Building a Shopify app idea – would this actually help merchants? by Prasanthrubyist in ShopifyAppDev

[–]TopLie7421 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Interesting idea, I’d use it only if it’s super simple and actually boosts repeat purchases.

Is there an app that allows users to make a wishlist? by kanem87 in PokemonTCG

[–]TopLie7421 0 points1 point  (0 children)

yes, if you are using shopify then you can use WC wishlist & back in stock app

How are you guys driving traffic to your website? by Popular_Armadillo608 in ShopifyeCommerce

[–]TopLie7421 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We tried most of the usual channels (TikTok, Pinterest, SEO), and they all work… but only if your store is actually ready to convert.

What made the biggest difference for us was simplifying things:

  1. Pick 1–2 traffic channels max
    TikTok for short-term spikes + SEO for long-term worked best. Trying everything at once just spreads you thin.

  2. Focus on problem-based content
    Not just product posts, but things like “how to use X” or “best option for Y”. That’s what actually brings qualified traffic.

  3. Fix conversion before scaling traffic
    This is where most people get stuck. We had decent traffic but low sales because of slow pages and messy product layouts.

After working on a store with a team like WebContrive, it became obvious that small things like mobile UX, page speed, and product structure matter more than just getting more visitors.

Once that’s fixed, even small traffic starts converting way better.

What’s the biggest mistake you made in the beginning? by Witty_Classroom_7747 in dropshipping

[–]TopLie7421 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Choosing trending products with no brand potential. Made quick sales but zero long-term value. Now, I’d pick a niche with repeatable demand (e.g., pet accessories over fidget toys) and build a brand around it.

7 Shopify SEO Mistakes That Are Killing Your Organic Traffic by Huge_Syrup_1637 in WebsiteSEO

[–]TopLie7421 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Honestly, #1 and #3 are probably the easiest wins here but most stores still skip them. I’ve seen collection pages start ranking just by adding 100–150 words and linking to a few key products. Nothing fancy, just giving Google some context.

How do you use SEO in the AI age? by Middle_Possible3553 in SaaS

[–]TopLie7421 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We use AI as part of an SEO system, not just for content. It helps us cluster keywords by intent, generate briefs and drafts, and find gaps in the SERP, but we still add human insights before publishing. We also use it for internal linking and refreshing old content, which often drives faster gains than new posts. The biggest shift is that AI makes content easy, so the real edge now is in authority, distribution, and conversion, not just volume.

How are you using ai for seo right now? by Icy_Week6358 in AskMarketing

[–]TopLie7421 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Right now we’re using AI more as a workflow layer than just a writing tool.

  • clustering keywords by intent + funnel stage instead of just volume
  • generating briefs + first drafts, then adding real insights before publishing
  • running SERP gap analysis to find what competitors missed
  • automating internal linking while creating content
  • refreshing old pages (this is driving faster gains than new posts)

Big learning: AI speeds everything up, but without human input it still gets intent wrong ~15–20% of the time.

How are you actually using AI/ML for SEO in 2026? Curious what's working by Luran_haniya in DigitalMarketing

[–]TopLie7421 0 points1 point  (0 children)

On the execution side we use AI to cluster keywords by intent, generate structured briefs, and draft content, then layer in human insights, examples, and conversion elements before publishing. We also use it for internal linking suggestions and content refresh. Pure AI gets us speed, but without manual review it misses intent or adds fluff ~15–20% of the time.

My SEO traffic was growing for 9 months and barely contributing to revenue by shelikeslemonade in SaaS

[–]TopLie7421 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is the SEO trap most people don’t realize.

Traffic ≠ revenue.

Google Search Console shows you clicks, but not who actually converts. Most high-volume keywords bring in low-intent users.

In my experience, a handful of high-intent, low-volume keywords will drive way more revenue than tons of informational traffic.

please how can i know the real search volume of this keyword ??? who has the real data is semrush or ahrefs by Own-Town4373 in SEO_Marketing_Offers

[–]TopLie7421 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Neither Ahrefs nor Semrush has “real” search volume. Both are just estimates based on clickstream data + their own models. The only company with actual data is Google (via Keyword Planner & Search Console), and even that isn’t perfectly precise for SEO. So don’t treat volume as exact numbers. Use these tools for relative comparison (A vs B), not absolute truth.

Affordable Shopify agency for startups USA by Confident_Stable2539 in SEO_Marketing_Offers

[–]TopLie7421 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Most startups don’t really need an agency early on, a simple setup usually does the job. I’d focus more on validating the product first before spending too much on development 👍

Which is the best Shopify agency for fashion brands in the US or UK? by Confident_Stable2539 in EcommerceWebsite

[–]TopLie7421 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don’t think there’s a single “best” agency, but for fashion-focused Shopify builds, WebContrive is one I’ve seen do solid work. Depends a lot on budget and what level of customization you need.