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Free eCommerce CRO audit

Get a clearer view of where the store may be losing conversions before you spend more on traffic.

A conversion-focused audit helps highlight friction across product pages, mobile experience, cart flow, and checkout trust. It is a useful starting point when the store feels underpowered but the biggest blockers are still unclear.

What this audit helps uncover

A better first pass for product-page friction, trust gaps, and checkout hesitation.

Many stores do not need a complete rebuild to improve conversion. They usually need clearer priorities around UX, trust, messaging, speed, and the purchase journey.

Built around buyer friction

This audit helps surface the usability, trust, and content issues most likely to affect product discovery, cart progression, and checkout completion.

Useful for Shopify and WooCommerce

The goal is not to overcomplicate the process. It is to identify the highest-impact opportunities on the platform you already use.

Good before a larger engagement

Start here when conversion rates feel soft and you need a better sense of what deserves attention first.

How to use the results

Use the audit to move from a vague conversion problem to a focused revenue-improvement plan.

The point is not just to identify issues. It is to understand which changes are most likely to improve product engagement, checkout completion, and the overall buying experience.

Step

Share the store and your biggest point of friction

Tell us where the store feels weak today, whether that is product page engagement, cart abandonment, mobile UX, or broader checkout hesitation.

Step

Review the highest-impact conversion issues first

We look for friction in page clarity, trust signals, navigation, mobile experience, and the steps between interest and purchase.

Step

Turn the audit into a focused improvement plan

Use the results to prioritize design, content, speed, UX, or technical changes that support stronger revenue performance over time.

After the audit

Use the findings to prioritize the store changes most likely to improve revenue.

The real gains usually come from follow-through: stronger product pages, cleaner UX, better technical support, faster pages, and a more deliberate approach to ongoing optimization.