Creating A Seamless Checkout Process

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  • View profile for Geetanjali Gupta

    Founder @ Headspur | 2x Founder | IIMxB Alumnus

    22,490 followers

    Amazon once made $300M, with just one word. And then… they fixed it by changing “Register” to “Continue.” Let me explain. Amazon had a simple but deadly checkout flow: → Login → Register It completely blocked the user’s momentum. New users got annoyed: “I just want to buy something. Why do I have to register?” Returning users couldn’t remember their login details. Some people had up to 10 different accounts, each with forgotten passwords. What should’ve been a quick purchase became a point of friction, and so users dropped off. Cart abandonment shot up. That’s when Amazon hired a UIE (User Interface Engineer) to solve this. He suggested a tiny fix: Replace “Register” with “Continue” Add one message: “You do not need to create an account to make purchases on our site. Simply click Continue to proceed to checkout. To make your future purchases even faster, you can create an account during checkout.” That’s it. One word + one sentence = less pressure. The result was $300 million in revenue Within a year of this UX tweak: -Purchase completion rate jumped by 45% -The first month saw an additional $15 million in sales -Within a year, it generated $300 million in new revenue At Headspur Technologies, we live for these moments. Quiet, compounding wins are born from deep user understanding. Because great UX is often about removing the one thing that makes people pause. In this case, it was the pressure to “sign up” :) #UX #change #growth

  • View profile for Stuti Kathuria

    Rethinking how brands convert | CRO (Conversion Rate Optimisation) + UX Design | 7 Years · 200+ Brands · Global Clients

    38,921 followers

    Over 80% of users skim, so when a PDP tries to say everything at once, it ends up saying nothing. A cluttered PDP gets more friction than function. Overwhelming users, leading to: - less time spent on page - missing value cues - fewer checkouts A well structured PDP doesn’t overwhelm, rather presents the information in a clear and digestible manner. Encouraging them to take action. In this post, I’ve broken down 12 changes I made to make the PDP easier to read and more focused on what actually helps users purchase. 1. Highlight customer satisfaction upfront. Show how many customers have purchased in the announcement bar. This builds immediate social proof that stays on all your pages. 2. Add benefit-focused badges above the product name. These help shoppers understand what key problems the product solves without needing to read through paragraphs. 3. Keep the title clear, and use a short subtitle to summarise the product and its core benefit. This helps users get both the “what” and the “why” at a glance. 4. Show the number of reviews beside the rating. It adds transparency and makes the rating feel more trustworthy, especially for first-time visitors. 5. Clarify price and pack size early. It saves users from searching for basic details which keeps attention focused on the purchase. 6. Use a context-rich main image. Featuring the product in its real-world use makes it easier to understand what’s being sold and how it fits into everyday life. 7. Expand image thumbnails beyond angles. Include images that show packaging and portion size to help customers evaluate fit and quality. 8. Add 2–3 bullet points above the fold. These help break down the product’s key benefits clearly, making it easier for skimmers to understand what makes it different. 9. Reinforce trust near the Add to Cart section. This is where buying hesitation happens so highlight things like delivery speed, return policies, or support to reduce friction. 10. Use icon-based highlights instead of long descriptions. Visual markers help users absorb information faster and keep the layout clean and scannable. 11. Break down product details visually. Showing ingredient percentages or content breakdowns in a simplified format helps make complex info more digestible. 12. Use accordions (not horizontal tabs). This allows users to expand only what they need, keeping the page organized and improving mobile usability. 13. Bring related variants closer to the decision zone. Show similar options earlier to help customers switch easily without needing to scroll to the bottom. Other UI/UX changes I did – Reduced text density to improve readability – Used consistent icons to simplify scanning – Added color cues for visual balance Found this useful? Let me know in the comments. PS: This checklist helps PDPs be clear and easy to follow without cramming in too much at once. This in turn will help the users make informed decisions that drive action. 

  • View profile for Lex Sokolin
    Lex Sokolin Lex Sokolin is an Influencer

    Managing Partner @Generative Ventures | ex Consensys Chief Economist & CMO | Fintech, AI, Web3

    304,465 followers

    Checkout optimization used to mean adding more payment methods. Today it’s about shaping the payment journey before friction ever shows up. Fintech Adyen just launched Personalize inside its Uplift suite. The headline feature is real-time Dynamic Identification, trained on trillions of transactions across its network. Why it matters: 37% of shoppers abandon when checkout takes too long. 72% of businesses say transaction fees are pressuring margins. Static checkout flows treat every buyer the same. Modern payment stacks can’t afford that. Personalize adjusts the experience in real time. It can: • Prioritize cost-efficient payment rails • Suppress unnecessary authentication • Surface risk signals before authorization • Route transactions based on identity and context Early data: • 9.4% lower payment costs on eligible traffic in year one of Uplift • 42% reduction in false positives • +1.19% average conversion lift, up to 6% for some merchants • Pilots showing up to 3% lower transaction costs • Tebi: 4.26% cost savings and 0.8% conversion lift This is not incremental CRO. The real shift is architectural. Checkout is becoming a data and feedback loop problem, not a front-end design problem. The platforms that unify acquiring, issuing, risk, and identity inside one system will compound advantages over time. If you’re running payments at scale: Are you optimizing a page… or optimizing a network?

