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Conversational Shopping Trends

Conversations Are Becoming a Revenue Channel: The Data Proves It

Brands using AI-driven conversational commerce are seeing measurable gains in purchase rates, retention, and AOV. The data from 16,000+ ecommerce brands shows why conversation has become the new path to checkout.
By Gabrielle Policella
0 min read . By Gabrielle Policella

TL;DR:

  • Customer journeys are collapsing to a single conversation. The traditional browse-and-buy journey is giving way to AI-guided shopping that moves from discovery to purchase in a single exchange.
  • 79% of brands say AI-driven conversational commerce has increased their sales and purchase rates.
  • AI-only influenced orders grew 63% in a single year, from 2.7 million in Q1 to 4.4 million in Q4.
  • Brands treating conversation as a revenue channel. They’re not just a support function, generating higher AOV, shorter buying cycles, and stronger retention.

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 shopping journey has collapsed into a single thread

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.

Side-by-side comparison showing traditional page-based shopping with multiple steps and drop-offs versus a streamlined conversation-led journey with AI guidance and fewer friction points.

The conversation-led journey collapses that timeline:

  1. A shopper recognizes a need and starts a conversation via chat, messaging, or a search-triggered prompt
  2. An AI agent asks clarifying questions about preferences, budget, and constraints
  3. The AI provides personalized product recommendations in real time
  4. The shopper validates concerns about fit, compatibility, delivery, and returns, all inside the conversation
  5. The shopper completes the purchase directly within or immediately after that exchange
  6. The AI picks up the conversation post-purchase for order tracking and proactive support
  7. A human agent steps in only when the situation calls for it

What used to take days now takes minutes. Discovery, evaluation, and purchase happen in a single thread.

Conversation is a revenue strategy, not a support upgrade

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:

  • 38% cited improved customer support efficiency
  • 23% pointed to higher customer retention and loyalty
  • 20% saw improved purchase rates

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.

What the data shows about AI-influenced orders

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. 

Quarterly bar chart showing conversations linked to orders increasing from about 2.7M in Q1 to 4.4M in Q4, with a small share influenced by AI.
Quarterly bar chart showing conversations linked to orders growing from about 753K in Q1 to just over 1M in Q4, with a small AI-driven portion.
Quarterly bar chart showing conversations linked to orders growing from about 2.05M in Q1 to 2.82M in Q4, with a small portion influenced by AI.
Quarterly bar chart showing conversations linked to orders increasing from about 651K in Q1 to 978K in Q4, with a minor AI contribution.
Quarterly bar chart showing conversations linked to orders rising from about 322K in Q1 to 509K in Q4, with minimal AI influence.

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.

Why brands are making this a strategic priority

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.

Statistics showing 84% of brands increased the strategic importance of conversational commerce and 82% expect AI-driven conversational commerce to become mainstream 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.

What this looks like in practice: TUSHY

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.

How to apply this to your strategy

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:

  • Pre-sales chat. Identify your most common pre-purchase questions (sizing, compatibility, shipping timelines) and ensure your AI can answer them confidently and promptly.
  • Product page engagement. Use proactive chat prompts triggered by page behavior to start conversations before shoppers leave.
  • Post-purchase follow-up. Let AI pick up the conversation after checkout with order updates and proactive support, reducing inbound volume and building trust.
  • Human escalation. Define clearly which situations require a human agent – complex issues, emotional exchanges, high-stakes decisions. 

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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min read.
Conversational Commerce Trends

The State of Conversational Commerce: 5 Trends Reshaping Ecommerce in 2026

Explore 5 key trends from The State of Conversational Commerce Trends Report in 2026.
By Gabrielle Policella
0 min read . By Gabrielle Policella

TL;DR:

  • AI is resolving tickets, not just replying. AI now handles 31% of customer interactions for ecommerce brands, and that number is expected to nearly double within two years.
  • Every channel is becoming a storefront. Conversations are replacing the traditional browse-and-buy journey, with 79% of brands reporting sales from AI-driven interactions. 
  • AI is shortening the buying cycle. 93% of AI-influenced purchases happen within the first 48 hours of the conversation. 
  • CX teams are changing, not shrinking. Ecommerce brands are actively hiring for more technical roles to implement, coach, and maintain AI. 
  • The winning model is hybrid. AI handles volume and speed, while humans handle complexity and judgment. 

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. 

Bar chart showing percentage of customer interactions handled by AI: 31% in 2025 and 47% within the next two years.

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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Trend 1: AI is table stakes for ecommerce and it’s no longer just about efficiency

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.

Bar chart showing ecommerce professionals using AI: 69.2% in 2024, 77.2% in 2025, and 96% in 2026.

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

  • Order tracking and status updates
  • Returns, exchanges, and refund requests
  • Shipping FAQs and delivery estimates
Bar chart showing AI use cases across ecommerce: customer support automation (96%), AI product recommendations (88%), automated tracking updates (69%), AI personalization (64%), inventory control (51%), dynamic pricing (36%), and order fulfillment (18%).

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. 

Trend 2: Conversations are the new path to checkout

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.

Side-by-side comparison of page-based and conversation-led customer journeys, highlighting AI-driven real-time recommendations, proactive information, and post-purchase support within a single conversation.

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

Bar chart showing percentage of customer interactions handled by AI: 31% in 2025 and 47% within the next two years.

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.  

Trend 3: AI is accelerating the purchase cycle

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. 

AI chat interface recommending apparel items based on cart contents, alongside statistic stating 93% of purchases occur within 48 hours of an AI agent’s recommendation.

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.

Trend 4: AI is making CX teams more technical 

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.

Bar chart of expected headcount changes over 12 months: 21% increase significantly, 41% increase somewhat, 28% stay the same, 9% decrease somewhat, and 1% decrease significantly.

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.

Donut chart indicating 77% of companies report at least some convergence between support and sales functions due to AI.

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. 

Trend 5: The future is hybrid: AI-first, humans when it counts

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. 

Chart showing which inquiries are handled by AI vs. humans.

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.

Bar chart showing customers prefer human support for order issues (54%), product advice (35%), and returns or refunds (24%).

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. 

Where conversational commerce is heading by 2030

The 2026 trends are about expansion and standardization. The 2030 predictions are about what comes next.

Bar chart showing brand expectations by 2030: 89% expect AI voice purchasing, 29% expect AI multilingual support, and 19% expect proactive AI upsells and cross-sells.

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. 

Start building your conversational commerce strategy today

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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min read.
Ecom Lab Announcement

Ecommerce Finally Has a Research Hub Built on Real Data

The Ecom Lab is here. Explore first-party ecommerce data on AI adoption, support performance, and industry benchmarks.
By Gorgias Team
0 min read . By Gorgias Team

TL;DR:

  • The Ecom Lab is Gorgias’s public research hub for ecommerce insights. It shares real, first-party data to help teams understand industry performance and trends.
  • It exists to solve the lack of reliable ecommerce benchmarks. Most available data is self-reported or too broad, making it hard for teams to accurately measure performance.
  • The goal is to give ecommerce teams a clear baseline for smarter decisions. With real benchmarks, you can better evaluate performance and opportunities.
  • The Ecom Lab makes metrics like AI adoption, response times, and CSAT visible. These are segmented by brand size, GMV, and vertical so you can benchmark more precisely.
  • The latest reports reveal major gaps in AI adoption and benchmarking practices. They also highlight how inefficient support processes are driving costs.

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.

What is the Ecom Lab?

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.

What data can you find in the Ecom Lab?

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.

Read the first three reports now

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.

Go to the Ecom Lab →

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

Further reading

Ecommerce Communities

The Best Ecommerce Communities To Join To Grow Knowledge as an Online Merchant

By Michelle Deery
11 min read.
0 min read . By Michelle Deery

Let’s keep it real:

Growing an ecommerce store can be difficult. You need to consistently compete to attract customers to your website and win sales.

There are so many business decisions that you need to make, from product selection to logistics to marketing. 

That’s why it’s so important to study every facet of running an ecommerce business. It will allow you to stay on top of your game at all times. 

One of the best ways to learn more about the ecommerce industry is to join an ecommerce community.

