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Stop Chargebacks Before They Start: The Power of Fast Customer Support

Chargeflow's report reveals 80% of chargebacks stem from poor communication, not fraud.
By Jodi Lifschitz
0 min read . By Jodi Lifschitz

TL;DR:

  • Most chargebacks occur due to poor merchant communication rather than fraud. Customers choose this path when they feel ignored or frustrated.
  • 80% of customers report never being contacted by merchants after filing a chargeback. 23% file immediately after an issue and 38% file within 1-3 days if unresolved.
  • The most common chargeback reason is "product not received" (35%). 79% of all chargebacks are actually "friendly fraud" filed for invalid claims.
  • Prevention requires fast customer support and automated chargeback management. Combining Gorgias for AI-powered support with Chargeflow for automated dispute management provides a comprehensive solution with faster resolutions and higher win rates.

Chargebacks are more than a thorn in a merchant’s side — they’re a growing financial and operational threat. According to Ethoca, chargebacks are projected to more than double, from $7.2 billion in 2019 to $15.3 billion by 2026 in the U.S. alone. And while fraud plays a role, the primary reason customers file chargebacks is simpler: they feel ignored. 

Chargeback volume in 2026 is projected to be $146 millino
Chargeback volume is expected to reach $146 million in 2026.

At Chargeflow, we recently published a comprehensive report analyzing why customers dispute chargebacks. The findings were eye-opening. While it’s true that fraud is a real concern, most chargebacks happen for a different reason: a lack of communication between merchants and customers.  

Top stats from Chargeflow’s report:

  • 23% of customers file a chargeback immediately after an issue.
  • 38% file a chargeback within 1-3 days if unresolved.
  • 80% report never being contacted by the merchant.
  • 52% are likely to dispute if the response is too slow.

When customers feel ignored or frustrated, they often turn to their bank for a solution instead of reaching out to the merchant first. Understanding these behaviors is key to preventing disputes before they escalate and cause chaos. 

So, what actually drives customers to dispute charges? Here’s what the data says.

Why customers file chargebacks

While chargebacks are often the cost of doing business, the truth is that many disputes are preventable — but only if merchants understand the root causes. We identified five key drivers behind chargebacks.

1. Customers take immediate action

According to our research, most customers file a dispute right away after encountering an issue, leaving no opportunity to resolve the problem. Another 38% file within one to three days if they don’t receive a timely response. 

Why? Customers assume the fastest way to get their money back is by filing a chargeback, especially if they receive no response from the merchant.

2. Lack of communication leads to disputes

We found that 80% of customers never receive a follow-up after filing a chargeback. Additionally, 64% of customers state immediate communication is crucial, yet many businesses fail to reach out.

  • 90% of customers tried to reach out to the merchant first.
  • If they don’t receive a response, they quickly file a dispute. 

Why? Customers expect businesses to be proactive. When they don’t hear back quickly, they assume the merchant won’t help, making a chargeback seem like the best option.

3. Chargebacks are too easy for customers

98% of customers report a neutral to highly satisfactory experience when filing chargebacks, and only 12% are denied. 

A pie chart showing that 45% of customers are satisfied with the chargeback process.
45% of customers are Very Satisfied with the process of initiating chargebacks through their banks and credit card companies.

Why? Many customers believe chargebacks are faster and easier than dealing with merchants directly, especially if return policies are unclear. 

4. Transaction issues drive chargebacks

The most common reason for filing a chargeback is “product not received” (35% of the cases). Other common reasons included:

  • Fraudulent transaction claims - 16%
  • Product significantly not as described - 15%
  • Unauthorized transaction - 15%

Why? When customers don’t receive clear shipping updates or experience delivery delays, they assume their order won’t arrive and file a chargeback rather than waiting.

5. Friendly fraud is a major problem

Friendly fraud occurs when a cardholder makes a legitimate purchase but later disputes the charge as fraudulent or unauthorized, leading their card issuer to reverse the payment. 

