Traffic vs Engagement: Which should you focus on?

Which is more important, getting traffic or having engagement?

It’s easy to say both, but it’s really a timing issue. In the beginning, you need traffic, and engagement is more of a signal of how well you’re getting your message out. If you have a small (n) traffic problem, meaning you don’t have much traffic at all, then multiplying the small (n) by any number isn’t going to do much to move the needle. So when you’re just starting out, traffic is more important than engagement.
But, if you increase engagement, you get more sales from your traffic, more repeat visits and Google gives you a higher site rank. So this is also a bit of a chicken and egg problem. Not enough traffic and amazing engagement doesn’t help that much. Not enough engagement and your traffic is wasted and growth is even harder.

All traffic isn’t created equal.

Organic traffic ranks higher than paid traffic, and it’s free (not). You can grow old and die before Google decides to send you organic traffic without running ads. Organic traffic is anything but free once you consider how much time and/or money you spend creating the content that drives organic traffic.

 

Social media traffic may be easier to get, but it’s typically less effective at driving sales. There are those who ROCK social media, and those who just post. Mobile visitors to your website are less likely to buy than desktop visitors. Social media is more mobile-oriented so it tends to bring in more mobile visitors. Social media also skews to a younger audience, which is also a consideration. If you are a natural at social, it can be a driver. If you need to hire someone, it’s more expensive than ads.

Paid traffic and engagement

Once you start paying for ads, you absolutely need to work on engagement. Not having an engaging site is spending money you don’t have to. Engaging sites also bring in significantly more organic traffic, but here’s a little tidbit that doesn’t get as much attention as it should: Google will charge you less for ads than other sites, even if they bid higher, if you rank better than they do. I’m not making that up. Sites with high engagement scores pay less for ads. Google would rather send searchers to sites they’ll engage with than sites they’ll bounce on. Bad search results make Google look bad.

Why Google stopped rewarding traffic alone

Until a few years ago, SEO was mostly about telling Google what your pages were about. Keywords, structure, links. Google ranked sites algorithmically, largely independent of how visitors behaved.

That’s changed. Google’s recent updates lean heavily on user-behavior signals: dwell time, pages per session, return visit rate, scroll depth. These now decide which sites get more traffic. Sites that engage visitors well get rewarded with better positions. Sites that bounce visitors get quietly demoted, not in a single drop but in slow erosion over months.

For established stores, this means the comparison between traffic and engagement is misleading. They aren’t separate dials anymore. Engagement is part of how Google decides whether to send you more traffic at all. Working harder on traffic acquisition while engagement metrics stay flat is like filling a bucket Google has decided has a hole in it.

What stores ahead of this shift have been seeing

One of our customers, HorseWorldEU, lived this. After Google’s algorithm update — the one that put AI answers at the top of the search page — they saw a 700% increase in organic traffic. They didn’t change their product mix, didn’t add new apps, didn’t run new campaigns, didn’t suddenly produce more content. What they had done in the months prior was install Stylaquin and build the kind of on-site engagement Google now rewards: longer sessions, more products viewed per visit, repeat visitors curating boards.

We can’t claim direct causation. The algorithm does many things at once. But the timing aligned, and stores still pumping content into a low-engagement experience are watching their positions erode without an obvious cause.

The four engagement signals to watch

Before you fix engagement, you have to know which signal is weakest. Pull these four numbers from your Shopify analytics or GA4.

Pages per session under 3 means visitors land on a product, don’t see an obvious next thing to look at, and leave. The standard Shopify grid is the usual culprit. It’s fine for shoppers who already know what they want, but it works against shoppers who are exploring. If your store skews visual or fashion-adjacent, this signal is often the easiest to move.

Average session duration under 90 seconds means the same problem in time terms. Visitors arrive but don’t find enough to hold their attention.

Bounce rate over 60% means most visitors leave from the page they landed on. Usually that’s a mismatch between what brought them and what the page delivers. Sometimes a meta description that promised something different. Sometimes a slow page. Sometimes a layout that doesn’t match what the visitor expected.

Return visitor rate under 25% means the visitors you do convert aren’t coming back. This is the hardest signal to move because it requires giving visitors a reason to return that isn’t an email reminder.

Any one of these is a flag. Two or more together is a clear pattern. That’s the case for changing the on-site experience itself, not tuning at the margins.

How to move these signals

Each signal maps to different work. None is fixed by working harder at traffic acquisition.

Pages per session improves when product discovery feels less like clicking through a directory. Stronger related-product recommendations, more compelling collection layouts, alternative browsing experiences. Visual stores benefit most.

Session duration is downstream of pages per session, but adds a layer. Are visitors engaging with each page, or just clicking through? Better photography, clearer styling context, the ability to compare items side by side, these all extend sessions.

Bounce rate is mostly fixed at the entry point. The page that ranks for a query needs to deliver what the searcher expected when they clicked. Sometimes that’s rewriting the meta description. Sometimes it’s making the page faster. Sometimes the page just needs to look more like inspiration and less like a generic grid.

