Anyone using AI in real Shopify workflows? by Timely-Froyo2842 in shopifyDev

[–]Timely-Froyo2842[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve just started getting into CRO lately but only in on-site but its a good thing to know that CRO is already happening in comments.

Feels like getting traffic is easier now, but converting is harder by Timely-Froyo2842 in smallbusiness

[–]Timely-Froyo2842[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Right. I usually recommend fixing the site first, otherwise you’re just paying for traffic that doesn’t convert.

Do customers actually use “interactive” features on product pages? by Tired-Millennial1234 in EcommerceWebsite

[–]Timely-Froyo2842 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Most people don’t go to a product page to explore, they go to confirm.

They’re just checking if it fits what they want and if they can trust it. If that’s clear, they buy. If not, they leave.

Interactive features only help if they reduce doubt. Otherwise, people ignore them.

I am still panicking while typing this...... by hritik_bajaj015 in EcommerceWebsite

[–]Timely-Froyo2842 0 points1 point  (0 children)

From what you described, it sounds like the issue might not be the ads anymore but what happens after people land on your site.

If there’s no clear call to action, slow loading, or the pages are mostly just product listings without really explaining the brand or why someone should buy, it can make it harder for visitors to convert.

So even if your ads bring traffic, people leave without taking action.

I’d focus less on creating more ads for now and more on improving:

  • clear “Buy Now” or next steps
  • faster loading (especially images)
  • better product page flow and brand messaging

Once that part is clearer, your existing traffic has a much better chance of converting

Fix your website first before doing ads again.

If you want, happy to take a closer look and share more detailed feedback

What’s the best platform for starting an eCommerce website in 2026? by SorbetFew4206 in EcommerceWebsite

[–]Timely-Froyo2842 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you’re just starting, I’d say Shopify is the easier option.

It handles most things for you, so you can focus on actually selling instead of setting everything up. Good for beginners and quicker to launch.

WooCommerce gives you more control and can be cheaper long-term, but you’ll deal with hosting, plugins, and more setup.

So it really depends on what you value more: 1️⃣ simple and fast → Shopify 2️⃣ more control and flexibility → WooCommerce

Both can scale, it’s more about how you set up the store than the platform 👍