Our research found that:

  • 21% of customers admitted to not fully understanding the chargeback process. 
  • Another 20% aren’t even aware of what a chargeback is. 
  • 97% of consumers believe they’ve never filed a chargeback incorrectly, while only 3% admit they have.
97.14% of customers have initiated a false chargeback
Nearly all customers (97%) have initiated a false chargeback at one point.

According to our State of Chargebacks report, 79% of chargebacks are actually friendly fraud, meaning they were filed for invalid reasons.

Why? Many customers mistakenly believe that a chargeback is just another way to request a refund, rather than a process intended for fraud or merchant failure. 

📌 The takeaway: Most chargebacks aren’t actual fraud, but rather a result of customer confusion, impatience, or poor communication from merchants.

The solution: how to stop chargebacks before they happen

Merchants who want to stop chargebacks before they happen need a two-part strategy:

  • Fast, customer-focused support to resolve issues before customers dispute charges. 
  • Automated chargeback management to detect and fight disputes efficiently, so merchants don’t lose revenue to invalid claims.

Chargebacks result from slow response times, poor communication, and unresolved issues, not fraud. Adopting AI-driven customer support and chargeback automation allows businesses to significantly reduce disputes and retain more revenue. 

How AI-powered support & chargeback automation work together

Instant responses prevent frustration-driven chargebacks

Many chargebacks happen because customers don’t receive a fast enough response. In fact, 52% say they will dispute a charge if the response time is too slow. AI-powered chatbots provide real-time support, resolving issues before they escalate. 

Proactive communication reduces uncertainty

Customers expect updates regarding orders and refunds, but often don’t receive them. 80% of customers report never hearing from a merchant after filing a chargeback. 

Automated order updates, refund confirmations, and proactive notifications keep customers informed, reducing unnecessary disputes.

24/7 availability ensures no issues go unanswered

Customers expect round-the-clock support, but most businesses can’t provide live assistance. AI-powered ticketing and automation ensure every customer receives help, regardless of the time zone or urgency.

The result? Fewer chargebacks, faster resolutions, and increased customer satisfaction.

Actionable strategies for improving response times

Prioritize long-term clients

It’s impossible to please every customer. On average, chargebacks take 50 days to resolve successfully. Focus your energy on retaining high-value, long-term customers.

Prioritize high-risk inquiries

Lost inquiries take on average 15 days to resolve, and lost chargebacks take 38 days. Prioritize cases based on impact. 

Build efficient escalation systems

Advanced automated ticketing systems can route inquiries and prioritize urgent cases.

Use pre-approved resolution templates

Ensure customer service teams have quick-response templates to speed their resolutions.

Work closely with shipping carriers

“Product not received” was the most cited reason for delivery-related chargebacks. Work closely with carriers and third-party suppliers to improve fulfillment and reduce disputes.

Leverage chargeback management tools

Use automated tools for real-time analytics, enhanced communication, and proactive alerts, which will reduce response times. 

Gorgias & Chargeflow: A fully automated chargeback prevention system

Successfully tackling chargebacks requires both proactive customer support and automated dispute management. That’s why Gorgias and Chargeflow work so well together to give merchants a comprehensive defense against disputes.

Post-purchase automation isn’t just about reducing customer support workload or quick replies. It's about finding the most effective ways to increase customer loyalty and prevent disputes.

Learn more about how AI-driven automation enhances post-purchase experiences here.

How Gorgias prevents chargebacks with conversational AI

  • Automated real-time responses engage customers before they decide to dispute charges.
  • Proactive customer communication ensures customers receive updates on their orders, refunds, and transactions.
  • 24/7 availability ensures customers receive the support they need without increasing overhead. 

How Chargeflow automates chargeback prevention & recovery

  • Pre-dispute alerts notify merchants before a chargeback is finalized and provide proactive intervention.
  • AI-powered chargeback responses to automate evidence collection and improve win rates. 
  • Smart analytics to help merchants understand why disputes happen and how they can prevent them. 

Final thoughts: Stop chargebacks before they start

As you know, chargebacks are costly, frustrating, but most importantly, preventable. Our research shows that most chargebacks don’t stem from fraud, but from poor communication, slow response times, and customer uncertainty.