Return visitor rate is the hardest of the four. Email is the traditional answer, but open rates are falling and most stores send too much. The stores that actually move this number give visitors something to come back to that isn’t email. A saved selection. A curated board. An outfit-in-progress. The store becomes a place they return to of their own accord.

Stylaquin’s strongest data shows up here. Returning visitors using the Idea Board convert at 8.13%, versus 3.76% for those who don’t. More than double, on the customers most likely to buy.

What to do this week

If you’re past 5,000 sessions a month with flat conversion, the work isn’t more traffic. It’s whichever of the four engagement signals is weakest, and the lever you pull to fix it.

Pull the four numbers from your analytics today. Pages per session, session duration, bounce rate, returning-visitor rate. The weakest one tells you where to start. If multiple are weak together, that’s the case for changing the experience itself.

If you’re wondering whether any of this would actually move the needle on your specific products, run them through the Mockup Studio at stylaquin-mockupstudio.netlify.app. Five minutes, no install. You see your own catalog in the experience.

What is the impact of discovery on engagement?

Discovery is a big part of engagement

Discovery is when customers find new things they are not actively searching for. It’s that “Oh wow, cool!” moment of shopping. When you look at your customers’ journey, how much time do you spend on discovery? 

Let’s dig in a bit. First, we’ll go over eight ways you can increase discovery, and then we’ll look at what any improvement does to your SEO scores and Ad costs. It’ll be a happy discovery for you, I promise.

  • Personalized Recommendations:
    There are several Shopify Apps that will make product recommendations based on customer behavior. The Achilles heel is that new customers don’t have any previous data. You could have a best-sellers collection that would probably make the same recommendations. 

  • Special Collections:
    Think about what would interest customers and create collections to pique their interest. “Sale” is always a party favorite, but “Tops under $30” might get more attention. Is there a seasonal play? Can you do something with color?

  • Curated Collections:
    Retailers create themed collections or curated lists (e.g., “Summer Essentials,” “Top Picks for You”) that highlight specific products, helping users discover items that fit within a certain context or trend is an invitation to check things out.

  • Search and Filtering Options:
    Advanced search tools and filters allow users to explore products by category, Honestly, while Google considers this a part of discovery, search tools are designed to help shoppers find what they are looking for fast. They are less about discovery and more about narrowing options They can be important, especially if you have a lot of products with purchase-relevant specifications, think appliances and tools. 

  • Social Discovery:
    Social media integration and user-generated content, such as reviews, ratings, and social shares, can guide customers to new products that are popular within their social circles or the broader online community. 

  • Content-Driven Discovery:
    Blogs, videos, and articles on the site can feature products within a story or how-to guide, introducing customers to new items in a contextual and informative way. This is not really discovery while shopping, but they are an opportunity to show products off in new ways and sell shoppers on things they may not see in the thumbnails or the first few pictures in the image carousel.

  • Interactive Tools:
    Tools like virtual try-ons, and quizzes can help users discover products that are tailored to their preferences or needs. Virtual try-ons are pretty limited at the moment and school’s out on whether quizzes have real impact on sales. They do increase dwell time (time on site), which helps tremendously with SEO engagement scores—more on that later.

  • Stylaquin:
    Discovery starts with an experience. Stylaquin uses your site’s images to create visually interesting layouts for each product. Shoppers can flip through a site like they flip through a magazine. Shopping is faster and more fun. Stylaquin shoppers view 3X more items when they shop. Stylaquin is easy to add to any Shopify site, very affordable, and comes with a free 14-day trial.
Animated gif showing a laptop that displays Stylaquin's Look Book Feature

Does Your Site Do This?

It can with Stylaquin! Stylaquin is the easy to add Shopify app that transforms your website. Stylaquin makes shopping faster, more engaging, and more fun. Stylaquin shoppers stay longer, view over 85% more products, come back more often, and buy more when they do. Find us in the Shopify App Store.

Impact on Sales

Discovery plays a pivotal role in online retail by enhancing the shopping experience, increasing time spent on the platform, and driving impulse purchases. By making it easier and more enjoyable for customers to find new and relevant products, retailers can boost engagement, foster customer loyalty, and ultimately drive higher sales. 

Impact on SEO

Because AI is driving a surge in online content. (Thank you for giving a human-written post a read!) Google is altering the way it ranks sites. Remember when keywords were everything and we all worried about site tags? The sheer volume of AI-generated content is making engagement the big winner in SEO. When Google and the search engines (that could be a band name) look for the best site to send searchers they still use keywords, but the volume the site has in less important than the total events, dwell time, and repeat visits the site generates. I invented Stylaquin to make online shopping more fun for women, but it also solves the SEO problem created by AI-driven content—a happy accident. 

Impact on Ad Spend 

In case you need one more reason to focus on engagement—sites with better Google ranking pay less for ads. I’m not shining you on. Sites with higher scores get a boost in the bidding wars. Google and the search engines (Doo Wap, doo wah.) are happy to give up a few pennies to send searchers to a site they’ll be happy with. Getting a few cents off oevery ad view can save you a nice chunk depending on your ad spend.

