quickly and helpfully can be the difference between creating a loyal customer, or losing a first-time customer.
Thank you for reporting this! I will make sure this is addressed with our team. Would you mind letting me know which product you are purchasing so that we can help right away? Thank you :)
We are terribly sorry for this inconvenience. I can fix this right now for you. Would you mind sending us your order number so that we can change and remove incorrectly added items?
Hey there! I have just checked your order information, and since it was purchased within an allowable timeframe, we would be happy to make the requested changes. If you would like to fully cancel the order instead, just let us know and we can do that for you as well.
Thank you for your request! We are sorry to say that we are not able to process the change, since your order is currently on the way. If you are interested in returning your order, please follow the instructions from our page here, you will find all the needed details! We are sorry that we are not able to help more and we thank you for your understanding!
I understand that you didn’t receive an order confirmation. How long ago was the order placed?
Did you see a thank-you page screen after ordering? Thank you for the details provided, this will help us fix the issue fast!
Being able to use customer service scripts to address issues customers experience with your product mitigates the issue quickly and increases the chances you can keep customer satisfaction intact.
Thank you for reaching out and for the details you have provided! To process your return, would you mind clicking on “Get a return label” link here? Once this is done, we will continue processing your refund. If you have any other feedback regarding the product, we would be happy to hear it!
I understand you have concerns about some of the reviews you’ve seen. Our product isn’t a fit for everyone, but we have 2,000 positive reviews from customers who love it and we are always transparent and upfront! There are no risks, as we offer a full refund if you ship the unused portion back to us within 30 days.
I see you’ve got some questions about your product! We would be happy to help. Ask away.
We are terribly sorry for this inconvenience. We aim to provide the most excellent service and carry our business to high standards We try our best to make sure items reach you in perfect condition, but sometimes mistakes happen that are out of our reach. Please send the item back to us using a prepaid label, which you can print here: (link). We’ll ship you a replacement right away.
Thank you for understanding!
Requests for returns are one of the most common queries to come through customer service tickets. Customers often looking to bend the rules during the phone call or live chat session can pose a unique challenge to representatives who need to provide good service, but also follow company policies. Here are three must-have scripts for addressing tricky returns issues.
Thanks for contacting us! We allow returns up to 30 days from the purchase date for all items except clearance items. You can initiate your return and print a shipping label with our easy return portal here: (link)
Thank you for contacting us. Unfortunately, your order is outside the window of return. However, because it is only outside the window by a couple of days, I can allow you to return the item. Please confirm you’d still like to return it and I will email the prepaid shipping label. If we don’t receive the product within 10 days, we will not be able to accept your return.
Or...
Thank you for contacting us. Unfortunately, your order is unable to be returned because it is well outside of the time window (30 days) outlined in our return policy.
Thank you for reaching out! Let us provide a timeline here. We typically refund orders within 3 to 5 business days from receiving them. I can see that your package is expected to arrive tomorrow, so you should expect to receive your refund within 2 weeks.
Leveraging product integrations that work seamlessly with your customer service platforms can put the power of returns primarily into the customer’s hands. Gorgias’ Loop integration does exactly that, letting customers take control of their returns on their own time and giving them a better customer experience in the process.
The integration is valuable to your support team, too: Instead of spending time on return tickets, they can focus on new customers, shipping issues, etc.
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Staying friendly and accommodating during a customer service call can be difficult, depending on the customer's attitude. Customer service scripts keep your team members — especially new customer service agents — on track and focused on resolving the problem at hand.
Hi, thank you for contacting us. Regarding payment, we accept Visa, Mastercard, American Express, PayPal, and gift cards. Anything else we can help you with?
Yes, we do offer PayPal! Just select PayPal and you’ll be prompted to log in and choose your payment method through PayPal.
Thank you for reporting that. Like all platforms, unfortunately, PayPal has issues sometimes. Since this is a third-party app, we don’t have access to troubleshoot your account. Please ensure that your login information is correct and contact PayPal support with any issues. Alternatively, you can complete your order using a credit card or debit card. Let us know if there is anything else we can help you with!
Many ecommerce companies receive lots of questions about using gift cards. From checking its balance to troubleshooting why it’s not working, answering gift card questions is crucial to maintaining customer satisfaction and building brand loyalty.
Thanks for contacting us about your gift card balance. You can find that information by entering the gift card number here: (link)