By prioritizing fast, AI-driven customer support and automated chargeback management, merchants can resolve issues before they escalate, improve customer experience, and protect their revenue. 

With Gorgias handling proactive customer support and Chargeflow managing chargeback disputes, merchants get a powerful, end-to-end prevention system that ensures fewer chargebacks, higher dispute win rates, and, at the end of the day, happier customers. 

Don’t let chargebacks drain your revenue. Take control today with faster, smarter automation.

Download Chargeflow’s full Psychology of Chargebacks Report to dive deeper into the data and start preventing disputes before they happen.

min read.

9 Ways to Use AI to Personalize the Customer Journey

Use AI to segment behavior, predict intent, and personalize CX across chat, email, and support touchpoints.
By Tina Donati
0 min read . By Tina Donati

TL;DR:

  • Use AI across both support and sales. Ecommerce brands are using AI to drive revenue and efficiency by combining automation in chat, email, and customer data with personalized product guidance and upsells.
  • Analyze post-purchase surveys with AI to uncover customer insights. AI quickly identifies themes, sentiment, and trends from open-ended feedback to inform product, shipping, and support decisions.
  • Predict customer intent with AI before they take action. By analyzing behavior like cart activity or page views, AI can engage high-intent shoppers with personalized nudges in real time.
  • Automate QA and proactive support with AI. AI reviews 100% of conversations, flags quality issues, and triggers outreach for known problems — all before customers even ask.

Shoppers aren’t just open to AI — they’re starting to expect it.

According to IBM, 3 in 5 consumers want to use AI as they shop. And a McKinsey study found that 71% expect personalized experiences from the brands they buy from. When they don’t get that? Two-thirds say they’re frustrated.

But while most brands associate AI with support automation, its real power lies in something bigger: scaling personalization across the entire customer journey. 

We’ll show you how to do that in this article.

AI for customer data 

Before AI can personalize emails, recommend products, or answer support tickets, it needs one thing: good data.

That’s why one of the best places to start using AI isn’t in sales or support — but in enriching your customer data. With a deeper understanding of who your customers are, what they want, and how they behave, AI becomes a personalization engine across your entire business.

Enriching surveys with AI

Post-purchase surveys are gold mines for understanding customers — but digging through the data manually? Not so fun.

AI can help by analyzing survey responses at scale, identifying trends, and categorizing open-ended customer feedback into clear, actionable insights. Instead of skimming thousands of answers to spot what customers are saying about your shipping times, AI can surface those insights instantly — along with sentiment and behavior signals you might’ve missed.

Try this prompt when doing this: "Analyze 500 open-ended post-purchase survey responses. Identify the top 5 recurring themes, categorize customer sentiment (positive, neutral, negative), and surface any trends related to product quality, delivery experience, or customer support."

Predicting customer intent before they even say a word

One of AI’s biggest strengths? Spotting intent.

By analyzing things like page views, cart activity, scroll behavior, and previous purchases, AI can identify which shoppers are ready to buy, which ones are likely to churn, and which just need a little nudge to move forward.

This doesn’t just apply to email and retargeting. It also works on live chat, in real time.

Take TUSHY, for example.

To eliminate friction in the buying journey, TUSHY introduced AI Agent for Sales — a virtual assistant designed to guide shoppers toward the right product before they drop off. 

Instead of letting potential customers bounce with unanswered questions, the AI Agent steps in to offer:

  • Personalized product recommendations based on shopper questions
  • Compatibility guidance (especially for customers unsure which bidet works with their toilet)
  • Real-time installation tips and links to helpful how-to articles
TUSHY uses AI Agent to answer customers on live chat.
TUSHY removes pre-sales friction with Gorgias's AI Agent to answer product questions, resolve compatibility concerns, and deliver personalized recommendations.

With a growing product catalog, TUSHY realized first-time buyers were overwhelmed with options — and needed help choosing what would work best for their home and hygiene preferences.