  • View profile for Stacy Sherman, MBA. CSP®
    Stacy Sherman, MBA. CSP® Stacy Sherman, MBA. CSP® is an Influencer

    International Keynote Speaker | Customer Experience & Influencer Marketing Expert | LinkedIn Learning Instructor | Host of Award-Winning Doing CX Right℠ Podcast (Top 2% Global Rank)

    18,811 followers

    Have you noticed: A flight costs $200 at 10am & $400 by 3pm for the same seat. This isn't inflation. It's AI-powered pricing in action. Delta is using real-time demand data to adjust fares throughout the day. With public and regulatory scrutiny increasing, companies must recognize that optimizing price without managing perception is a major business risk. It affects how customers feel and whether they’ll return. Here are my 3 Customer eXperience lessons every leader needs to consider when using AI to adjust pricing: 1️⃣Provide Transparency. When customers see large price swings without an explanation, they feel misled as public reaction to "surge pricing" in other industries has shown. ✓ The lesson: Add context. A simple note at checkout, such as “This price reflects real-time demand,” helps customers understand the logic behind the number. When expectations are managed, confidence in the brand stays intact. 2️⃣Monitor Feedback Proactively. If you're experimenting with AI-driven pricing, you must monitor customer feedback across all channels: reviews, contact center notes, and social media. These signals appear early and are easy to miss. ✓ The lesson: Pay attention to the customer’s emotional response. It will surface well before any change in revenue or retention. 3️⃣Understand the Emotional Impact. A higher price is rarely the main issue. It's the absence of an explanation that creates doubt and can make customers feel taken advantage of. When people feel surprised or confused at checkout, they begin to question the brand's integrity and their own loyalty. ✓ The lesson: AI can drive efficiency. But emotional clarity, how people feel in the moment, determines whether they continue to buy and tell others. Don't let AI jeopardize customer trust! This is what Doing CX Right® looks like in practice. If you want to retain valuable customers, design pricing experiences that are transparent, justifiable, and emotionally intelligent. What’s your view about dynamic pricing? Comment below 👇 Want more proven tactical CX advice? 🔔 Follow me and subscribe to my blog: DoingCXRight.com. #Doingcxright #customerservice #DynamicPricing #AI

  • View profile for Ronak Shah

    The Plumber of DTC Brands | Growth Advisor to 25+ DTC Brands | Building with AI @ Ronshah.co

    40,362 followers

    $80+ shipping is customer betrayal. You're asking customers to leave your store. International shoppers don’t leave because they don’t want the product. They leave because of sticker shock. They'll see $59,99 on the website. Then at checkout, it's suddenly $100+. Conversion is gone. And the fix isn’t cheaper shipping. Here's the solution: Show the full price upfront. To do this, use software that detects the user's location. Then, bundle product + shipping + duties + taxes directly on the product page. So: • US customer sees $59.99 • Australian customer sees $105 Both customers can see “Free Shipping” (because it’s already baked in). With international ads 60–70% cheaper than US ads, even small conversion lifts compound fast. The Takeaway: Stop charging $30+ for international shipping. Just show all-in pricing depending on the user's location.

  • View profile for Connor Dimond

    Brand partnership Ecommerce Email Marketer | Sent thousands of emails resulting in $150+ million in email attributable revenue.

    27,929 followers

    Brands lose their best international customers over $40. Not the product price. The surprise customs fee at delivery. I keep seeing the same pattern: European customer excited about a US brand. Places their first order. Gets hit with unexpected duties at their door. Never orders again. Meanwhile, other brands are quietly scaling to 47 countries without this problem. The difference? They show total landed cost upfront. Duties, taxes, shipping – everything visible before checkout. No surprises. No angry customers. Most brands think this will hurt conversion. It actually improves it. When customers see the real price upfront: → They know what they're paying → They actually complete purchases → They come back and buy again When they discover fees at delivery: → They feel tricked → They complain on social → They shop elsewhere next time The infrastructure already exists to fix this. Automated duty calculation for every country. Tax & tariff transparency at checkout. Localized payments & pricing customers trust. One platform instead of 20 different tools. But most brands are still treating international like it's complicated. It's not complicated anymore. It's just infrastructure. Swap handles all the complexity so brands can focus on selling. Calculate duties automatically. Show transparent pricing. Build trust with international customers. While competitors are still googling VAT rates, you're processing orders. See how it works → https://lnkd.in/gwmJdD5y The brands winning internationally aren't the ones with the best products. They're the ones who stopped surprising customers with hidden fees. #SwapPartner

  • View profile for Martijn Wijsmuller

    Co-founder @ Ask Phill | 10 Years Shopify-Only | Helping European Brands Migrate, Scale and Unify Commerce on Shopify