AI is killing the traffic X conversions equation – boom!

What matters when it comes to web traffic?

So much of being successful online is a complex numbers game. Opening a new store on the web is like opening a store in one of the remote reaches of the planet, putting a sign on the door, and then expecting customers to show up—ain’t gonna happen. Without advertising, there is no way anyone will find you. There are some free sources of traffic, but SEO is a long game and you pay for “free” social media advertising with time. Advertising is the time-honored way to get eyeballs but it is expensive. So what matters?

Volume

Size matters. Sheer numbers work the way knocking on more doors worked a hundred years ago. Get more people to your website and you’ll get more sales. So the most simplistic form of the sales equation looks like this: Sales = Traffic X Conversion rate. If the conversion rate remains constant, then more traffic means more conversions.

Target Audience

If you want to increase the conversion rate, you need traffic that is likely to be interested in what you are selling. This is where advertising, SEO, and Social media all act as magnets to bring in the right customers. AI is changing how this all comes together. SEO is moving from keywords to content and engagement. Here’s a post on that if you want to understand why AI is going to destroy keyword search. AI determines which people will be interested in your wares, and it predicts this better than the experts can. Privacy is coming into play with AI, but we are so connected that, using AI, Google and Facebook know what you’re in the market for and what you’re going to be in the market for.

If you post that you are expecting a child on Facebook, you can also expect to see a sea of baby-related ads in your feed. Your friends can expect to see fun baby shower gifts in theirs. Grandparents will see ads for college savings programs and a new round of life insurance ads. AI, at its core, is just a predictive engine.

If humans can’t design a better campaign than AI can, we will all get the traffic we pay for. Think about it, if someone with no marketing chops can use AI to develop campaigns that beat the experts, there is no meaningful competitive advantage in audience selection. AI is the best and everyone can use AI. Done and dusted. 

Wait, what about Social Media?

It works, and it doesn’t. If you’re friends with Beyonce or Taylor Swift you’re all set. If you sell mass-market supplies or don’t love interacting with strangers, it will be a challenge. Social media gets eyeballs, but it doesn’t always convert. It can help you find and connect with your tribe. Those who are good at it are rewarded, those who aren’t good at it are frustrated. AI is probably going to impact social media soon, then it’s going to get weird. I mean what could go wrong with letting a predictive machine try to get people’s attention? (Hint: it gets racist and offensive pretty quickly.)

Customer experience

So, if we all have the same AI marketing genius design our campaigns, how are we going to impact our conversion rate so we don’t get killed by the competition?

  1. Sell products for a defined target customer that AI can identify.
  2. Create content that is interesting, relevant, and fresh.
  3. Focus on making websites that delight and engage shoppers.
  4. If you’re on Shopify, add Stylaquin to your site.

Stylaquin shoppers stay longer, view more items, come back more often, and buy more when they do. Seriously, now more than ever, making your website fun to shop is a great way to increase conversions and get more repeat traffic. We see it over and over, Stylaquin shoppers are three times more likely to come back to a site. Think about what that does to the equation if 5-30% of your site traffic is three times more likely to come back. If you are on Shopify, you can add Stylaquin in about 15 minutes, test it for free, and it starts at $29/month. Book a demo to learn more. 

Focusing on Mobile May be Costing You Money

66% of all online purchases are not on mobile

Mobile is important. 77% of all online retail visits are on mobile. So shoppers are coming on mobile, but they are buying on desktop. Let’s take a moment to look at what mobile brings to the table and why desktop is still where people feel more comfortable making purchases.

Mobile is our constant companion

If you look at the amount of time you spend with your phone vs the amount of time you spend with your desktop, mobile is the clear winner. It goes with you to the store, to the bank, on the train, to your appointments, and so on. We play on our phones, we explore on our phones, we converse on our phones, but we don’t always buy on our phones. 

Size matters

The advantage of mobile is that it fits in your pocket. The disadvantage of mobile is that it’s tiny so it fits in your pocket. Technology will overcome the screen size problem, but not for a while. For now, we can’t ask a phone to do for the shopping experience what a desktop does. Looking at products on a big screen is easier and gives us more confidence that we are seeing everything without all the pinching and zooming that’s needed on a phone. Having a high-speed connection allows for a more immersive experience with big images, video, and sound. Remember, most retail purchases are made in person. In-person shopping typically lets customers fully experience the products. Much like direct mail, online shopping has to work harder to both sell and educate customers in order to make the sale.

Animated gif showing a laptop that displays Stylaquin's Look Book Feature

Does Your Site Do This?

It can with Stylaquin! Stylaquin is the easy to add Shopify app that transforms your website. Stylaquin makes shopping faster, more engaging, and more fun. Stylaquin shoppers stay longer, view over 85% more products, come back more often, and buy more when they do. Find us in the Shopify App Store.