“What amazed us most is that the AI Agent doesn’t just help customers choose the perfect bidet for their booty — it also provides measurement and fit guidance, high-level installation support, and even recommends all the necessary spare parts for skirted toilet installations. It’s ushering in a new era of customer service — one that’s immediate, informative, and confidence-boosting as people rethink their bathroom habits.”

—Ren Fuller-Wasserman, Sr. Director of Customer Experience at TUSHY

Forecasting revenue by segment

AI also helps you see the road ahead.

Instead of looking at retention and loyalty metrics in isolation, AI can help you forecast what’s likely to happen next and where to focus your attention.

By segmenting customers based on behaviors like average order value, order frequency, and churn risk, AI can identify revenue opportunities and weak spots before they impact your bottom line.

All you need is the right prompt. Here’s an example you can run using your own data in any AI tool:

Prompt: “Analyze my customer data to forecast revenue by segment. Break customers into at least three groups based on behavior patterns like average order value, purchase frequency, and churn risk. 

For each segment, provide:

  1. A projected revenue trend for the next quarter
  2. A key insight about their behavior
  3. One actionable recommendation to either grow or retain revenue from that segment.”

Here’s what a result might look like:

  • VIPs (Top 5% by LTV): Predicted 15% growth next quarter based on repeat behavior
  • One-time Buyers: 70% churn risk flagged—time to trigger a win-back campaign
  • Discount-Only Shoppers: Revenue likely to dip unless incentive strategy changes

Instead of flying blind, you’re making decisions with clarity — and backing them with data that scales.

AI for sales 

When used strategically, AI becomes a proactive sales agent that can identify opportunities in real-time: recommending the right product to the right shopper at the right moment.

Here’s how ecommerce brands are using AI to drive revenue across every part of the funnel.

Dynamic pricing that responds to the market (and the shopper)

Your prices shouldn’t be static — especially when your competitors, inventory, and customer behavior are anything but.

AI-powered pricing tools like AI Agent for Sales help brands automatically adjust pricing based on shopper behavior. The goal is to make the right offer to the right customer.

For example:

  • Show a discount to a price-sensitive shopper who’s hesitating at checkout
  • Recommend premium add-ons to high-LTV customers who are more likely to spend

With dynamic pricing, you can protect your margins and boost conversions — without relying on blanket sales.

Turning chat into a personal shopper (that never sleeps)

AI-powered chat is no longer just a glorified FAQ. Today, it can act as a real-time shopping assistant — guiding customers, boosting conversions, and helping your team reclaim time.

That’s exactly what Pepper did with “Penelope,” their AI Agent built on Gorgias.

With a rapidly growing product catalog (22 new SKUs in 2024 alone), Pepper knew shoppers needed help discovering the right products. Customers often had questions about styles, materials, or sizing, and if they didn’t get answers right away, they’d abandon carts and move on.

Instead of hiring more agents to keep up, Pepper deployed Penelope to live chat and email.

Her job?

  • Instantly answer questions about fit, fabric, or product differences
  • Guide shoppers toward the best option for their needs
  • Recommend complementary products (like matching panties or bottoms)
  • Free up agents to focus on higher-value 1:1 moments, like virtual fit sessions
“With AI Agent, we’re not just putting information in our customer’s hands; we’re putting bras in their hands... We’re turning customer support from a cost center to a revenue generator.”
—Gabrielle McWhirter, CX Operations Lead at Pepper
Pepper uses Gorgias's AI Agent on their website via chat.
Pepper uses AI Agent to provide proactive sales support on chat, handling objections and encouraging customers to make informed purchases.

Let’s look at how Penelope performs on the floor:

Real-time recommendations

A shopper asked about the difference between two wire-free bras. Penelope broke down the styles, support level, and fabric in plain language — then followed up with personalized suggestions based on the shopper’s preferences.

Proactive engagement

Using Gorgias Convert chat campaigns, Pepper triggers targeted messages to shoppers based on behavior. If someone is browsing white bras? Penelope jumps in and offers assistance, often leading to faster decisions and fewer abandoned carts.

Intelligent upsells

If a customer adds a swimsuit top to their cart, Penelope suggests matching bottoms. No full-screen popups, no awkward sales scripts — just thoughtful, helpful guidance.