Want to take your ecommerce career to the next level? Keep reading.

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What Are Ecommerce Communities and Why Do They Matter?

Ecommerce communities are specialized online communities dedicated to ecommerce businesses.

These communities are meant to be a gathering place for ecommerce professionals where they can meet, share what they have learned, and get advice. 

Some of these communities exist as standalone online forums, some of them as subforums of large online discussion platforms, and some as user groups on social media networks.

Some of them are free for everyone to join, some are exclusive to paying members.

But whatever the particular setup is, the aim of all these ecommerce communities remains the same: helping ecommerce professionals connect and learn from each other.

By the way, if you're just starting your online store, check out our ecommerce launch checklist to make sure you cover all your bases.

Why Should You Join an Online Ecommerce Community?

Joining an ecommerce community can help you grow your ecommerce knowledge and make your sales soar.

Here’s how...

1) Peer Effect & Feedback

Ecommerce communities are full of ambitious, hard-working, motivated ecommerce professionals who are passionate about selling online.

Hanging out with fellow online merchants will fuel your ambition, inspire you to work harder, gather ideas that will gain more sales and keep you motivated day in and day out. Especially if you can find a community dedicated to your specific ecommerce niche.

In fact, studies have shown that when performance feedback is received, it has both a cognitive and a positive motivational impact on individuals. 

2) Mutual Help

Mistakes are unavoidable.

But they are also expensive.

And they can seriously set back the growth of your ecommerce store if you make the wrong decision and implement an incorrect strategy. 

That’s why it makes sense to ask for advice when you have to make an important business decision.

When you are a member of an online ecommerce community, you can post a question and get various perspectives. This can help you see the situation in a new way.

Moreover, these communities are often frequented by seasoned ecommerce professionals, which means that you can get advice from people who have achieved more than you.

3) Build Relationships

You have probably heard the saying:

“It’s not about what you know, it’s about who you know.”

And while it may be an exaggeration since your actual skills are definitely important, there’s no doubt that there’s a lot of truth in that phrase.

Relationships with the right people can lead to:

  • New business ideas
  • Lucrative collaborations and partnerships
  • Mentorships that accelerate your progress

...and more.

But you can’t just go about your daily life expecting to somehow bump into the right people by accident. You need to get out there and proactively build your network.

And what could be a better place to start than an ecommerce community that’s full of ecommerce professionals just like you?

4) Accountability

To grow your ecommerce store, you need to go above and beyond your customer’s expectations. That’s how you will stand out from everyone else.

But this can be easier said than done. You want to show initiative, you want to prove how excellent your products are, you want to add value… But the competition can be fierce, especially since there are currently 7.9 million online retailers in the world and 2.1 million of them are in the United States.

That’s where joining an ecommerce community can help as well. You can keep yourself accountable by announcing your extra-curricular project and then posting progress updates. You can even get an accountability buddy with whom you can check in with.

Social pressure is an extremely powerful thing. No one wants their store to fail. So make yourself accountable and start getting things done. 

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The Best Ecommerce Communities

Okay, so now that you understand how joining an online ecommerce community can help you gain ecommerce knowledge and perform better, let’s take a closer look at some of the best ecommerce communities out there.

Shopify Plus Community


The Shopify Plus Community is an official Shopify Facebook group. It currently has 7.1k members. It is a closed group and you can only become a member if you are a Shopify Plus Merchant.  

It’s a great place to access and network with other growth-minded business leaders who have already scaled their ecommerce store. 

You will be able to discuss experiences and strategies with high-volume merchants that will help you not only survive in the commerce world, but thrive. 

Members are also known to provide recommendations of the tools they use that help them achieve sucess, like push notification apps and multi-channel helpdesks. This will help you avoid the trial and error phase that inevitably comes along with trying new software that you need for your ecommerce store.

Ecommerce Elites Mastermind

This is a private Facebook group that was created by ecommerce entrepreneurs Steve and Evan Tan who have built several million dollar stores.

This is a large and active ecommerce community that has 107k+ members at the time of writing. 

It’s a great place to discuss any ecommerce topics, like Shopify/Magento tips, Facebook ads, social media marketing, and conversions. But it’s especially useful if you need advice on international ecommerce as there are a lot of members from outside the U.S.

Shopify Ecommerce Group


Shopify Ecommerce Group is an unofficial Shopify public Facebook group for ecommerce professionals who use Shopify. It has 29k+ members at the time of writing.

You can get help on various topics related to the Shopify platform, from using the core software to various helpful apps to conversion optimization tips.

You don’t need to join the group to browse the posts, so you can check them out and see if you find them useful before you commit to joining the community.

Ecom Empires

Ecom Empires is a private Facebook group created by Nick Peroni for ecommerce professionals. It has 97k+ members at the time of writing.

Here you can find discussions on a wide variety of ecommerce topics, from software to logistics to marketing. Whatever your question is, the chances are that someone on the Ecom Empires group has an answer. 

Shopify Entrepreneurs

Shopify Entrepreneurs is another unofficial private Facebook group that caters to ecommerce professionals who use Shopify. It has 106k+ members at the moment of writing.

It is full of a diverse group of people, from Shopify store managers, store owners and expert service providers that include marketers, designers and developers.

This makes it a great place to get feedback on Shopify stores, but keep in mind that the moderators need to approve each post manually. Not all posts get approved. 

Although this may seem like an unnecessary hurdle when you want to ask a question, it also means that the content quality remains high. 

The Ecommerce Marketing Community

The Ecommerce Marketing Community is designed to connect ecommerce founders who are growing their brands from $0 to $1 million in sales. They bring in ecommerce experts every month for a monthly AMA, along with having daily posts sharing what founders are learning. With over 1,200 members, the community is growing every day and the perfect place to share e-commerce marketing tips you're using to grow your brand.

WooCommerce Community

WooCommerce Community is the official WooCommerce ecommerce platform Facebook group. It has 40k+ members at the time of writing. It was created to help online merchants with features and functionality of their WooCommerce store.

It’s one of the best places online to get answers to questions related to WooCommerce software. It also provides an opportunity for WP developers and WooCommerce euthanists to connect and discuss ideas. 

Cener Ecommerce Mastermind

Cener Ecommerce Mastermind is a private Facebook group for ecommerce professionals that has 52k+ members at the time of writing.

It was founded by a successful ecommerce entrepreneur Justin Cener who has built and sold a 7-figure ecommerce business. It was originally a closed Facebook group made specifically for Justin’s clients.

It’s a great place for online merchants who want to gain ecommerce knowledge as he still hangs around and answers as many questions as he can.

Ecommerce Entrepreneurs

Ecommerce Entrepreneurs is a private Facebook group that is affiliated with the popular website A Better Lemonade Stand.

It’s an active community that has strict rules and is heavily moderated. 

They only accept users that:

  • Have been active on Facebook for over a year
  • Have valid profile photos
  • Belong to less than 50 Facebook groups

You will need a password to access the group, which you will get immediately after reading and agreeing to the group rules. 

Ecommerce Fuel Forum

Ecommerce Fuel Forum is an exclusive online community for 7-figure ecommerce business owners.

This is probably the best place for successful ecommerce entrepreneurs to network with other successful ecommerce entrepreneurs.

You will need to apply and pass the vetting process to join this community, but it’s worth the hassle.

SEO Chat

Does search engine optimization (SEO) feature heavily in your company’s marketing strategy?

Then you may want to check out SEO Chat, an online forum dedicated to the topic of getting organic search traffic from Google.

Being a member of an SEO community can help you stay up to date on the latest SEO strategies and tactics. This is important given the fast-paced, ever-changing landscape of search engine optimization.

Digital Point Ecommerce Forum

Digital Point is a massive online forum that has subforums for pretty much everything related to developing stores, from SEO to pay-per-click advertising to copywriting. It even has subforums for web development and web design!

You may want to check out the ecommerce subforum. At the time of writing, the last message on it is almost a week old, so it’s not particularly active. Still, you can post your question there and see if you get replies. 

Plus, it may be worth your while to browse the archives, since some popular threads have received 1,000+ replies. You may find valuable business insights buried in those discussions!