Let me know if I can help you with anything else!
Gift card balances expire after 6 years and can be used for any purchase, including clearance items. For our full gift card policy, please visit this link: (link)
We will look right into that, thank you for reporting it. Would you kindly provide us with the gift card number?
Issues with using coupons can enrage even the calmest customer. You can avoid this problem by having friendly, helpful customer service scripts on hand to solve the most common problems that come up with coupon codes.
Not to worry, we will look into that immediately! It seems that the coupon doesn’t apply to your order. However, here’s a coupon for free shipping that you can use for orders over $50.
Unfortunately, coupon codes can’t be used together. Would you mind choosing one coupon code to use per order? If there is anything else needed please let us know!
There can be a lot of user account issues that can frustrate customers who are trying to log in, check order status, or initiate a return. Make sure that your customer service team is trained in requesting the additional information needed, such as their account number or order number, to troubleshoot the issue. The following three scripts can help address common customer requests regarding user accounts.
Not a problem, we can definitely help with that. Can you please use the “forgot username” or “forgot password” buttons here? (login link)
I understand that the order isn’t showing up in your account. Please note that it can take up to 30 minutes for the order to show on your account. Would you mind confirming that this timeframe has passed since you placed the order? Thank you.
We are terribly sorry for this inconvenience. Would you mind sharing a bit more details about the issue you have experienced so that we can fix that for you?
When customers discover issues on your site, use the right words to show your appreciation. Check out these quick scripts to use when a customer discovers a bug or issue on your website or ecommerce store.
Great catch! Thank you for reporting it. Our development team will fix it ASAP. Can I help you with anything else?
I’m sorry about that! I can see what you mean — that is confusing and could be improved. We appreciate you taking the time to let us know about this issue. Our development team will fix it ASAP. Can I help you with anything else?
As touched on above, customer service script templates help support agents address customer needs with consistent, uniform responses. They also help with customer service training and strengthen customer relationships. Beyond being an excellent way to mitigate customer issues with ease and consistency, customer service scripts offer the following benefits:
Make it easy for your customer service representatives to instantly access scripted responses inside of your ecommerce helpdesk. This reduces the time it takes to either craft a response from scratch or hunt for the template in a wiki.
You can further cut back on manual time by automating ecommerce customer service, which we’ll cover in more detail towards the end of this guide.
Providing great customer service can be stressful, even for senior support reps. They need tools like customer scripts to help them be prepared and stay on top of issues — fast. Instead of expecting your team members to formulate and articulate answers as they're dealing with impatient, frustrated, and difficult customers, scripts help them keep a cool head. Positive scripting reduces customer frustration and relieves stress on both sides as your team members work toward a resolution.
You don’t want one customer to have a great customer service experience and another customer to have a bad one. This inconsistency can reflect poorly on your brand: Customers won’t know what to expect when contacting you, and you’ll end up with some negative online reviews and social media comments.
Scripts help everyone — even new agents — follow company procedures and policies, and even adopt a standardized tone of voice.
Here are the four core ingredients to high-quality support:
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Related: Our best strategies for improving the quality of your customer service program.
Customer support positions are prone to twice the average rate of employee turnover. You can mitigate high employee turnover with faster onboarding. Get new customer service team members up to speed with ready-to-use scripts. Scripts reduce many of the customer problems that crop up during a team member’s first few days or weeks on the job, like “How do I answer this question?” and “What’s the protocol for this type of customer issue?”
However, scripts only help if your team uses them. An internal knowledge base is a great way to house your scripts so that your team members can easily access them when needed, whether they’re a new hire or an established employee.
Here are a few signals your customer service team may need some additional training and resources like customer service scripts:
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Related: Our Director of Support’s guide to training for customer service.
When your support team uses customer support script templates, they can resolve issues more quickly, leading to increased customer satisfaction and effortless customer experience.
It is always a good practice to incorporate articles from your knowledge base or FAQ into your scripts. For example, your scripts and FAQ page should both address common customer questions, like those about your shipping policy.
For example, men’s jewelry brand Jaxxon makes their shipping policy available as a Quick Response Flow (or an autoresponse) in their live chat widget and on their FAQ page. This way, shoppers have two methods of understanding the company’s shipping process without having to reach out to customer service:
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If your business doesn’t have an FAQ or knowledge base yet, consider adding one to your ecommerce store as an easy way to address customer questions and improve user experience. These resources can deflect repetitive tickets by giving customers self-service information with minimal (or even zero) direction from an agent. Find out more about how to set one up and take a look at some great FAQ pages in action.
Related: Our guide to reducing resolution time, with insights from our Director of Customer Support.
Automation is one of the best ways to build an efficient customer support team, and this includes prewritten live chat scripts. While leaning on technological functionality like automated responses saves time and effort while ensuring consistent quality, it also has the added benefit of providing much more step-by-step information for customers.
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For example, a scripted response to, “Where is my order?” still requires the agent to manually go look up the order and shipping details. But when utilizing technology like Gorgias’ Macros, that information can be automatically pulled from Shopify or BigCommerce and sent to the customer — in a templated format that’s consistent with your brand’s voice:
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The response is only the beginning. When you pair Macros with automated Rules, you can also trigger actions like assigning tickets to agents, prioritizing tickets, changing shipping addresses, refunding orders, and so much more:
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With a helpdesk for ecommerce like Gorgias, your entire team can access and use your library of templated customer service scripts (Macros) to accelerate and improve their responses.
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Gorgias also offers robust, intuitive customer service automation tools that are much more customer-friendly than most other platforms’ chatbots. Through Gorgias’ Automate, merchants don't even have to dig into Shopify data and send a scripted response — customers can find and change order details right within the chat box, no agent attention required:
Customer service scripts are priceless tools for your customer service agents. Using them effectively reduces response times, and helps with resolution time since your agents will have everything prepared for them upfront. This workflow keeps everyone satisfied: customers for getting fast resolution and agents for not having to type in the same response over and over again.
Gorgias’ deep integration with Shopify and other ecommerce platforms makes it easier than ever to set up Rules and Macros that empower your agents to work through repetitive tickets faster so they can focus on the most important customer conversations.
Check out our Loop Earplugs customer story to see how Gorgias helped Loop decrease WISMO (“where is my order”) tickets from 17% to 5% by providing self-service information, and increase revenue from CX by 43% using Gorgias Automate.
“We’ve seen 43% increase in revenue from customer support since we launched pre-sales flows. Quick response flows give us the ability to build trust with our customers and that’s priceless. When customers get a quick and honest answer, they often end up buying more than one product in a short span of time. Seeing customers live the life we’re aiming to create for them in Loop Earplugs is extremely rewarding for us.”
— Milan Vanmarcke, Customer Service Manager
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Quick summary:
Gross Merchandise Value (GMV) is a useful metric to monitor when running an ecommerce site. Traditionally, it’s one of the first numbers online merchants try to improve sales. It sounds simple enough: If you increase GMV, you’ll make more money, right?
Not so fast.
Like any single metric, GMV has its shortcomings, too. Below we’ll explain the right way to think about GMV and ways to increase GMV that can lead to more profit, not just more revenue.
Gross merchandise value measures the total value of goods sold on a platform or marketplace over a specific period of time. GMV is the full amount customers pay before deductions like fees, discounts, or returns.
GMV and revenue are not interchangeable. Revenue is what remains after subtracting deductions from the GMV.
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You can use the following formula to calculate GMV:
Gross merchandise value = sales price of goods x number of items sold
If you sell something for $100 through Etsy and Etsy takes a 10% commission, that’s $100 GMV for Etsy.
In terms of revenue, $90 of revenue is for you and $10 of revenue for Etsy.
If you sell something for $100 on your own website, your GMV and revenue are $100.
GMV provides insight into a platform's sales strength before considering deductions, but it doesn't reflect actual revenue or profit.
In this section, we'll examine the advantages, limitations, and risks of depending solely on GMV to evaluate your business' performance.
GMV is a versatile metric that can be used for more than just evaluating how profitable your business is. Here are the five benefits of using GMV:
Although GMV offers valuable insights, it falls short of capturing a complete financial overview of your business. Let's look at some drawbacks of relying on GMV alone.
The best way to use GMV is to complement it with other essential key performance indicators (KPIs). Here's how you can use GMV in tandem with other metrics:
If you’re looking for ways to improve GMV for your ecommerce website, here are four ways to do that.
Free shipping is a popular option for online shopping, where customers don’t have to pay for delivery. Free shipping is attractive to customers who are sensitive to price and prefer a simple pricing structure.
Here is a good example from Teddy Fresh:

Two different ways to offer free shipping to increase GMV:
🛒 Setting up an ecommerce store? Check out our list of the best Shopify themes.
Upselling is a strategy to sell a superior, more expensive version of a product that a customer already owns (or just bought). Meanwhile, cross-selling means selling related products to the one a customer already owns (or just bought).
To upsell products, you can offer larger sizes, adding more features, or increasing performance. For example, if a customer wants a 4GB graphics card, upsell them to 16GB with a limited-time discount and a slightly higher price than their previous choice.
For cross-sell, you can add a “frequently bought with this item” or “who bought this bought this” section on your product pages. Or promote accessories on the cart page as Cariuma does in the below example:

Product bundling is when you package complimentary products as a group of items that can be purchased together at a discount or a lower price than when purchased separately.
You can bundle products together as an upsell or a cross-sell. Alternatively, you can create a unique product bundle, either in a gift box or special wrapping.
Winc is just one example of an online store that has capitalized on an opportunity for product education and curation with subscription boxes. The brand uses a quiz to help customers determine the right bottle of wine that satisfies their tastes. Then, offer curated boxes of items that meet their preferences.

When you have a lot of slow-moving inventory products, it’s a great idea to bundle them with popular items. Doing that will help freshen up your old or overstocked inventory and increase sales.
By offering bundles, you can also make customers feel that they got a good deal — even though they’ve likely spent more than they planned to.
Setting up your Shopify store? See our list of the best Shopify apps for ecommerce merchants.
Bulk discount (also known as bulk pricing or volume discount) is a sales strategy that encourages customers to purchase more and with higher quantities at a lower price. This is particularly useful if you’re selling items that are typically bought in bulk.
Note that you can also use free gifts or free products to incentivize customers who spend more on your store. Cotopaxi did a great job of using this tactic. This store offers customers free masks if they spend beyond a certain threshold.

Approximately 95% of customers say that customer service is important to their choice of and loyalty to a brand. And 80% of customers consider the experience a company provides as important as its products.
These are just a few of many key customer service statistics, but enough to prove that an excellent customer service experience impacts your bottom line.
When you take time to answer customers’ questions on social media and live chat, you build trust with them and make them feel safe to buy from you.
When you’re proactive in reducing returns, you have a chance to turn them into new sales. Your customer might be satisfied with an exchange instead of asking for a refund.
That strengthens your brand confidence and encourages customers to come back to your store.
After all, retaining an existing customer is five times cheaper than finding a new one. By delivering exceptional customer service, you give your customers a convincing reason to stay with your business forever.
GMV is helpful if you’re selling on marketplaces like Etsy, Amazon, or Alibaba. But as said earlier, you shouldn’t focus too much on improving GMV. There are more important ecommerce KPIs you should follow to measure how your store performs.
Also, it’s one thing to increase GMV; it’s another thing to maintain excellent customer service when you have more orders. Take care of your customers first to create an incredible shopping experience for them, and you’ll improve your bottom line sooner or later.
If you’re looking for a solution to help you handle a flood of customer requests, let Gorgias lend you a hand.
Sign up for a Gorgias account and enjoy all the features you need in an ecommerce help desk in a 7-day free trial.
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You went back to check your store and noticed an error in the checkout page settings, preventing customers from making payments on your store.
Do you think you would experience the moment of dread in that situation?
I bet you would.
When you’re launching an online store, there are many details to remember—and those details can make or break your business's success.
However, by having a rock-solid ecommerce launch checklist in place, you can eliminate errors and rid yourself of “dread” moments forever.
The following checklist will help you figure out the key things you need to get ready when launching your online store. Think of it as a quality-assurance check for your ecommerce launch.
Let’s jump in.
Your ecommerce website is where customers will visit to learn more about what you’re offering. It’s also where shopping activities happen.

Hence, ensure your website includes these most recommended standard pages:
A worthy note is that your ecommerce website doesn’t have to include a blog page. It depends on your marketing strategy, product types, and target audience (more on that later).
A listing page or a category page is where customers discover your products associated with a specific category. It’s useful for keeping your website coherent and helping customers find what they’re looking for quickly. You can take listing pages to a whole new level by using them to increase conversions and enhance your overall SEO.