How do you leverage both?

Mobile is the amuse-bouche of shopping. Yes, people do buy on their phones. Most people have made at least one purchase on their mobile device, but executing a complicated shopping list on the phone is hard. Considering multiple options on a phone is hard. Keeping track of multiple tabs on a phone is hard. What makes a phone easy to bring with you, makes it hard to shop on.

Where mobile shines

Mobile shines as a way to connect to influencers, get ideas, chase trends, and make easy-to-understand purchases. If Kendal Jenner recommends a new mascara, you can feel confident buying that on your phone. If Macy’s offers a new separates line, you probably want to see everything on a big screen before committing. Mobile is where you kill time, or look up info in the store. Mobile is easy, convenient, and fun. Mobile is more private and personal. You might have a family computer, but not a family phone. Mobile is where you can share ideas and inspiration. It connects you personally to the world.

Where desktop shines

Desktop is often a work tool. Shopping data shows that people shop at work, especially at lunch and after work. When you’re home, it’s easy and more efficient to pull out the laptop or move to the big computer when you want to power shop, unless you don’t want to get off the couch. Power shoppers will save items on their phones and then move over to desktops to really dive in and make purchase decisions. 

Add a Styling Board and a Wishlist!

The Stylaquin Idea Board keeps customers engaged in two ways: it’s an interactive styling board where shoppers can collect and curate all the things that interest them; and it also acts as a wishlist that shoppers can return to. Find us in the Shopify App Store.

Animated gif showing a laptop displaying Stylaquin's Idea Board

Which is more important?

That’s like asking which arm is more important. Having both in good working order makes everything easier. We all have a dominant hand though. The dominant hand for online shopping is desktop. That’s where you’re going to get the most bang for your buck. If you have been focusing on mobile, maybe it’s time to give desktop some love. 

If you’re a Shopify site, take a look at Stylaquin. It works beautifully on mobile and desktop, but it really shines on desktop. It increases repeat visits by up to 3X and increases conversions by up to 3.5%. Shoppers stay longer, view more items, come back more often, and buy more when they do!

Surprise Google algorithm leak shows why engagement is vital

We got a peek behind the Google curtain!

Way back in May, lightyears ago in cyber time, there was an accidental Google leak discovered by Erfan Amizi. Erfan turned it over to Rand Fishkin, one of the MOZ founders, and Search Marketer of the Year, Michael King. They decoded it and learned several important things. (I learned that the leaked document was total gibberish to me.) 

While the learnings from the leaked document were not earth-shattering, they are illuminating, so here goes.

Google’s best practices are still valid, at least for now. AI may change everything, but more on that later.

Google is not going to make it easier for anyone but Google. We all knew that but, on some level, I think we are all hoping for some benevolence. (Dance you clueless marketer—Bang, Bang—Dance!) 

Animated gif showing a laptop that displays Stylaquin's Look Book Feature

Does Your Site Do This?

It can with Stylaquin! Stylaquin is the easy to add Shopify app that transforms your website. Stylaquin makes shopping faster, more engaging, and more fun. Stylaquin shoppers stay longer, view over 85% more products, come back more often, and buy more when they do. Find us in the Shopify App Store.

Apparently “Site authority” is a big thing. Again, we have known about it for years, but it’s more important, and yet somehow just as ephemeral as ever. The big takeaway is that backlinks are something to focus on. Backlinks are the basis of most site authority, so more, high-quality links are better. There are toxic backlinks, though, like every scary story out there, we don’t know who they are. Yes, that’s mighty vague, but it’s all we’ve got.

Clicks matter, a lot. This is where engagement comes back into the conversation. Engagement is one of the hardest things to fake. Google tracks clicks, drags, and a range of what are called events. The more events your site has, the higher your engagement score. If you’re on Shopify and want a quick and easy way to supercharge your customer engagement, check out Stylaquin. Stylaquin increases dwell time, increases events, and increases repeat visits. 

Links still matter, but only inbound. Don’t spend time on extra internal links. Google is only looking at (or at least the link only shows it looking at) external links to your site. 

Add a Styling Board and a Wishlist!

The Stylaquin Idea Board keeps customers engaged in two ways: it’s an interactive styling board where shoppers can collect and curate all the things that interest them; and it also acts as a wishlist that shoppers can return to. Find us in the Shopify App Store.

Animated gif showing a laptop displaying Stylaquin's Idea Board

High-quality content is still key. For the moment at least content is still king. Once AI gets going, I predict that it will do to content what bad marketers did to email. Think about it, once the bots start really duking it out, it’s going to be a war that no one wins. Here’s a post on why AI is going to destroy keyword search.

Freshness is still important, and also something that AI is going to poop all over. A bot can post every five minutes and there are marketers out there who will do that (of course) until Google finds a way to identify the bots, at which point the bots will shift to avoid Google and so on, and so on. Spy vs Spy, whack-a-mole, take your pick.