Support and sales in one

Penelope also handles WISMO tickets and return inquiries. If a shopper is dealing with a sizing issue, Penelope walks them through the return process and links to Pepper’s Fit Guide to make sure the next purchase is spot on.

Pepper uses AI Agent to automatically answer product questions.
A customer asks about the fabric used in her Pepper bra. AI Agent successfully responds with the proper details in a natural tone of voice.

By implementing AI into chat, Pepper saw a 19% conversion rate from AI-assisted chats, an 18% uplift in AOV, and a 92.1% decrease in resolution time.

With Penelope handling repetitive and revenue-driving tasks, Pepper’s team now has more time to offer truly personalized touches — like virtual fit sessions that have turned refunds into exchanges and even upsells.

Curating bundles with AI-powered sales data

Bundling is a proven tactic for increasing AOV — but most brands still rely on subjective judgment calls or static reports to decide which products to group.

AI can take this a step further.

Instead of just looking at what’s bought together in the same cart, AI can analyze purchase sequences. For example, what people tend to buy as a follow-up 30 days after their first order. This gives you powerful clues into natural buying behavior and bundling opportunities you might’ve missed.

If you’re looking to explore this at scale, you can use anonymized sales data and feed it into AI tools to surface patterns in:

  • Frequently bundled items
  • Follow-up purchases within a set time frame
  • High-value product pairings with repeat potential

Try this prompt:

 "Analyze this spreadsheet of order data and identify product bundle opportunities. Look for: (1) products frequently purchased together in the same order, (2) items commonly bought as a second purchase within 30 days of the first, and (3) patterns in high-value or high-frequency product pairings. Provide insights on the most promising bundles and why they might work well together."

Just make sure you’re keeping customer data anonymous — and always double-check the insights with your team.

Related: Ecommerce product categorization: How to organize your products

AI for support

AI isn’t just here to deflect tickets. From quality assurance to proactive outreach, AI can elevate the entire support experience — on both sides of the conversation.

Quality checks powered by AI

Manual QA is slow, selective, and often feels like it’s chasing the wrong tickets.

That’s where Auto QA comes in. Instead of reviewing just a handful of conversations each week, Auto QA evaluates 100% of private messages, whether they’re handled by a human or an AI agent.

Every message is scored on key metrics like:

  • Resolution completeness
  • Brand voice
  • Empathy and tone
  • Accuracy

It gives support leaders a full picture of how their team is performing, so they can coach with clarity, not just gut feeling.

Here’s what brands can do with automated QA:

  • Save time by focusing only on the conversations that need attention
  • Ensure consistency across agents and AI with a single scoring standard
  • Improve agent performance with targeted coaching and feedback
  • Deliver higher-quality support that customers actually notice

Let’s walk through a real example.

Customer: “Hi, my device broke, and I bought it less than a month ago.”

Agent: “Hi Kelly, please send us a photo or a video so we can determine the issue with your device.”

Auto QA flags this interaction with:

  • Communication Score: 3/5 — The agent was clear, but could have shown more empathy in tone.
  • Resolution Score: Complete — The issue was addressed effectively.

Proactive support that reaches out first

Reactive support is table stakes. AI takes it a step further by anticipating issues before they happen — and proactively helping customers.

Let’s say login errors spike after a product update. AI detects the surge and automatically triggers an email to affected customers with a simple fix. No need for them to dig through help docs or wait on chat — support meets them right where they are.

Proactive AI can also be used for:

  • Order delay notifications with live tracking updates
  • Subscription renewal reminders
  • Back-in-stock alerts with support follow-up for next steps

This saves the time of your agents because the AI will spot problems before they turn into tickets.

Understanding sentiment at scale

Your customers are telling you what they think. AI just helps you hear it more clearly.

By analyzing reviews, support tickets, post-purchase surveys, and social comments, AI can spot sentiment trends that might otherwise fly under the radar.

For example:

  • Multiple reviews mention “runs small”? AI flags it, so your team can update the product description or add a sizing chart.
  • A sudden rise in “frustrated” language in support tickets? Time to check if something’s off with your shipping or product quality.