BigCommerce Forums

BigCommerce is a sophisticated ecommerce platform that provides all the functionality needed for running a medium to large ecommerce business. 

They have an official online forum where anyone can ask questions related to ecommerce in general and BigCommerce software in particular. You will find that the forum is split into various different groups.

Reddit Ecommerce Subreddit

You are probably familiar with Reddit, which is one of the largest online discussion websites in the world.

On it, you can discuss pretty much anything, from cute pet videos to business to politics.

At the moment of writing, the Ecommerce subreddit has over 140k subscribers. You can post your own threads as well as participate in other members’ threads.

It’s a public forum, so the discussion quality can be hit and miss, but if you keep an eye on this subreddit you will almost certainly stumble across some gems (detailed case studies that companies share are especially valuable).

Reddit allows you to sort posts by popularity over a certain time period, which is a handy feature if you want to quickly check the most upvoted posts of the day, week, month, or year (or even of all time).

Shopify Community

Shopify, one of the most popular ecommerce platforms out there, has its own official forum called Shopify Community.

You can ask questions on a variety of ecommerce topics, from the technical stuff to store design to marketing to payments to selling internationally.

There is even a subforum focused on the social impact of ecommerce where people can discuss how to grow sustainable and socially conscious brands.

Plus, there’s also a subforum specifically dedicated to feedback requests, so if you want feedback on a Shopify store, that’s the place to go to. 

Shopify Community is an active online forum. At the time of writing, the latest messages in quite a few subforums were posted less than half an hour ago, in some cases as little as 3 minutes ago. 

So if you want to get answers to your Shopify questions, you should definitely check out this ecommerce community.

Gorgias Community

Gorgias Community is an official group created and managed by the team at Gorgias. It is a closed group that only existing Gorgias customers can join. 

The group is a place where customer support teams can collaborate and share ideas on training, strategy, tactics and more. Being an active member of this Facebook group will help you take your ecommerce store’s customer support to the next level.

Since it and covers all types of customer support topics, it is a great place where you can share your successes and help others in the ecommerce community solve their problems too.

Wrapping Up

Ecommerce communities are places where you can find inspiration, learn the latest tactics, and network with other ecommerce professionals.

They are an ideal place where online merchants will find invaluable information that will help them take their ecommerce store to the next level.

We recommend that you not only join ecommerce communities, but be active in them. You won’t regret it.

Ultra Fast Fulfillment In 2021

8 reasons why ultra-fast fulfillment should be your new normal in 2021

By Rachel Go
8 min read.
0 min read . By Rachel Go

In 2019, Amazon Prime broke records, delivering a bottle of Oyster Bay Sauvignon Blanc in just 13 minutes. But what was a novel example of ultra-fast fulfillment is quickly heading towards normality, as customer expectations rise beyond the buy button and beyond Amazon.

Only a third of customers will wait three or more days for an online delivery, and one in four shoppers will choose a retailer because they have better delivery options than their competitors. In other words, fast fulfillment is the new eCommerce standard for 2021. 

But you don’t want your eCommerce brand to be standard; you want it to be exceptional, and this is where ultra-fast fulfillment comes in. 

This blog will go over ultra-fast deliveries and how to get them for your eCommerce store. 

What is ultra-fast fulfillment?

Ultra-fast fulfillment is an eCommerce delivery standard that beats standard fulfillment speeds by delivering orders in 3, 2, and even next day.

The actual date of ultra-fast delivery depends on the customer location and your fulfillment partner’s order cut-off time. For example, a customer living 3 kilometers from your warehouse, placing an order at 10 a.m. on a Monday, could receive their order the same or next day. A customer living 4,000 kilometers from your warehouse placing an ordering at 5 p.m. on Monday would receive their order later.

To make this possible, eCommerce sellers can use a combination of distributed warehouses, an array of carriers and overnight shipping services, or leave it to an all-inclusive outsourced fulfillment provider. 

First, let’s look at why ultra-fast delivery is critical for eCommerce success this year.  

8 reasons ultra-fast fulfillment is critical for 2021

Ultra-fast delivery isn’t anything new; as you heard, Amazon has been delivering items super quick for years. But events in 2020 have made ultra-fast fulfillment crucial for eCommerce success in 2021, for several reasons. 

1. Providing ultra-fast fulfillment as your eCommerce differentiator

eCommerce is becoming an increasingly noisy industry, with more people selling online than ever before. 

Last year, we witnessed the shift from physical to online retail accelerate by approximately five years. eCommerce is booming, and so is the competition. Accordingly, you need a sustainable differentiator to stand out;- something that can set you apart without significantly diminishing your profits, as price wars can do. 

Ultra-fast fulfillment is your eCommerce differentiator. It’s dynamic, specific, and convenient -- providing customers with something valuable, personalized, and noticeable to distinguish you from your competitors. 

Shoppers also like talking about and listening to positive delivery experiences -- allowing you to further differentiate your customers using positive user-generated content and feedback to secure more conversions.

Relevant reading: How fast delivery can help your Shopify store stand out

2. Winning customers from Amazon

Amazon ships fast, and shoppers know that - it’s why 63% of consumers head straight there. However, 2020 caused a change in shopper behavior, with more consumers wanting to shop directly with brands rather than via an online marketplace. 

According to RetailDive back in 2018, 81% of consumers planned to shop directly by 2023 - and with Amazon Prime suffering notable outages last year, we expect this statistic to be achieved earlier than expected. 

Ultra-fast fulfillment provides shoppers with the convenience of Amazon’s shipping speeds with the personal and rewarding experience of shopping directly with online brands. It allows you to offer the best of both worlds and benefit from Amazon’s disloyal customer base. 

3. Increasing your visibility online

To stand out, you must be seen, and ultra-fast shipping speeds help with that too. 

If you’re a multi-channel seller, fast shipping programs such as Walmart TwoDay and Wish 2-day increase your visibility with search rankings, fast shipping tags, fast shipping-filters, and buy box preference. This, in turn, boosts your website traffic, as people learn about your brand and google you to find out more.

You can also increase the visibility of your website among paid advertisements. Dynamic, fast shipping ad tags display 2-day or next-day delivery tags on your Facebook and Google Shopping advertisements, depending on the customer’s location. This makes your ads visually stand out to attract customer attention.

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4. Providing Insta-gratification

May 2020 saw Instagram Shops hit the eCommerce scene, bringing a whole new level of instant gratification. 

Shoppers use Instagram to seamlessly browse products and place orders without leaving the platform - increasing the speed they can purchase. 

Ultra-fast fulfillment ensures you don’t ruin an Insta-worthy customer experience by slow deliveries. Instead, customers receive their product while they’re still excited and engaged, making them more likely to share their buying experience on the platform.

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5. Providing more control to your buyers

Buying products online can be unpredictable. Customers don’t know if the product quality will match expectations, when the order will arrive, or if it will arrive at all. This makes shopping online stressful for many, and the panic buying of 2020 only made things worse. 

Ultra-fast shipping comforts customers and provides reassurance and convenience in an unpredictable world. Customers know when their order will arrive, meaning they spend very little time in that gray area between order placement and receipt. 

Let’s also not forget that sometimes shoppers have no control over how quickly they need an item - think forgotten anniversary gifts or empty beauty products. Ultra-fast shipping allows customers to regain control over the situation by rectifying it as soon as possible.

6. Meeting the emotional needs of shoppers

Customers have certain emotional needs you need to meet when selling online, and that’s gotten even more prominent over the past 12 months. 

2-day and next-day delivery speeds cater to these emotional needs in four different ways:

  • Providing easy-to-understand shipping expectations that reduce ambiguity and increase certainty. 
  • Delivering products as soon as possible to provide instant gratification and remove worry. 
  • Highlighting exceptional customer care to increase trust. 
  • Providing strong customer service to support the customer through their purchasing journey. 

Ultimately, fast shipping excites customers during the purchasing phase, supports them during the delivery phase, and pleases them during the receipt phase. 

7. Creating business resilience during growth periods

eCommerce has been running at a peak since the middle of last year, creating certain industry strains. 

Amazon FBA couldn’t keep up with the demand, resulting in the suspension of non-essential inbound deliveries and slow delivery speeds - while other sellers faced broken supply chains, insatiable demand, and overwhelmed shipping carriers. 

