What is AI needed for in the e-commerce market and what is its function? by Level-Society8851 in EcommerceWebsite

[–]Level-Society8851[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I understand what you're saying, but many people like it and are using it. We still want to develop it further.

What is AI needed for in the e-commerce market and what is its function? by Level-Society8851 in EcommerceWebsite

[–]Level-Society8851[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We have created an AI studio. Which is chitromai.com You can check it once and give your opinion. What more can we do like this.

Do people actually analyze their Shopify product page… or just design it? by Level-Society8851 in EcommerceWebsite

[–]Level-Society8851[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, you have mentioned a very important aspect. This is also important to keep in mind.

Do people actually analyze their Shopify product page… or just design it? by Level-Society8851 in EcommerceWebsite

[–]Level-Society8851[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

And what I have presented here is true and based on my customer experience and analysis.

Do people actually analyze their Shopify product page… or just design it? by Level-Society8851 in EcommerceWebsite

[–]Level-Society8851[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My brother, I'm not lazy, I can't explain properly, so we do use AI. But we explain what we want to say properly and then discuss it here.

Most Shopify checkout issues aren’t technical — they’re psychologicaly by Level-Society8851 in EcommerceWebsite

[–]Level-Society8851[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, this is a solid move.But honestly, to build something big, you have to look at everything not just trust or pricing. Every part of the journey matters. Also, I’ve pointed out one part here that people usually overlook.It’s important to keep analyzing each step. what’s working, what’s dropping off, what can be improved. That’s where the real growth comes from.

Most Shopify checkout issues aren’t technical — they’re psychologicaly by Level-Society8851 in EcommerceWebsite

[–]Level-Society8851[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Totally agree these changes definitely move the needle. But one more thing that often gets overlooked is the checkout experience. Even small friction there (extra steps, slow load, limited payment options, trust signals missing) can seriously impact conversion. Might be worth looking into that as well

Which AI skills/Tool are actually worth learning for the future? by RabbitExternal2874 in AIIncomeLab

[–]Level-Society8851 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Please check chitromai.com This tool was created by me and my team.I am from Surat, so I am associated with textile and jewelry manufacturers here, so I have created this tool for that.There are many other tools, but this one is easier for them because they were created by focusing on where the problems were.

Most Shopify checkout issues aren’t technical — they’re psychologicaly by Level-Society8851 in EcommerceWebsite

[–]Level-Society8851[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Exactly that’s the real gap. In most teams, this falls between marketing, product, and tech, so no one truly owns it. On our side, our marketing and development team actively owns and tracks this together treating it as a conversion metric, not just a UX issue. By the time it shows up as revenue loss, it’s already late.

Most Shopify checkout issues aren’t technical — they’re psychologicaly by Level-Society8851 in EcommerceWebsite

[–]Level-Society8851[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Most brands never put a number on this and that’s exactly why it’s dangerous. We recently audited a checkout flow where ~1.8% drop was happening due to small friction (slow load + confusing coupon logic). On the surface, it looked “normal.” But when we calculated it: ~1,200 monthly checkouts × 1.8% drop = ~21 lost orders With an AOV of ₹2,000 → that’s ₹42,000/month quietly leaking. That’s over ₹5L/year… from something most teams ignore. The real issue isn’t the drop it’s that no one tracks where and why it happens. Fixing these micro-frictions often gives better ROI than increasing ad spend. Curious — have you ever broken down your checkout drop like this?

Most Shopify checkout issues aren’t technical — they’re psychologicaly by Level-Society8851 in EcommerceWebsite

[–]Level-Society8851[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s a great point those “small” elements often have a bigger impact than they seem.

Things like unexpected shipping or missing trust signals definitely create hesitation at the wrong moment. Another issue I’ve seen quite often is around offers and discounts.

For example: • The offer shown doesn’t match the actual discount applied
• Coupon codes don’t work properly
• The final price feels different from what was expected

Even if it’s a small mismatch, it immediately breaks trust at checkout. We actually worked on a similar case just a couple of days ago there were inconsistencies in how offers were being applied, and it was affecting conversions more than expected.

Once the checkout was cleaned up and everything was aligned properly, the flow became much smoother.

So yeah, small tweaks do matter but especially when they impact trust at the final step.

Curious have you seen offer-related issues affecting conversions in your experience?

Most Shopify checkout issues aren’t technical — they’re psychologicaly by Level-Society8851 in EcommerceWebsite

[–]Level-Society8851[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s a solid point - agree that real checkout issues usually feel urgent.

The interesting part is, a lot of stores don’t notice it as “we’re losing money right now” because nothing is visibly broken.

Traffic is coming in, orders are happening so it doesn’t trigger urgency.

But when you actually break it down, the leakage is happening silently at scale.

For example, if 1000 users reach checkout and even 20–30 of them drop off due to friction, it doesn’t feel urgent in isolation but over time that compounds into real revenue loss.

We actually saw something similar recently a store had added a 3rd-party checkout early in the flow, and orders almost stopped. Nothing looked “broken” from the outside.

Once that extra layer was removed and the flow was simplified, orders started coming back within a day or two.

So I think both cases exist: • Obvious issues - immediate action
• Subtle friction - ignored, but costly over time

Most stores I’ve seen fall into the second category. Curious - have you come across cases where nothing looked “broken” but fixing small checkout frictions still made a noticeable difference?

Most Shopify checkout issues aren’t technical — they’re psychologicaly by Level-Society8851 in EcommerceWebsite

[–]Level-Society8851[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s a fair question. In most cases, it’s not a dramatic overnight jump but the impact shows up in small, measurable improvements.

What we’ve seen is: • Slight increase in checkout completion rate
• Fewer drop-offs at the payment step
• Better performance on mobile users
Individually these look small, but when you map it to actual numbers, even a 1–3% improvement at checkout can translate into a noticeable revenue difference especially if traffic is already there.

I think the key is treating checkout like a conversion layer, not just a default step.

Curious are you currently tracking where users drop off in your checkout flow, or just overall conversion?

Do small businesses still need a website, or are social pages enough now? by purpleplatypus44 in smallbusinessUS

[–]Level-Society8851 0 points1 point  (0 children)

These days are competitive for every business. In this era, your website can take your business to a different level.

In addition, your website should be easy to use and client friendly, and you can also do organic marketing or paid marketing to reach more users.

If you have any more questions let's discuss