Related: 12 ways to upgrade your data and trend analysis with Ticket Fields 

Personalization at scale starts with the right AI stack

Whether you’re enriching customer data, making smarter product recommendations, triggering dynamic pricing, or proactively resolving support issues, AI gives your team the power to scale personalization without sacrificing quality.

With Gorgias, you can bring many of these use cases to life — from AI-powered chat that drives conversions to automated support that still feels human. 

And with our app store, you can tap into additional AI tools for data enrichment, direct mail, bundling insights, and more.

Personalized ecommerce doesn’t have to mean more work. With the right AI tools in your corner, it means smarter work — and better results.

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min read.

Should Brands Disclose AI in Customer Interactions? A Guide for CX Leaders

Explore the risks, benefits, and best practices for AI transparency in customer support. Plus, a framework to help you decide whether or not to disclose AI.
By Tina Donati
0 min read . By Tina Donati

TL;DR:

  • Check legal requirements. Some regions mandate AI disclosure—stay compliant.
  • Transparency impacts trust. Some customers appreciate honesty; others may disengage.
  • Frame AI as helpful. Position it as a support tool, not a human replacement.
  • Refine your approach over time. Monitor feedback and adjust AI disclosure as needed.
  • AI is everywhere in customer service—powering live chats, drafting responses, and handling inquiries faster than ever. 

    But as AI takes on more of the customer experience, one question keeps coming up: Should brands tell customers when they’re talking to AI?

    Legally, the answer depends on where you operate. Ethically? That’s where things get interesting. Some argue that transparency builds trust. Others worry it might undermine confidence in support interactions. 

    So, what’s the right move?

    This guide breaks down the debate and gives CX leaders a framework to decide when (and how) to disclose AI—so you can strike the right balance between innovation and trust.

    The legal landscape: What are the disclosure requirements?

    Depending on where your business operates, disclosure laws may be strict, vague, or nonexistent. Some laws, such as the California Bolstering Online Transparency Act, prohibit misleading consumers about the use of automated artificial identities.

    For maximum legal protection, it’s best to proactively disclose AI use—even when not explicitly required. 

    A simple disclaimer can go a long way in avoiding legal headaches down the line. Here’s how to disclose AI use in customer interactions:

    • In email: Use your email signature to indicate that AI has assisted in generating the response.
    • In chat: Update your Privacy Policy to clarify when AI is involved in customer interactions.

    Truthfully, AI laws are evolving fast. That’s why we recommend consulting legal counsel to ensure your disclosure practices align with the latest requirements in your region.

    But beyond avoiding legal trouble, transparency around AI usage can reinforce customer trust. If customers feel deceived, they may question the reliability of your brand, even if the AI delivers great service.

    Related reading: How AI Agent works & gathers data

    How does disclosure impact trust and satisfaction?

    Research shows that 85% of consumers want companies to share AI assurance practices before bringing AI-driven products and experiences to market.

    But what does “transparency” actually mean in this context? An article in Forbes broke it down, explaining that customers expect three key things:

    1. Clear disclosure: They want to know when AI is (and isn’t) used in customer interactions.
    2. Simple, non-technical language: AI disclosures shouldn’t feel like reading a terms-of-service agreement. Keep it digestible.
    3. Easy-to-find information: AI disclosures should be visible—not buried in fine print. A chatbot notification, a banner on your site, or a brief message before an AI-powered chat begins can make a big difference.

    How you disclose AI matters just as much as whether you disclose it. At the end of the day, AI isn’t inherently good or bad—it’s all about how it’s implemented and trained. 

    The business perspective: Risks and benefits of AI transparency

    The way a brand approaches AI disclosure can impact trust, satisfaction, and even conversion rates—making it a decision that goes beyond simple legal requirements.

    While some customers appreciate honesty, others may hesitate if they prefer human support. Brands must weigh the pros and cons to determine the best approach for their audience.

    Risks of disclosure

    Let’s be honest: AI in customer service still carries baggage. While some consumers embrace AI-driven support, others hear "AI" and immediately picture frustrating, robotic chatbots that can’t understand their questions.