Successful brands were those that could rely on a strong and fast fulfillment infrastructure to maintain delivery speeds and meet the demand of their customers.

8. Reducing strain on your customer service

Customer relations are integral to your store’s success and reputation, necessitating fast, easy, and helpful customer support. 

Ultra-fast fulfillment helps your customer service team reduce the number of “where is my order?” queries, by removing uncertainty and delivering before frustration sets in. 

This gives your customer service team more time to handle other customer matters, initiate proactive customer support, and nail your customer service in 2021

How to attain ultra-fast fulfillment speeds

Perhaps the biggest question in your mind isn’t the benefits of ultra-fast deliveries, but the practicalities of them. How do you match the speeds of Amazon Prime to provide next-day and 2-day deliveries on your Shopify store or other eCommerce platform?

Distribute inventory across the country

The first step in attaining ultra-fast fulfillment is distributing your SKUs across the country. The closer your inventory sits to the end customer, the less time it takes to get to their front door.

This enables you to increase delivery speed - providing 2-day deliveries across the country and next-day deliveries to customers living within a certain radius of your warehouses. And the less distance orders must travel, the less money you spend on shipping costs

For example, Deliverr strategically distributes inventory across the country based on historical demand. That means we predict where your most demand will be, and preemptively store SKUs near buyers. 

Optimize internal fulfillment processes

The less time it takes between receiving an order and handing that order to your shipping carrier, the more time your shipping carrier has to deliver an order expeditiously. 

If you fulfill orders in-house, optimize your internal fulfillment processes to minimize order handling time by:

  • Using real-time order management software to download new orders and print shipping labels upon receipt. 
  • Adapting your warehouse layout to mimic your order fulfillment workflow (for example, order download station > fast-moving stock > packaging station > warehouse door). 
  • Using temporary staff during peak retail periods such as the holidays or ‘Back to School.’ 

Package orders properly

A lost, damaged, or incorrectly delivered package is a surefire way to downgrade your delivery service from ultra-fast to ultra-slow. 

Reduce the chances of this happening to your order by securely packaging orders using the right materials, eCommerce dunnage, shipping labels, and traceable shipping service. 

Tip: If you’re outsourcing, send your items into your fulfillment center as you want your customers to receive it.

Partner with an outsourced eCommerce fulfillment service

If you don’t have the time, space, or expertise to achieve ultra-fast fulfillment yourself, it’s time to switch from in-house to outsourced fulfillment.

An ultra-fast fulfillment service like Deliverr is optimized for 2-day and next-day deliveries, using:

  • A network of warehouses across the country
  • Intelligent stock distribution software
  • Scalable storage and staff to manage peak periods
  • Fast-shipping designed processes and practices

You simply distribute your stock according to their instruction, and they do the storing, picking, packing, shipping, and everything in between.

Outsourcing your fulfillment doesn’t have to cost more either. The buying power of third-party fulfillment services often results in better bulk rates, and Deliverr provides an all-inclusive fulfillment cost that makes ultra-fast deliveries more affordable for your business.

How to promote ultra-fast fulfillment speeds

Before we leave you to get started and reap the benefits of ultra-fast fulfillment in your eCommerce business, lets cover the best ways to promote those shipping speeds to your customers. 

When you’ve gone to the time and trouble of achieving 2-day and next-day delivery, you want to share them in as many places as possible.

Get on marketplace fast shipping programs

Many marketplaces will take care of highlighting your fast shipping offerings for you. For example, Walmart has Walmart TwoDay Delivery, eBay has eBay Fast ‘N Free, Wish has Wish 2-day, and Amazon has Amazon Prime.

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Fast shipping tags and banners

Add branded fast shipping tags to your listings, making it one of the first things customers notice when clicking through to a product page. You can also add fast shipping banners on your home and category pages to reinforce the message and appeal to all customers - regardless of how urgent their purchase is.

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Fast shipping countdown timers

Use a fast shipping countdown timer on product pages to tell customers exactly how long they have left to order their product in time for 2-day or next-day delivery. Not only does a fast shipping countdown timer create certainty, but it also creates a sense of urgency that pushes many customers over the conversion line. 

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Dynamic fast shipping ad tags

Add dynamic fast shipping tags to your online advertisements that use a customer’s current location to display next-day or 2-day delivery tags as appropriate. These set realistic customer expectations while making your ad stand out among others. 

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Your customer service and marketing teams

Get your customer service and marketing teams talking about and using your ultra-fast delivery speeds when dealing with customers. For example, your customer service agents can provide free ultra-fast delivery for replacement products or as a gesture of goodwill. At the same time, your marketing team can share ultra-fast delivery feedback on your social media accounts. 

Wrapping it all up

Fast shipping has been getting faster for a long time now, but 2021 is the year where ultra-fast fulfillment becomes critical to business success. 

Delivery speeds of 2-day, next-day, and same-day shipping have the power to:

  • Distinguish your store
  • Win customers
  • Increase online visibility
  • Satisfy customer needs
  • Increase business resilience
  • Reduce strain on your customer service team 

Together, these benefits propel your eCommerce business forward to scale great heights. And, with ultra-fast fulfillment services that can handle allocating, storing, packing, and shipping for you, there is no excuse not to get started

Sell On Instagram

9 Ways to Sell on Instagram for Free

By Lavender Nguyen
10 min read.
0 min read . By Lavender Nguyen

You asked Google “how to sell on Instagram for free” and found yourself on this page? Good for you! You’re about to learn 9 ways to make a lot of money on this social platform without spending a dime.

Selling on Instagram has been red-hot since it introduced several ecommerce features like Instagram Live Shopping and Instagram Guides. 

Whatever you’re selling, you can make use of Instagram to increase sales for your ecommerce business. 

Excited to learn? Let’s waste no time.  

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1. Optimize Your Instagram Business Profile 

First things first, you should create an Instagram business profile and optimize it as much as possible. It matters a lot. 

Why? Because more and more customers are turning to Instagram instead of Google to search for brands, sales, product reviews, and recommendations. 

  • 145k+ posts using the hashtag #flashsales
  • 10m+ posts using the hashtag #discount
  • 39m+ posts using the hashtag #giveaway 

These numbers don’t lie.

Another reason is an Instagram business profile offers a bunch of extra features and tools you can use to grow your business, compared with a normal profile. For example, Instagram Shopping, Instagram Ads, Instagram Guides, Instagram Reels Shopping, and Instagram Insights. 

Tips for creating an Instagram business profile that sells: 

  • Use a branded Instagram profile picture. It should be the same picture you’ve used for your profiles on other social media platforms. Doing that will help strengthen your brand presence. 
  • Choose a simple, recognizable, and easy-to-find name for your Instagram username. 
  • Include a short description (a maximum of 150 characters) of your business. Explain who you are, what you’re offering, and what makes you different.
  • Add a compelling call to action to urge visitors to take a specific action, for example, “shop now” or “download a free holiday gift guide.”
  • Optimize your call-to-action link. Use tools like Bitly to create a trackable link to your store or a promotion landing page. This is the only clickable link you can add to your Instagram page, so ensure you use it!
  • Showcase content and offers with Instagram Stories Highlights. 

Take a look at Skirt Society’s Instagram business profile:

What Skirt Society does well:

  • Use the same name for username (@skirtsociety) and business name (Skirt Society)
  • Emphasize the benefits of their products, “modest, classic, affordable XS-3X”
  • Show a compelling offer, “free shipping on orders $150 and up” for U.S. customers
  • Include a strong call to action, “shop now, wear now, pay later with @afterpayusa”
  • Use Instagram Story highlights to showcase new arrivals, customers wearing their products (lovelies), shoutouts, restocks, shop small, blog posts, and reviews. 

See? Skirt Society’s Instagram bio is all about their customers or what customers will get when shopping with the brand. 

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2. Set up Instagram Shopping to Sell Products

Instagram Shopping allows you to create an Instagram shoppable feed and a digital, shareable product catalog right on Instagram. 

With Instagram Shopping, people can learn more about your products and purchase your products directly from the app (with Instagram Checkout) or click through to complete the order on your ecommerce store.   