Ensure you include the following elements in your listing pages:
Product pages are where the buy buttons show up. But they’re also where many other things can go wrong: lack of trust, unclear information about products, etc. That’s why each product page must be optimized as much as possible.

Keep in mind the following:
The shopping cart is where shoppers review their selected items and make the purchasing decision. The goal of this page is to lead shoppers to the checkout page.
Follow these tips to create an effective shopping cart:
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The checkout page is where cart abandonment often happens. So ensure you review it carefully as much as possible.

Remember these to build a high-converting checkout page:
Many ecommerce websites rely on social media or paid advertising to drive conversions. They ignore entirely or put together with little consideration of search engine optimization (SEO).
But ecommerce SEO is worth investing in because 44% of people start their online shopping journey with a Google search. Also, 37.5% of all traffic to ecommerce sites comes from search engines.

Keep in mind the following:
Recommended reading: SEO for ecommerce, Dominate Google in 10 Easy Steps.

On an ecommerce website, conversions are critical. Check out the following to make sure your store is optimized for high conversion rates:

Every ecommerce platform offers an app store filled with amazing apps to extend your commerce store’s functionality and grow your business. That’s why you should find the most essential apps and install them into your store:
Here are some app types you should consider:
Good customer service means better customer retention and more sales. That’s why choosing the right helpdesk is crucial for your online business. It’ll not only help you provide the best customer support, increase engagement, and convert more sales in the process but also seamlessly integrate with your current ecommerce platform.
For ecommerce businesses, Gorgias is an ideal solution as it’s an ecommerce-dedicated ticketing system and has tight integration with Shopify, BigCommerce, and Magento.

Here is what Gorgias offers:

Using email marketing is one of the best ways to develop and maintain a good relationship with customers. If your ecommerce business hasn’t taken the time to adopt email marketing, you’re likely leaving money on the table.
Here are the eight most important emails for ecommerce:
The U.S. now has over 230 million active social media users, with nearly 7 million added in 2019. That doesn’t mention the fact that ecommerce sales are heavily influenced by social media. Since your customers are very likely already on some social platforms, you might want to go where they are.

Keep the following in mind:
Recommended reading: Master Social Media Marketing for Ecommerce in 10 Easy Steps
It’s essential to set up analytics tracking and monitoring from day one because doing that will give you valuable insights into your visitors and customers.

Your ecommerce platform has its own set of analytics reporting built-in, but you may also want to consider trying these tips:
Also, be sure you understand the importance of the following ecommerce metrics:
The secret to ecommerce success isn’t just to get your products out there and see how they perform. You need a marketing plan to bring your products to potential customers and convince them to buy.
Without a marketing plan, you might miss out on the fact that “More and more brands are competing for the same eyes. Facebook’s algorithm rewards video and motion-based creative that are more likely to hook your audience quickly. And customers are also more demanding, impatient and curious than ever before,” as Scott Ginsberg, Head of Content, Metric Digital says.
Ensure your marketing plan includes:
One of the best ways to reduce abandoned carts is by providing as many payment methods as possible since everyone has different preferences.

Consider integrating these payment options:
Regarding credit cards, you need to set up payment authorization to capture payment from your customers. You can do this by accessing your ecommerce platform admin. For example, in Shopify, you can set up automatic or manual capture of credit card payments. Shopify Payments provides an authorization period of 7 days.
To avoid errors and remove common online shopping hassles, you need to carefully test your ecommerce website before launching it. Also, run continuous A/B testing to identify what makes your customers happy and what brings conversions to your store.
Ensure you do the following tests:
This ecommerce launch checklist represents a roadmap for online merchants looking to start their business from scratch. Mastering the basics, and you’ll avoid all the hassles along the way.
Let’s wrap up:
And once your store is up and running, check out these 13 ecommerce growth tactics to take your store to the next level.
Looking for a customer support app for your ecommerce store? Sign up for a Gorgias account and enjoy all the premium features for free in 7 days. Gorgias is an ecommerce-focused helpdesk solution that will help you create the best experience for your customers, improve your support team’s performance, and eventually drive sales.
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