    This is one of the biggest risks of transparency: customers who’ve had bad AI experiences in the past may assume the worst and disengage the moment they realize they’re not speaking to a human.

    For brands that thrive on personal connection and high-touch service, openly stating that AI is involved could create skepticism or drop-off rates before customers even give it a chance.

    Another challenge? The perception gap

    Even if AI is handling inquiries smoothly, some customers may assume it lacks the empathy, nuance, or problem-solving skills of a live agent. Certain industries may find that transparency about AI use leads to more escalations, not fewer, simply because customers expect a human touch.

    Benefits of disclosure

    Despite the risks, transparency about AI can actually be a trust-building strategy when handled correctly.

    Customers who value openness and ethical business practices tend to appreciate brands that don’t try to disguise AI as a human. 

    Being upfront also manages expectations. If a customer knows they’re speaking to AI, they’re less likely to feel misled or frustrated if they encounter a limitation. Instead of feeling like they were "tricked" into thinking they were talking to a human, they enter the conversation with the right mindset—often leading to higher satisfaction rates.

    And then there’s the long-term brand impact

    If customers eventually realize (through phrasing, tone, or inconsistencies) that they weren’t speaking with a human when they thought they were, it can erode trust. 

    Deception—whether intentional or not—can backfire. Proactively disclosing AI use prevents backlash and reinforces credibility, especially as AI becomes a bigger part of the customer experience.

    Example: How Arcade Belts used AI transparency without losing the human touch

    Arcade Belts, known for its high-quality belts, wanted to improve efficiency without compromising customer experience. By implementing Gorgias Automate, they reduced their reliance on manual support, creating self-service flows to handle common inquiries.

    Arcade Belts' website uses Gorgias Chat to automate FAQs
    Arcade Belts uses Gorgias Automate to automatically answer common questions.

    Initially, automation helped manage routine questions, such as product recommendations and shipping policies. But when they integrated AI Agent, they cut their ticket volume in half. 

    The transition was so seamless that customers often couldn’t tell they were interacting with AI. “Getting tickets down to just a handful a day has been awesome,” shares Grant, Ecommerce Coordinator at Arcade Belts. ”A lot of times, I'll receive the response, ‘Wow, I didn't know that was AI.”

    You can read more about how they’re using AI Agent here.

    Decision-making framework: Should you disclose AI?

    We mentioned it earlier, but deciding whether or not to disclose your use of AI in customer support depends on compliance, customer expectations, and business goals. That said, this four-part framework helps CX leaders evaluate the right approach for their brand:

    Step 1: Assess legal requirements

    Before making any decisions, ensure your brand is compliant with AI transparency regulations.

    • Research regional laws governing AI disclosure, as requirements vary by jurisdiction.
    • Consult legal counsel to confirm whether your AI usage falls under any mandated disclosure policies.
    • Stay informed on evolving AI governance frameworks that could introduce new compliance obligations.

    Step 2: Review customer expectations and brand positioning

    AI transparency should align with your brand’s values and customer experience strategy.

    • Consider whether transparency supports your brand’s messaging—does your audience expect openness, or do they prioritize seamless interactions?
    • Analyze customer sentiment through surveys and engagement data to determine if they prefer knowing when they’re speaking with AI.
    • Review past AI interactions to identify patterns in customer reactions and adjust your approach accordingly.

    Step 3: Test both approaches and measure the impact on CSAT

    Rather than making assumptions, run controlled tests to see how AI disclosure affects customer satisfaction.

    • Conduct A/B tests comparing interactions with and without AI disclosure.
    • Track key support metrics like response time, CSAT scores, and AI resolution rates to measure effectiveness.
    • Experiment with different positioning strategies—does framing AI as a helpful assistant improve customer perception?

    Step 4: Adjust based on customer feedback and industry trends

    AI strategies shouldn’t be static. As customer preferences and AI capabilities evolve, brands should refine their approach accordingly.