Bonus: Google has actual humans who review content and they rate the best as “Golden Documents”. It’s nice to know it isn’t all just bots reading our posts. 

Product copy is your secret weapon—here’s how to slay!

Nobody reads copy. (Psssst: Except when they buy.)

We are a society of scanners and clickers. We spend as little time as possible to get through as much as possible. The truth is that shoppers are busy people. Many mobile shoppers are killing time while commuting, or in a waiting room, or picking up kids or, or, or. You have just a few precious seconds to get their attention. 

So how much copy is ideal?

If your store is on a platform like Shopify, you have to think of  how much copy you need to effectively sell, and where that copy goes. You have two places to add copy, the product name and the product copy block. The product name is where you need the quick read most. “Women’s wide leg denim stretch crossover pant with hidden size zipper” is not going to get anyone’s attention fast. “Mardi Gras Pant” isn’t going to help with SEO. So you have to find a balance. 

Animated gif showing a laptop that displays Stylaquin's Look Book Feature

Does Your Site Do This?

It can with Stylaquin! Stylaquin is the easy to add Shopify app that transforms your website. Stylaquin makes shopping faster, more engaging, and more fun. Stylaquin shoppers stay longer, view over 85% more products, come back more often, and buy more when they do. Find us in the Shopify App Store.

Start with the customer’s journey

What are your customers looking for? If they are looking for a staple they always buy, like me buying Allegro Italian Roast Whole Bean Coffee, they aren’t shopping, they’re buying. They just need to find the item and check out fast. If they aren’t sure what they want, then they need to be able to compare. If the item has a design component, the first sort is going to be visual. Most products have at least some design component. Can you answer any of your customers’ questions with pictures? Can you add callouts to make the pictures more of a quick read? 

If they still have interest, they read the copy

Take a moment to think about the last time you bought something without reading the copy. Didn’t happen right? We all read the copy before we buy and customers can be lost if they have concerns or questions that the copy doesn’t answer. How crazy is it to cut out product copy that will be read when the customer is weighing whether to buy or not? It’s pretty darn crazy my friends. Pretty darn crazy.

Add a Styling Board and a Wishlist!

The Stylaquin Idea Board keeps customers engaged in two ways: it’s an interactive styling board where shoppers can collect and curate all the things that interest them; and it also acts as a wishlist that shoppers can return to. Find us in the Shopify App Store.

Animated gif showing a laptop displaying Stylaquin's Idea Board

What purpose does copy serve?

Product copy serves three masters. The internet gods, the customer, and the FTC. The internet gods require that product copy contains keywords, lots and lots of keywords. The consumer requires that product copy contains the dream of ownership, the benefits of ownership, the features of the product, and the price. The final master is the Federal Trade Commission or whatever that body is called in whatever country your store lives in. The FTC requires the specifics, which are different for different types of products but typically include the content and country of origin for the product. 

The internet gods must be appeased

Think about what someone would type into Google if they were searching for your product online. Use those words in the product copy. AI is actually helpful for this and worth the chatGMP subscription. 

How to write good product copy with AI

in order to get good product copy you’ll need to tell the AI who your target customer is. Age, sex, education level, hobbies, and anything else you know about them. If you don’t know, give it your best guess. Then tell the AI that you would like it to act as the head of marketing for a company that sells what you sell. Feed it your customer information, and then ask it to write copy for the product that has at least 5 keywords. You can also have the AI make a list of keywords first and then have it write the copy using the ones you like the best. The more information you can give the AI about the product the better the result. 

Is AI copy as good as professionally crafted copy?

No. A professional copywriter will think about the hierarchy of information, the aspirational opportunities, the cultural tie-ins, and more. AI is a great starting point and most professional copywriters are using it to do some of the heavy lifting. AI is a time saver, but there’s an art and craft to copy that AI may never master. 

Site lost it’s oomph? When everything old is just old.

It's easy to lose your mojo when everything looks the same

I just got back from vacation in Paris. It was beautiful. It was delicious. It was different. Do Parisians see it with the same wonder that I did? Truth is, It doesn’t matter where you are, familiarity breeds contempt. The same goes true for our online world. Everything gets old. What once thrilled you is now a bore. What was so very IN is now tragically out, Out OUT!  

When I was an Art Director for L.L. Bean I had a delightfully huge photo budget. The ADs could basically do whatever they wanted as long as they didn’t go crazy and hire a supermodel or rent a cruise ship. It’s hard keeping things fresh on any budget, but tighter budgets require some added creativity. The magic isn’t really the money spent, it’s the ideas that make the magic.  

Animated gif showing a laptop that displays Stylaquin's Look Book Feature

Does Your Site Do This?

It can with Stylaquin! Stylaquin is the easy to add Shopify app that transforms your website. Stylaquin makes shopping faster, more engaging, and more fun. Stylaquin shoppers stay longer, view over 85% more products, come back more often, and buy more when they do. Find us in the Shopify App Store.