Source: @apostolicclothing

Instagram Shopping’s key features:

  • An Instagram Shop as your customizable digital storefront
  • Product detail pages display your product information
  • Product collections showcase products in a curated category
  • Shopping tags allow you to tag products from your catalog in your Stories or Instagram posts
  • Instagram Checkout allows your customers to complete their purchase without leaving the app. This feature is currently available in the U.S. only.

Here is an excellent example from @camillerosenaturals. Their Instagram profile is filled with many posts with a shopping bag icon tagged in the top right corner. Tap on the product tagged, and you can see additional product details like this: 

To set up Instagram Shopping, ensure your business checks a few boxes for eligibility: 

  • You have an active Instagram business account
  • You own an ecommerce website (Shopify, BigCommerce, etc.)
  • You connect your Instagram profile with a Facebook page 
  • You sell eligible physical goods
  • You comply with Instagram's merchant agreement and commerce policies

Want to use social to sell? Check out our list of the best social media integrations for your Shopify store.

3. Create Instagram Stories Shopping

Instagram Stories allows you to connect with your followers on a more personal, casual level. It brings you a huge opportunity to build trust and increase engagement in a short time. 

Mention’s 2020 Instagram Engagement report reveals many interesting statistics about Instagram Stories. Here are some of them:

  • 58% of Instagram users watch personal stories multiple times a day
  • 19% of users watch Stories from beginning to end
  • 26% of users comment on or share personal Instagram Stories
    they watch
  • 67% of users have ‘swiped up’ on the links of branded Stories
  • 44% of users use Instagram Stories to promote products or services

That’s awesome, right? 

Here are some Instagram Stories’ sales and conversion features you should keep in mind:

Shopping stickers: Use them to tag physical products in your stores. There are four types of stickers, including a shopping bag icon, a sticker with a product name in rainbow or grey, and translucent text. 

Source: @smashboxcosmetics

What makes this feature so great is that no matter how many followers you have, you can drive traffic to your website through your stories. 

Swipe up: Once you reach over 10k followers, you can add a “swipe up” to your Instagram Stores — another big opportunity to promote products, blog posts, and sign-up pages. 

For example, @covergirl includes the View Product button at the bottom of their story. Viewers can simply tap on the button to access the link. 

Note that you must have an Instagram business profile and over 10k followers to access this feature. 

4. Establish Partnerships With Instagram Influencers

According to Morning Consult’s The State of Consumer Trust 2020 report, 69% of consumers say it’s very important brands deliver consistently on what they promise when considering trust. Nielsen’s research also shows that consumers trust personal recommendations above paid ads. 

How can brands gain customer trust? One of the best practices is working with Instagram influencers. 

Instagram influencers are a reliable source for product reviews, recommendations, opinions, and more. They share content in an authentic way, helping them gain a high level of trust from their followers.

Source: @huntervought

By partnering with Instagram influencers, brands can take advantage of their influence on their audiences to promote products, encourage purchases, and gain a loyal following. 

Another great thing about Instagram is that you don’t need to work with mega influencers like Selena Gomez and pay them thousands of dollars for a sponsored post. 

Today, ecommerce merchants and small business owners have many choices to establish a partnership with an influencer. 

If you have a tight budget, you can find nano-influencers (having 1k-10k followers) or micro-influencers (10k-100k followers) and offer them free products in exchange for sharing branded content on their profiles. 

Source: @leevosburgh

According to Mention, an enthusiastic micro-influencer with a smaller, but keen and dedicated following, provides better value for money. 

Also, micro-influencers are experts of their niche and more personally invested in their online presence. They spend a lot of time creating high-quality content, reading comments, and addressing their followers’ inquiries personally.

5. Run Instagram Giveaways 

Want to give your followers a bit of fun while still making a lot of sales? Enter Instagram giveaways.

With a giveaway, you can invite your followers to join a competition in which they have to do a couple of things to have a chance to win a prize. 

For example, you can ask them to share a video of themselves using your product, use your branded hashtag, or tag a friend in your post. The rules should be as simple as possible so your followers can follow them without taking much effort. 

Here is a great example from Pacifica Beauty (@pacificabeauty):

Some tips for creating a successful Instagram contest:

  • Determine your prize. It doesn’t have to be something big. You can offer a discount, a free gift, a free consultation, a book, a sample of your latest product, or anything else as long as you know it’s valuable and relevant to your followers. 
  • Decide how people will participate in your contest. You can make two or three simple criteria for entry, like “follow this account, like this post, and tag a friend below.”
  • Be sure to include the hashtags #contest, #giveaway, and #yourbrandname in your giveaway post. 

6. Offer Instagram-exclusive Offers

One of the most common ways brands leverage exclusivity in their Instagram marketing strategy is by giving their followers exclusive access to deals… just for being part of their Instagram community. 

Sattwa Skincare (@sattwaskincare) knows how to start off on the right foot. From their post, they state clearly what they’re offering and frame the offer around exclusivity.

What’s more, Sattwa Skincare limits the offer “until Sunday evening,” giving followers a little push to take action before the deal ends. This is an excellent example of creating a sense of urgency with an exclusive deal. 

7. Show Your Followers You Care

Gaining audiences’ attention is one thing; getting them to stay longer (and forever) with you is another. 

When you show people you’re truly interested in them and want to create a meaningful relationship with them, they’ll show their caring back to you.

Follow these tips to build great connections with fans on Instagram:

  • Communicate with your followers. Respond to their comments and mentions, tag them in your photos if you reshare their post, watch their stories if you can. 
  • Send a direct message to foster a more authentic relationship with loyal followers. Be careful with this tactic because you don’t want to look spammy. 
  • Be friendly and flexible when dealing with customer complaints on Instagram. When you receive negative reviews or comments, do your best to resolve them quickly, directly, politely. Don’t let your customers wait so long to receive your support. 
  • Install customer service tools like Gorgias to create a seamless omnichannel support experience for your customers. Gorgias allows your agents to handle Instagram comments, mentions, and messages in a centralized dashboard, helping them remove distractions, work more effectively, and have more time to close the deals. 

Related: Learn how to use social media for customer service. Or, if you're just interested in Instagram, check out our in-depth guide on Instagram for customer service.

8. Sell through IGTV

IGTV is both a standalone video-sharing app and an extension of the existing feature on Instagram. IGTV supports vertical and horizontal videos with a 10-minute length for most Instagram accounts and up to one hour for larger accounts. 

Done right, IGTV can bring a great opportunity to build engagement, collaborate with influencers, drive sales, and many other things. 

Here are some ideas for your IGTV videos:

  • Create tutorial videos. For example, if you’re selling cosmetics, you can create a series focused on lip care tutorials or maybe another about body care routine. 
  • Host a Q&A session. It’s great for answering questions about your shipping, payment, etc. 
  • Go behind the scenes. You can share how you source ingredients, how you manufacture products, or how your company looks like. Use it to build transparency for your brand. 
  • Stream an event. If you plan to host a flash sales event, be sure to share it on IGTV.

9. Sell through Instagram Reels 

Instagram Reels allows you to create interactive videos, add effects, and stitch the video together right within the app. It’s a new way to make fun and engaging video content on Instagram. 

With Instagram Reels, you can record and edit together 15 to 30-second video clips set to music and share them to your Stories, Instagram feed, and the Reels tab on your profile. 

Brands use Reels to share stories, user-generated content (UGC), new product teasers, and tutorials. They even collaborate with influencers to promote products, announce sales, and more. As an online store, you should start creating Reels right away to reach more potential customers. 

Start Selling on Instagram!

Many merchants think they have to make huge investments on Instagram to get a significant level of return. But that’s not true. You can start selling on Instagram for free with these 9 tips:

  • Optimize your Instagram business profile
  • Set up Instagram shopping to sell products
  • Create Instagram Stories Shopping
  • Establish partnerships with Instagram influencers
  • Run Instagram giveaways
  • Offer Instagram-exclusive offers
  • Show your followers you care
  • Sell through IGTV
  • Sell through Instagram Reels

In case you’re looking for a help desk tool to manage Instagram customer requests, give Gorgias' social media features a try. Sign up for an account to get a full-featured 7-day free trial. You’ll be amazed at what Gorgias can do for your customer service experience. 