    9,233 followers

    Shopify now supports per-market checkout customization. For European multi-market brands, this is one of the most impactful platform updates of the year. What changed: merchants on Advanced and Plus plans can customize checkout branding, fields, and app embeds for each market. One store, multiple localized checkout experiences. Native to the platform. Why this matters for conversion: Checkout is the highest-leverage page in any e-commerce store. A 1% improvement in checkout completion rate has more revenue impact than a 10% increase in traffic. And yet, most multi-market Shopify stores have been running the same global checkout across every country. The conversion gap is real. Different markets have different expectations, here some examples: 1. Payment method preferences (iDEAL in NL, Klarna in Nordics, carte bancaire in France) 2. Trust signals (VAT display, local return policies, security badges) 3. Form fields (PO numbers for B2B, address formats per country) 4. Visual trust (local language, recognizable branding) A generic checkout leaves conversion on the table in every non-home market. The brands we work with typically see 15-25% lower checkout completion in secondary markets compared to their home market. A meaningful chunk of that gap is addressable through checkout localization. The previous workarounds were painful. Separate stores per market (expensive, fragile, hard to manage). Custom checkout extensions (development-heavy, brittle). Most brands just accepted the gap. Now it's configurable in the editor. The effort-to-impact ratio on this optimization is exceptional. If you're running a multi-market Shopify store, this should be next week's project. Not next quarter's. #Shopify #ecommerce #checkout #CRO #internationalcommerce

  • View profile for Uttam Gupta

    Claude & AI Growth Hacker | Helping Businesses with AI Sales and Marketing Systems | 🔗 Join my free AI Community

    76,501 followers

    I just spent 47 hours optimizing checkout for a fitness and wellness brand. Here's how we turned their biggest revenue leak into a 14% conversion boost. Last month, a D2C fitness and wellness brand reached out with a problem that's haunting most e-commerce founders: "Our traffic is great, our products are selling, but we're losing customers at the final step." When I dug into their data, the picture was clear: → Customers abandoning carts during lengthy checkout flows → Returning buyers frustrated with re-entering the same details → Zero visibility on who was leaving and why → No way to retarget lost customers Here's exactly what I did: Hour 1-15: Audit & Analysis I mapped their entire checkout journey. Found 8 friction points and 3 critical data gaps. Hour 16-32: Solution Implementation Integrated Razorpay Magic Checkout to: 👉 Pre-fill customer information automatically 👉 Reduce checkout steps from 6 to 2 👉 Create detailed abandoned cart tracking 👉 Enable real-time retargeting capabilities Hour 33-47: Testing & Optimization A/B tested the new flow, monitored user behavior, and fine-tuned the experience. The results after 30 days: ✅ 14% increase in conversion rate ✅ 5x faster checkout process ✅ Complete abandoned cart visibility ✅ 35% recovery rate on abandoned carts The biggest insight? Most brands treat checkout as a technical afterthought. But it's actually where your entire funnel either converts or collapses. This client went from losing 7 out of 10 customers at checkout to converting nearly 8 out of 10. Same traffic. Same products. Different checkout experience. The lesson I'm taking to every client now: Your payment flow isn't just about collecting money, it's about respecting your customer's time and removing every possible barrier between intent and purchase. For fellow consultants and founders: What's the biggest conversion killer you've seen in e-commerce? Drop your thoughts below.

  • View profile for Andrew Durot

    I keep 9-figure brands like Jones Road, JD Sports & Malbon online — then post about the scars. CEO EcomExperts: Persuasive Design + Engineering for Shopify

    6,948 followers

    Ever tried to check out on a website… and just gave up? The absolute worst. Instant deal-breaker. Your customers shouldn’t need a PhD in navigation to find the checkout button. Here’s how we fixed a broken e-commerce experience ➝ The case of Starfire Direct, an online retailer specializing in outdoor living products. Their website had a few key issues that were hurting both user experience and sales: 🔸 A broken cart icon: Shoppers couldn’t even check out properly. 🔸 Misaligned homepage elements: Images and text weren’t displaying right. 🔸 A messy menu & footer: Making navigation more confusing than it should be. The fix: Our team at EcomExperts jumped in to clean things up. We did a full audit, pinpointed the weak spots, and tackled them head-on: ✔ Restored the cart icon across all devices. ✔ Fixed misaligned images and sections for a cleaner look. ✔ Optimized the menu and footer for easy navigation. ✔ Updated site templates for a more consistent experience. ✔ Added a Sticky Add to Cart button to help boost conversions. The results… A smoother shopping experience, higher customer satisfaction, and a major drop in cart abandonment. More people were able to find what they needed, and ACTUALLY fully complete their purchases. Great UX isn’t just about looking good. It’s about removing friction so customers don’t have to think twice about buying. And when you get that right? The sales follow. If your e-commerce store has frustrating quirks that could be hurting conversions, it’s worth fixing now, before it costs you even more.

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