Creativity is a muscle that needs to be used

There’s a myth that creative people are born and not forged. The truth is that the people who say they aren’t creative just don’t like the process of being creative. I don’t like the process of accounting, but thankfully there are those who do. If you don’t enjoy being creative you won’t spend a lot of time honing your skills. Ten thousand hours to mastery is also true of creativity. One of the biggest killers of great creative is not giving it enough time. How often have you heard a nature show say “Play is nature’s training ground for the hunt.”? Play is creative’s training ground for the killer idea that sells. Giving yourself, or your creative team, time to come up with multiple ideas is the fastest way to get fresh ideas.

So how do you keep your website fresh?

Embrace change. You need to change things. There are things you can change easily: Images, colors, copy, and apps. There are things that are harder to change: Branding, themes, and target audience. Start with the easy stuff.

New images

Just changing images can help. If you are on a Shopify site, change the order in the carousel. Be sure to keep an eye on how different images perform. Some images just sell better than others. If you can figure out what about the image made it better you can really dial in how you show products. A good example of this is when we figured out that showing a hand on rolling luggage increased sales by about 11%. Just the hand.

New images are getting easier to make all the time. With AI you can take an image with a model or product in one location, and with a few awkward sentences, probably move them to a new location, hopefully with all their parts intact. Even without AI, it’s pretty easy to swap out backgrounds or create new ones. 

Add a Styling Board and a Wishlist!

The Stylaquin Idea Board keeps customers engaged in two ways: it’s an interactive styling board where shoppers can collect and curate all the things that interest them; and it also acts as a wishlist that shoppers can return to. Find us in the Shopify App Store.

Animated gif showing a laptop displaying Stylaquin's Idea Board

New colors

Change site colors with the season. It’s an easy way to show that your site is evolving and vibrant. If you just stick with your brand colors, that’s fine, but it’s harder to keep fresh. When we were designing the Stylaquin App we made it easy to change the colors of the bar so folks could play with color. 

New Copy

It’s really easy to set it and forget it online, but revisiting copy can be an easy way to keep things fresh. No one reads copy until they are considering buying, then everyone reads copy. The tee shirt that sells all year round will still sell better if the copy changes with the seasons. Basic items may be used differently in summer than they are in winter. Refreshing product copy from time to time keeps products relevant.

New Apps

One of the great things about online shopping platforms like Shopify is that you can add new things easily. While adding too many apps can slow down a site, letting apps transform your website is easy and affordable. The Stylaquin App adds a new way to shop that transforms any website without changing much. Sounds impossible, but it’s almost magic. Stylaquin is easy to add and has a 14-day free trial. 

How much change is enough?

There’s a cognitive bias called the Status Quo Bias where we prefer to keep things kind of the same. If you color outside the lines, the group think will be that you are doing something wrong. But if nothing changes then, well, you’re back in the same boring rut you started out in. So we need to keep things fresh, while not changing much, in order to get anything changed at all. Oh, the joys of being creative! Seriously though, evolution versus revolution is easier to manage and, if you make it part of the normal product cycle, it’s not as daunting as a total overhaul done in a panic. 

Help them love you. Get online shoppers to stay longer!

Getting shoppers to stay longer has four main areas you can leverage

The longer a visitor stays on your site, the more likely they are to make a purchase. Google also counts this as part of your engagement site rank. Google calls staying longer “Dwell Time”. It used to be just “Time on Site”. I assume they want to differentiate between the active time when shoppers are live on the site and the time when they just walked away or opened a new tab. That’s a pretty important distinction when you think about it. But I digress. How do you get shoppers engaged with your site so they stay longer? First, let’s look at how they got to your site. 

New visitors may have very different journeys.

New visitors are experiencing your site for the first time and they’re the bulk of your site traffic. Let’s look at where they started and why.

  • Search: They were looking for something and your site came up in the search as a good place to find that something. Getting your SEO dialed in is the only way to make sure organic visitors come to you when they ask Google for anything. These visitors came with the expectation that they would find what they were looking for.
  • Ads: They saw an ad and it sparked interest. Either they were already looking for what’s advertised or they became curious. Either way, they also came with an expectation that they would find what sparked their interest.
  • Referral: They were at another site and they saw a reason to go to your site. They clicked on a link because they needed more information or were curious. They came with an expectation of finding whatever the link promised. (I know this sounds repetitive, but it’s important.) 
  • Recommendation: Either they saw something you sell and want to learn more, or they know someone who said you were a place they should visit. These customers are probably the most flexible about what they find. 

Four different paths to your door—groovy, but how do you get them to stay longer? The first thing to do is, and this is obvious, make sure they find what they are looking for. You need to meet their expectations, after that, you can show ’em a good time.

Animated gif showing a laptop that displays Stylaquin's Look Book Feature

Does Your Site Do This?

It can with Stylaquin! Stylaquin is the easy to add Shopify app that transforms your website. Stylaquin makes shopping faster, more engaging, and more fun. Stylaquin shoppers stay longer, view over 85% more products, come back more often, and buy more when they do. Find us in the Shopify App Store.