Why You Havent Made Your First Sale

Why you haven't made your first sale yet: a brutal look at early stores

By Jackie Whiting
8 min read.
0 min read . By Jackie Whiting

With so many choices and so little time, it can seem an impossible task to gain the attention (and wallets) of your target audience, especially if you’re just starting out! It of course doesn’t help that there are thousands of guides out there teeming with ecommerce tips telling you the one thing you’re doing wrong or the best way to grow 300% year-over-year...all before you’ve even made a sale. 

At Gorgias, we prefer to cut through all that noise and get straight to the point. After all, we can’t consider our job well done until your store starts making bank. But before we take a second look at your store, consider this: websites are not dissimilar to shops in a mall (remember those?) where the first impression is everything. 

For example, Apple’s simple, structured aesthetic seems to encourage a sense of order and management. It stands out from the dying electronic stores of yesteryear that piled their wares in the front window and whose own employees struggled to tell you what was in stock on any given day.

The key takeaway for you is that before doing anything consider applying a holistic approach to your online store. Ask a fresh pair of eyes to take a look and give you their initial impression if it’s clear from the start what you’re selling and how to learn more. Once you’ve done this brief exercise you’re ready to dig deeper. So let’s get on to our list of common ecommerce mistakes that might be preventing your first sale. 

You’re missing the basics 

Okay so maybe your website looks pretty but did you spend too much time focusing on the aesthetic and too little time ensuring you had all the basics in place before launching? 

Your design needs to be clear, clean and simple, in other words make sure you’re focusing on the sale first and foremost. You’ll also want all the usual elements to be easily findable, that means including clear and well-defined Return Policy, Terms of Service and About Us pages in your website’s footer.  

Make sure your site navigation is as easy to use as possible. Since research shows that most visitors only read about 20% of the text on any given page, your customers need to be able to find their way around your store easily and quickly. Achieve this by making sure your menu is clear, concise and easier to locate. 

Finally, don’t forget to verify your domain with Google (as well as other major search engines) by submitting your sitemap to them and always include any security badges your site uses. Considering almost 50% of Americans have been victims of credit card fraud in the last five years, letting your users know you’re trustworthy is fundamental to securing a sale. 


You’ve got lame product pages 

No two product pages are created equal and chances are yours could be working way harder. Start with the quickest fix: your copy. As your customers aren’t able to see and feel your products in-store, you need to describe them in a way that gives them the confidence to buy. Here’s a few characteristics to apply to your writing:

  • Make product descriptions accurate, educational and engaging 
  • Turn features into benefits (e.g. instead of describing a stove as “sleek with two-burners” you can say “The perfect size to fry up omelettes for the whole family”) 
  • Anticipate your customer’s pain points and proactively reply to them
  • Include relevant keywords in titles and descriptions to help search engines find your products

Balance detail with skimmable content and avoid long paragraphs that could cause a user’s eyes to look away. And where photos are concerned, the more the better. Multiple photos at different angles are proven to convert better than one single image.

You lack reviews 

As mentioned earlier on, trust is essential when it comes to getting customers to hand over the sensitive data required to make a purchase. If they’ve never heard of you before, it might be harder to convince them you’re a trustworthy seller. 

Of course it’d be easy to tell you to just incorporate product reviews on your product pages (which you definitely should do) but if you haven’t yet made a sale then that’s not a possibility for you yet. Instead, embrace the fact that we’re living in the age of the influencer and reach out to a few relevant figures in your target market. Offer to send them your products to test out in exchange for a testimonial you can put online. Some may even agree to post about your product.

If you target micro-influencers (people with 1000 to under 1 million followers) you can avoid running expensive search ads but still enjoy traffic from your target market and possibly sales as you’ll be benefiting from their pre-established trust. Keep in mind some influencers will charge a rate on top of the “free product” you’ve sent, but these fees are always negotiable and in some cases can be avoided if your product is of enough interest to the influence. 

Finally, don’t forget to just ask for reviews in the first place. Make it part of the process with automated emails that remind customers to leave a review after they’ve made a purchase. You can also make posts calling for feedback and reviews on your social accounts as well. 

You aren’t targeting the right audience 

Maybe you’ve built the best website imaginable, with emotive product photos, great emails and dazzling social accounts to boot, but have you considered how relevant your traffic is? You might already be getting all the traffic in the world but if you haven’t defined and appealed to the right target audience, the significance of a large traffic volume quickly becomes a vanity metric. 

Getting the right people to your website is the result of a few factors. First, it’ll be easier if you’re a fan of what you’re selling. Why? Because if you’re your own target audience you already understand the lifestyle, behaviour and unique selling points that get people to buy products like yours. Use this research to create customer profiles (built on demographics like location, pages visited, etc) that then inform the style of content you create. 

Are athletic people more interested in your product? Do you have a lot of site visitors from a particular state or province? You can use this information to personalise some marketing materials like emails. These practices apply across social media and your main site - you can do this kind of research and targeting everywhere. 

Finally, make sure you’re using relevant keywords on your site. Do you h2s and h3s and meta descriptions use phrasing and specific wording that aligns with what you’re selling and who you’re selling to? Understanding what your customers are searching for will help you answer those needs and get the low-funnel traffic that converts. 

You haven’t chosen the right payment gateway

Payment gateway technology is what store owners use to accept credit and debit cards from shoppers. The term refers to both physical, card-reading devices found in stores and the digital payment processor apps that exist on ecommerce websites. Now that you’re caught up on the lingo, let’s explain why choosing the right payment gateway is essential to making sales.

There are frankly hundreds of different payment platforms you can choose from and picking the right one can be difficult. But as we describe in detail here, there are three specific factors to consider before surrendering yourself over to one specific gateway. They are:

The benefits of on vs off-site processing

For example, PayPal requires users to leave your website in order to complete the payment process. If you want, you can pay a $30 fee to make sure the payment is processed without requiring shoppers to go to the external site but why do that when there’s providers out there like Shopify who have on-site processing built in to the experience? 

Accepting relevant payment methods for our market

Maybe your customers are the kind of people who would prefer to pay in a digital currency. Not all payment providers will support this. Not all payment providers even support the use of gift cards. Consider a provider that can grow with your business because one day you might want to have these options even if you don’t right now! 

Customer protection should come first 

Nobody likes data hacks. If your provider runs a less-than-secure operation that means your customers’ data is vulnerable and if they suffer a breach it might make even the loyalist fan think twice before shopping with you again. 

A smooth customer experience built-in

There’s offering options and there’s drowning people in so many choices you inadvertently cause the dreaded “abandoned cart” outcome. Pay attention to which payment gateways your customers are primarily using and stick to a small number (certainly not 5) of the most relevant ones. 

Once these factors are considered you’ll want to know which options are out there. We talk in depth about different providers in the article linked above but check out these names and weigh which one makes sense for the size and priorities of your business: Amazon Pay, Square, Apple Pay, Stripe, Google Pay, and WooCommerce Payment.  

You’re spread too thin on customer support

Whether your online store is a one person show or a small team that includes a trusty support agent, you might be missing out on sales simply due to a lack of customer service. That doesn’t mean you don’t have the skills required to provide superb support, instead the problem is likely that you aren’t making tech work for you. 

For example, let’s say you have your online store but you also have an Instagram channel, a Facebook page and a Twitter account. You might be getting emailed about questions and concerns via your website while also getting bombarded with DMs and comments across your socials. Despite your best efforts, if you’re checking everything manually across apps and websites - you’re going to miss something. 

But that’s okay! You’re only human. And lucky for us humans, we’ve got some pretty incredible tech on our side to streamline manual (yet important) tasks.   

With Gorgias, you can view your customer’s order history easily from the BigCommerce backend, personalise the experience by integrating data relevant to the customer, automate answers to common questions to save time and more. The sky’s the limit and even a one-person team will be able to deliver the support of 10 with the help of a few simple integrations. 

You can see which e-commerce platforms we support on our website and check out the support channels we can give you a hand with by visiting our integrations page.