How many times have you seen an ad and thought “Cool!” only to click on the link and not find the thing you thought was cool? You end up at the home page or a general landing page and then you have to dig for it. The journey you sent them on went from interesting to frustrating. Just getting someone to your site isn’t the same as giving them a good experience on your site. If you want them to stay longer, you have to give them a good experience. Think of it like being a good host. If you go to someone’s house for a party and they make you look for the other guests, track down a beer, hunt down a place to sit, and then don’t talk to you. Do you stay? Do you come back? I mean, maybe if the beer’s cold and the view’s nice…

Show ’em a good time!

Once you have earned their trust and attention by meeting their expectations, then you can have fun with them. The folks who love shopping will usually poke around a bit. How do you intrigue them? You know I love showing off a best seller or three. Hard to miss by offering to show new visitors what everyone loves.

Create intriguing collections

Collections are easy to create and don’t need to appear in the top nav. Say you create a collection of accessories that look great with jeans, you may not want to gum up your top nav with that, BUT you could add it to the bottom of every jeans copy block. Think about the things that could go with what you’re selling and what other interesting things you have to offer. The new customer journey begins when a new visitor comes to your store for a thing, then what?

Add a Styling Board and a Wishlist!

The Stylaquin Idea Board keeps customers engaged in two ways: it’s an interactive styling board where shoppers can collect and curate all the things that interest them; and it also acts as a wishlist that shoppers can return to. Find us in the Shopify App Store.

Animated gif showing a laptop displaying Stylaquin's Idea Board

Repeat visitors are money

Once you get a visitor to come back, you’re in clover. You got a second date! They liked you and came back for more. Chances are they had a good experience on your site, and now they are more likely to buy from you! 

If you want an easy way to get more repeat visitors to your Shopify website, give Stylaquin a try. Stylaquin engages and delights shoppers so they have a fun and memorable experience. Stylaquin shoppers are about 3X more likely to come back than non-stylaquin shoppers, and they have a significantly higher conversion rate when they do. It’s the easy and inexpensive way to create online engagement.

Get customers to browse more, so they buy more!

Browsing behavior is key to increasing sales!

How many of your site visitors have something they want to buy in mind when they visit? How many searched for something online and came to your site because they either saw it in an ad or on the organic list? How many of your customers stop by your website just because they want to shop? All of these shoppers can be encouraged to browse. Browsing is a hobby, a game, or a sport, depending on how you look at it. Browsing can be a key selling feature of your website. 

Not everyone is born a browser. There are people who love to shop. It’s a hobby. They want to browse and take a look at things. They may have started with something in mind, but they are always willing to check out what’s on offer. These are the customers you want to target. Even getting a percentage of them to view more products will do wonders for your bottom line.

Why is browsing so important?

Browsing brings two important benefits. First, it greatly increases the likelihood that shoppers will see something they like. If they just grab and go, you won’t be getting any additional sales. If you can get them to check out even a few more items, they are more likely to make an additional purchase. Amazon uses this tactic by having a row of other things that might be of interest at the bottom of the product window. 

Another reason to encourage browsing is that it helps your site’s SEO rank. The more engaged shoppers are with your site, the higher your site rank will be. Google and the other search engines want to send their customers, the searchers, to sites that will make them happy. The metric they use to measure that is called engagement. When a visitor looks at more than one item, Google considers that a vote of confidence. The more items and pages they view, the better the score. Having a better SEO rank will also reduce ad costs since Google gives preference and lower rates to sites with a higher site rank. It’s Google’s way of rewarding quality websites and discouraging spammy ones.

Who are browsers?

Women are more likely to browse than men. That said, if you show a guy who loves to fish a large selection of lures… pretty sure he’s gonna browse. Browsing is curiosity. Browsing is playful. Browsing is a leisure activity. Anyone will browse if you give them the right environment. 

Animated gif showing a laptop that displays Stylaquin's Look Book Feature

Does Your Site Do This?

It can with Stylaquin! Stylaquin is the easy to add Shopify app that transforms your website. Stylaquin makes shopping faster, more engaging, and more fun. Stylaquin shoppers stay longer, view over 85% more products, come back more often, and buy more when they do. Find us in the Shopify App Store.

How do you get someone to browse?

They have to have time to browse. Rushed people don’t browse, they grab and go. Doesn’t matter if they are online or in-store. They have to see things they’re interested in. You can’t get customers who don’t like what you sell to browse. Cheap customers are more likely to browse the sale collection, but making sure your site is geared to your target audience will encourage browsing. Browsing has to be fun, so make it visually stimulating.

The key is getting them started

Enticing customers to browse has tried and true tactics like showcasing best-selling items. Best-sellers are the items most likely to get the ball rolling. Be sure to put them where visitors will see them. 

You can encourage browsing with coupons. Knowing that everything is 25% off can be a great browsing motivator. Creating collections of items that work together or complement each other is another classic way to encourage shoppers to start browsing. 