It’s too early

Now listen, we left this one for last because nobody likes to hear but maybe, just maybe you haven’t given your store enough time to reap the benefits of all your hard work. The story of the best e-commerce stores are rarely the ones that describe themselves as an “overnight success.”

Be patient and if you’re applying the tips we’ve mentioned above you’ll start to see things like relevant traffic and conversions pick up on your site before you know it. 

And if you ever need more advice or a helpful tool, we’ve got you covered! Good luck!

How to Add a Live Chat to Shopify

How to Add a Live Chat to Your Shopify Store?

By Lavender Nguyen
5 min read.
0 min read . By Lavender Nguyen

But before going into details, let’s learn why you should add a chat button to your online store. 

Why does your Shopify store need a live chat?

If you’re running an ecommerce business, you know how difficult it is to turn every visitor into a customer and then a repeat one. With a live chat, you can deliver personal touches that help make your job much easier. 

Here are the benefits of adding a live chat to your online store:

  • Catch potential customers as they’re contemplating a purchase. When a website visitor is in the midst of their decision-making process, you can send a proactive message letting them know you’re available to chat immediately. 
  • Increase conversion rate. According to Forrester’s research, customers who engage in a live chat conversation with a business are 2.8 times more likely to complete a purchase.
  • Improve customer engagement. A live chat is a 1:1 conversation, which is a great way to engage potential customers on a personal level and make them feel more connected to you. 

Sounds great, right? 

You might be excited to have one! So, let’s move on to discover the best live chat app for your Shopify store.

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Gorgias live chat: The best Shopify live chat app

Gorgias gives you a powerful live chat widget that you can add to your Shopify store or other ecommerce stores like Magento and BigCommerce. It’s one of the best Shopify live chat apps, with over 400 reviews on the Shopify App Store. 

Gorgias live chat features:

  • Trigger personalized live chat conversation with shoppers on product pages to boost sales
  • Answer visitors customer support requests in real-time to remove any sales objections or doubts
  • Know on which pages customers are
  • Get all previous customer purchase information and conversation history (regardless of the channel) close to the conversation thread to provide personalized advice and support
  • Install live chat, SMS, and other messaging apps for multiple stores and centralize all conversation in one place
  • Respond in one click using pre-made templates 
  • Perform actions like rewarding loyalty points without leaving the chat
  • Display data from third-party ecommerce tools like Smile.io, Yotpo, Klayvio, etc., in your live chat backend and insert them in any message in one click
  • Respond in one click using pre-made templates 
  • Set up automated responses and bot for common tickets like “Where’s my order?”
  • Classify, assign and prioritize tickets depending on the content, but also on the sentiment and intent detected by AI

About pricing, Gorgias offers you a 7-day free trial with full access to premium features. Its pricing plans are reasonable and affordable than Zendesk Chat, Tidio Chat, and other live chat software. 

Bonus: Gorgias is also an ecommerce ticketing system! It offers omnichannel communication, i.e., email, live chat, phone, SMS messaging, and social media.

Use Shopify Inbox? Learn why Gorgias is the #1 Shopify Inbox alternative.

Steps to integrate Gorgias with your Shopify store 

To follow along in this tutorial, you’ll need a Gorgias chat account. If you haven’t had it, click here to sign up for an account and enjoy a 14-day free trial with full access to all advanced features. 

After that, take these steps to install Gorgias on your Shopify store:

Step 1: Log in to your Gorgias helpdesk.

Then, from the right sidebar, click Connect Shopify to enter the Shopify integration page.

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Step 2: In the Shopify integration page, click the Add Shopify button at the top-right corner. 

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Here’s what you’ll see:

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Type your store name in the Store name box. Then, click Add integration, and your Shopify store will be integrated into Gorgias in a second:

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Done! You’ve just integrated your Shopify store with Gorgias successfully. Move on to learn how to create your first Gorgias live chat. 

Steps to create a live chat widget

Do as follows:

Step 1: Click the Connect live chat option on the right menu of the Tickets view. 

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You’ll be directed to the Chat integration page as below. 

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Step 2: Click Add chat to open the New chat integration page. 

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On this page, you can add a chat title, edit introduction text during and outside business hours, change colors and language of the chat window.

When you’re done with customization, click Add new chat.

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At this point, you already have a real-time chat box. Now you need to add it to your Shopify store. 

Steps to add a live chat to your Shopify store

To add a live chat to your Shopify store, just switch the button on the right side of your Shopify store name from OFF to ON.

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Then, go to your Shopify store to see how Gorgias live chat appears:

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To further customize your live chat widget, check out these tutorials:

Note: If your store isn’t on Shopify, you can copy the JavaScript code and paste it on your website above the </body> tag. No plugin required. 

Start talking with your Shopify customers in real-time!

Create a Gorgias account right now and follow this guide to add a live chat to your Shopify store. Your customers are waiting to talk with you.

In case you have any questions, don’t hesitate to contact our fantastic customer support team. We’re more than happy to help you. 

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Simplr Contact Center

The rise of the NOW customer: how to capitalize on revenue opportunities with exceptional CX

By Blake Grubbs
3 min read.
0 min read . By Blake Grubbs

This week, Gorgias and Simplr announced a partnership to help provide ecommerce brands with a customer service stack that is built to turn contact centers into revenue drivers via 24/7 rapid-response digital customer engagement.

And, with consumers operating on a “NOW” schedule, we’re pretty excited about how this partnership will enable ecommerce brands to engage more customers in valuable CX moments. 

If you put on your consumer hat for a minute, think back to even two or three years ago- a time when we had to wait just a little bit longer for a meal delivery, for the arrival of an online order, or for a customer service email response. Today, everyone’s tolerance for waiting is lower than ever, thanks to the sky-high standards set by world-class companies like Amazon, Netflix, and Spotify. These are the brands that are setting the tone for every other experience your customer is having. Your business is not only competing with others in your industry, you’re competing with the best brands in the world.

Elevated customer expectations in our instant gratification culture have created a new kind of consumer that CX professionals haven’t been forced to deal with before. 

We call this consumer the NOW customer.  

For ecommerce brands in particular, the NOW customer, who is always “on” and expects immediacy in every experience they have, both online and offline, is looking for exceptional CX from the brands they shop and engage with -- they won’t (and shouldn’t have to?) settle for anything less.

In the new Simplr Consumer Online Shopping and Customer Service Study, published in December 2020, Simplr found that NOW-centric, exceptional customer service is a must (unless you like losing customers): 

  • One-third of consumers say they’ve felt ignored or neglected by brands they shop with
  • 47% of consumers have decided not to buy from a brand due to poor customer service
  • 41% of consumers have stopped shopping with brand altogether due to poor customer service

NOW customers are quicker than ever to leave you and shop with someone else if they aren’t getting the service they expect. So how does the NOW Customer define “exceptional” service? 

From the same study, we found that: 

  • 61% of consumers base their expectations for exceptional service off the best retailers they shop with
  • 59% of consumers say that fast response times to service questions contributes to making customer service “exceptional”
  • 41% say that providing 24/7 service makes for exceptional customer service
  • 37% say that being able to communicate with a brand over any channel they want provides exceptional customer service

All this boils down to providing fast, always-on service, on the customer’s terms, over any channel they want, 24/7. That’s all. Oh, and if you can’t deliver this type of experience, your customers and would-be fans will leave, and your brand ends up missing out on revenue. No big deal. 

Tongue-in-cheek-ness aside, providing this type of experience has historically been extremely hard, and few brands have actually been able to crack the NOW customer code. 

The fact of the matter is, the traditional contact center model is not able to scale and flex to meet these new expectations.  The fixed and rigid nature forces you to make compromises and tradeoffs that are ultimately trade-downs for your customers- resulting in limited hours and channels, deflection, and slow response times- all because the model you’re using today is so fixed and rigid, along with the costs that go with it. 

Now, brands don’t have to be held back by a contact center model that can’t scale. CX professionals can access a new model and approach the rise of the NOW customer as an opportunity to set themselves apart from the rest of the pack. By taking a “NOW” approach to CX and providing a level of service that boosts your reputation with buyers, you’ll be in a position to take advantage of every revenue opportunity in the moment.