If you are looking for an innovation designed to radically increase browsing, check out Stylaquin. Stylaquin makes browsing more fun and engaging. Fun is a great motivator. We all tend to do more of the things we enjoy. Shoppers who use Stylaquin are three times more likely to become repeat visitors and up to 9% more likely to convert when they do. You can add Stylaquin to any Shopify site in under 15 minutes and the monthly charge is tiny compared to the engagement it creates. Check it out—here’s a link to the Shopify App Store.

Add a Styling Board and a Wishlist!

The Stylaquin Idea Board keeps customers engaged in two ways: it’s an interactive styling board where shoppers can collect and curate all the things that interest them; and it also acts as a wishlist that shoppers can return to. Find us in the Shopify App Store.

Animated gif showing a laptop displaying Stylaquin's Idea Board

If you’re a well established brand with a loyal following, having a sale is probably enough to get your customers to come for a visit. You have to give up some margin, but they show up. If you’re a new or emerging brand you have to pay for advertising and, chances are, you have to also give up some margin. 

What is the value of a repeat customer?

How much more is a repeat customer worth?

There are a few things to consider when you look at the actual value of a repeat customer. Why they came back is important too. If you had a going out of business sale and you had repeat customers, maybe they’re not so valuable… just saying. From a more practical standpoint though, repeat customers are easier to keep, worth more to the bottom line, and will do wonders for your SEO and advertising costs. Let’s get into a bit more detail to understand why.

Lower acquisition costs

Acquisition costs are simply how much it costs to get a customer. When you look at the amount you spend on advertising, and then divide the number of new customers that advertising brought in, you get a simple acquisition cost. Repeat customers, even if they only come back once, are half the cost of new customers. If they come back multiple times, the acquisition cost drops with each visit. So the first value you get from repeat customers is lower acquisition costs. 

Animated gif showing a laptop that displays Stylaquin's Look Book Feature

Does Your Site Do This?

It can with Stylaquin! Stylaquin is the easy to add Shopify app that transforms your website. Stylaquin makes shopping faster, more engaging, and more fun. Stylaquin shoppers stay longer, view over 85% more products, come back more often, and buy more when they do. Find us in the Shopify App Store.

Improved site rank

While it’s easy to do the math on acquisition costs (not getting into attribution here), it’s harder to put a firm number on benefits like site rank because the search engines won’t tell you how their algorithm counts them. The best way to quantify this is to track it. Here is a list of sites that will rank your site. 

Why does having more repeat visitors improve your site rank? 

Google’s customer is the person searching, not the ad revenue it earns from advertisers. In order for Google to keep its place as the top search engine it needs to make its searchers happy by sending them to sites that meet their query, and then sends them to a page they’ll like.

So how does Google decide which of the millions of sites are the best choice? It starts by finding sites that have what the searcher is looking for. Then it determines if geography is important to the search, like “best pizza near me”. Say the search is for “jeans with pockets”, well honey, there are a whole lot of sites that have jeans with pockets. Sites that have made a point to add “pockets” to their product copy will rank better than sites that just have Jeans listed. But that still leaves a lot of sites that Google needs to rank. They have a secret formula that looks at several factors. How much traffic does the site get? How fresh is the content they provide? How relevant is the content provided to the person searching? AKA is the site showing expertise in jeans? Google also looks at engagement. That is, how engaged are visitors to the site?

Add a Styling Board and a Wishlist!

The Stylaquin Idea Board keeps customers engaged in two ways: it’s an interactive styling board where shoppers can collect and curate all the things that interest them; and it also acts as a wishlist that shoppers can return to. Find us in the Shopify App Store.

Animated gif showing a laptop displaying Stylaquin's Idea Board

Repeat visitors signal engagement 

Repeat visitors tell Google that your site was so good that the searchers they sent there, came back. Google wants its customers to be happy and repeat visits are their most reliable signal that the searcher was happy with the result. It’s like getting a gold star on your book report. There are other factors that go into a site’s engagement score, like dwell time (time on site) and the number of events they trigger. Events are things like clicks and drags. Basically, the things you do while on a site.

How does more engagement translate into value?

In terms of money, the better your site’s rank, the less you pay for ads. Google discounts ads for stores with better site ranking. It’s a way to encourage sites to step up their game, and it also makes spammy ads more expensive. So, if you’re running ads on any of the major search platforms, getting more repeat visitors is also getting you a discount on your ad spend. Who doesn’t like free money?

Brand value is the big bonus

Money is always nice, but when you’re building a business, brand loyalty is priceless. There are millions of websites out there selling what you sell and getting customers to pick you first is a huge boost. That’s when customers sing your praises. That’s when the media starts to notice. That’s when the magic happens!

The easiest way to get repeat visitors is with Stylaquin

If you’re a Shopify site and have traffic that isn’t coming back, give Stylaquin a try. It is easy to add, inexpensive, takes no work to maintain, and increases repeat visits like no other app we’ve seen. Here’s a link to the app store where you’ll find a video and lots of helpful information.