To provide the NOW customer with the service they expect and deserve, and to capitalize on every revenue opportunity, brands should break free from their traditional contact center model and embrace a newer model that was designed to deliver for the NOW customer. This model needs to scale easily, enable you to always be ready and responsive for customers, and engage them whenever and wherever they want.

The NOW customer can’t be ignored. And the brands that will rise in the NOW era will be the ones that have this realization and make the necessary adjustments, well, now.

Find out more about how the Simplr + Gorgias partnership can help you rise to meet the NOW customer and capture revenue opportunities in every moment.

Integration: Okendo

Create a 5-Star Customer Experience with Reviews & UGC

By Chris Lavoie
4 min read.
0 min read . By Chris Lavoie

Standing out and building a community of loyal fans is hard, and it’s even harder after the surge online shopping had in 2020. The mammoth amount of competition out there is constantly fighting for even the tiniest slice of ecommerce action.

To gain a competitive edge, brands must put their customers first.

In fact, companies voted customer experience as the most exciting opportunity for businesses over the next year, and it makes sense. Why? It’s because the customer experience drives sales. Research shows that brands with a customer experience mindset drive revenue 4-8% higher than the rest.

When your customers have a bad experience, it can wreak havoc on a brand and dramatically affect the bottom line. The problem is, it can be tricky to improve, especially if you don’t know where to start or what your customers actually want. This is where those customer reviews come into play

Not only do they help bolster customer support best practices, but these powerful assets give you a deep understanding of your customers — something that DTC brands are leveraging to the max. Customer-centric brands like Born Primitive, Beardbrand, Bombas, Tuff Wraps, and WAG are nailing customer experience by tapping into reviews and using them to leverage the buyer journey.

Read on to learn how reviews and UGC are helping brands create a 5-star customer experience. 

Reduce the risk of returns 

A clothing brand isn’t going to know how a jacket sits on every single body type, and they’re certainly not going to include this information in their product descriptions. Unfortunately, this can be a sticking point, especially since online shoppers aren’t able to try on products before they buy. 

This unsurprisingly leads to more returns (while in-store returns are around 8%, online returns hover around 25%).  

There’s a solution though, by strategically using reviews and UGC, brands can provide online shoppers with in-depth insights to help customers get exactly what they’re looking for. This is particularly essential for brands that use reviews with additional product and customer attributes, like shopper size and product color or type. 

Born Primitive does exactly this, sharing customer attributes and photos alongside reviews to help buyers get an idea about how items might look on them. 

Improve products and procedures 

Your products are the crux of your business. 

Fail to get your products right, and you’ll struggle to grow a flourishing business. This is one of the most important customer support tips for Shopify merchants — know thy customer and give them what they want. 

 Brands can fuel product development and internal procedures with customer feedback to continue to optimize the customer experience, all you need to do is listen.

 Using real-life feedback from buyers to improve how they view and buy products, as well as the products themselves, ties into the customer-centric vision that successful DTC brands share. It also shows your customers that you’re an honest, and transparent brand working to give them the best product and best experience.

 Take LSKD, for example. They’re using customer reviews to improve their products and to better align with customer wants and needs. The brand uses Okendo to capture reviews, respond to them, and gather crucial customer feedback. 

In fact, the brand’s popular Rep Tights have been molded over the years by customer feedback to ensure they take on the attributes buyers are looking for. Through reviews, customers are able to share their thoughts on specific product points to fuel development. 

Involving customers in this part of the process creates a community around a brand, and ensures you’re giving customers what they want. 

And think about it: if a brand is giving customers everything you need, why would they go elsewhere? 

Provide personalized and efficient customer support 

Support and customer experience go hand-in-hand. If customer support is good, the customer experience tends to be good too. 

Creating a good customer support experience is all about streamlining responses and separating those easy-to-answer questions from more complex ones. Brands can use reviews to automate commonly asked questions and personalize support based on the type of review a customer has given. 

On a more basic level, reviews help retailers identify customers who might be experiencing problems with their order. This, in turn, allows brands to address and resolve issues by responding to customer reviews, turning the experience from bad to good in a matter of minutes. Which can end up saving a company from hitting a bit of a rough patch, or issue with further customer responses.

Tuff Wraps regularly replies to less-than-stellar reviews with extra information and an email address that customers can use to get in touch with support. This can help customers feel seen and heard and completely turn around what was initially a poor experience. Combining reviews and customer support in this two-pronged approach aligns with the common best practices for customer support on Shopify.  

 If you’re experiencing this issue with customers leaving negative reviews, we’ve got something that might help. With Gorgias’ integration with Okendo, you’re able to diagnose these problems and handle them seamlessly from a single dashboard. By leveraging this integration, merchants gain full visibility on customer reviews and their support history.

Use reviews to carve a better customer experience 

 As many of us know, reviews are key to creating a positive customer experience, especially when they form such a crucial part of the buying journey. Shoppers actively seek out peer reviews before they buy to get a better understanding of a product.

 This is where Okendo can come in again, since it encourages customers to leave reviews complete with visuals and helpful attribute information. You can then use the reviews that come rolling in to glean valuable insights into the customer experience and identify ways to improve your products and the overall experience for your buyers.

Signup to Gorgias and leverage reviews to create a 5-star customer experience.

Why We Raised Our Series B

Why we raised our Series B, and what that means for our merchants

By Romain Lapeyre
2 min read.
0 min read . By Romain Lapeyre

The Covid-19 pandemic has dramatically accelerated the move from offline to online in retail. This got us busier than ever supporting our merchants, new and old, to ensure we help them work towards providing exceptional customer service. 

The latest example of this is Black Friday and Cyber Monday, where Shopify saw an uptick of 75% GMV when compared to last year.

As a result of this huge ecommerce spike, 2020 has been a massive year for Gorgias.

At the beginning of the year, we had just 30 people on our team and now, we’re sitting at over 100 incredible people working each and every day to help serve 5,000+ merchants.

Gorgias Virtual Summit Q4 2020

The reason our team grew so much this year is to support the growth of our merchants. 

Throughout the year, order volume has massively increased and therefore, lots of customers have been contacting businesses through customer service. We went from having 2 million support requests a month on Gorgias to 6 million during the holiday season. 

Growth of support requests through Gorgias


So today, we’re announcing a $25m series B lead by Rajeev Dham at Sapphire Ventures, with participation of Jason Lemkin (SaaStr), François Meteyer (Alven) and other historic investors. 

What’s our goal with this round?

We want to accelerate our progress towards our mission to transform support from painful to exceptional for merchants.

We asked our merchants and learned that they have the following needs: first they want their support to be fast and high quality, then they want to optimize their cost, and once they’ve done that, they are willing to shift the way they think about support to make it a profit center. 

How can we help merchants more in 2021

In 2021, we want to focus on the top questions our merchants are getting, which account for 60% of the support volume. By empowering support agents to respond faster to these frequent questions, we’re aiming at reducing first response time for our merchants and at increasing the quality of their support. This will free up agents time so that they can focus more on the more complex questions their customers are asking. 

The top 10 customer support questions

How are we going to do this? 

  • We’re building a help center so customers can self serve and find immediate answers to their most common questions
  • We’re going to work on becoming a platform so that third party developers can integrate with Gorgias and provide more value to agents
  • We’re improving our macro suggestions so that agents spend less time typing repetitive text and more time on custom responses
  • We’re also adding new channels, including Instagram DMs, Whatsapp, phone and others

You can learn more about our next quarter roadmap here

Looking further ahead into the future, our goal is to change the role of support from responding to customers’ issues to helping the business grow.

2021 is going to be a new chapter for us. With this round, we’re going to double our team to 200 people across all our hubs, in San Francisco, Belgrade, Paris, Charlotte, Toronto and Sydney. 

If you’d like to join the adventure and help us improve the daily lives of 3 million support agents in the US (and more worldwide), we’re hiring aggressively in all these locations

I want to thank our amazing team for helping build a company that has an impact on 60 million customers yearly, and the 5000 merchants who’ve decided to use our product every day. 

The adventure continues, we’re more excited than ever! 

Alex & Romain

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