    • Regularly collect customer feedback to understand how AI disclosure impacts their experience.
    • Monitor industry trends to see how competitors and market leaders are handling AI transparency.
    • Stay flexible—if sentiment shifts, be ready to adjust your disclosure strategy to maintain trust and efficiency.

    Best practices for AI disclosure (if you choose to disclose)

    If you decide to be transparent about AI in customer interactions, how you communicate it is just as important as the disclosure itself. Let’s talk about how to get it right and make AI work with your customer experience, not against it.

    First, make AI part of your brand voice

    AI doesn’t have to sound like a corporate FAQ page. Giving it a personality that aligns with your brand makes interactions feel natural and engaging. Whether it’s playful, professional, or ultra-efficient, the way AI speaks should feel like a natural extension of your team, not an out-of-place add-on.

    Instead of:
    "I am an automated assistant. How may I assist you?"

    Try something on-brand:
    "Hey there! I’m your AI assistant, here to help—ask me anything!"

    A small tweak in tone can make AI feel more human while still keeping transparency front and center.

    AI Agent responding to good customer feedback with a discount
    AI Agent uses an outgoing, enthusiastic, and approachable tone.

    Read more: AI tone of voice: Tips for on-brand customer communication

    Clarify the AI’s role

    One of the biggest mistakes brands make? Leaving customers guessing whether they’re speaking to AI or a human. That uncertainty leads to frustration and distrust.

    Instead, be clear about what AI can and can’t do. If it’s handling routine questions, product recommendations, or order tracking, say so. If complex issues will be escalated to a human agent, let customers know upfront.

    Framing matters. Instead of making AI sound like a replacement, position it as a helpful extension of your support team—one that speeds up resolutions, but hands off conversations when needed.

    Blend human and AI seamlessly

    Even the best AI has limits—and customers know it. Nothing is more frustrating than a bot endlessly looping through scripted responses when a customer just needs a real person to step in.

    AI should be the first line of defense, but human agents should always be an option, especially for high-stakes or emotionally charged interactions.

    A smooth handoff can sound like:
    "Looks like this one needs a human touch! Connecting you with a support expert now."

    Frame AI messaging positively

    AI disclosure doesn’t have to feel like an apology. Instead of focusing on limitations, highlight the benefits AI brings to the experience:

    • Faster responses
    • 24/7 availability
    • Instant answers to common questions

    It’s the difference between:

    "This is an AI agent. A human will follow up later."

    vs.

    "I’m your AI assistant! I can answer most questions instantly—but if you need extra help, I’ll connect you with a team member ASAP."

    The right framing makes AI feel like an advantage, not a compromise.

    Monitor customer feedback and adjust messaging

    AI perception isn’t static. Regularly analyzing sentiment data and customer feedback can help refine AI messaging over time—whether that means adjusting tone, improving explanations, or updating how AI is introduced.

    When you follow these best practices, AI can be a real gamechanger for your customer support. Just take it from Jonas Paul… 

    When AI is done right: Jonas Paul’s success story

    Jonas Paul Eyewear, a direct-to-consumer brand specializing in kids' eyewear, needed a way to manage high volumes of tickets during the back-to-school season without overwhelming their customer care team. 

    AI Agent responding to a customer asking about what eyeglass lenses to choose
    AI Agent helps a customer with the lens selection process.

    To streamline these conversations, Jonas Paul implemented AI Agent to provide instant responses to FAQs. This allowed human agents to focus on more complex cases that required personalized attention.

    “Being able to automate responses for things like prescription details and return policies has allowed us to focus more on the nuanced questions that require more time and care. It’s been a game changer for our team,” said Lynsay Schrader, Lab and Customer Service Senior Manager and Jonas Paul.

    Jonas Paul saw a 96% decrease in First Response Time and a 2x ROI on Gorgias’s AI Agent with influenced revenue. You can dive in more here.

    Make AI transparency work for you with AI Agent

    Whether or not your brand chooses to disclose AI in customer interactions, the key is to ensure AI enhances the customer experience without compromising transparency, accuracy, or brand identity.

    So how can you get started? Gorgias AI Agent was built with both effectiveness and transparency in mind. 

    For every interaction, AI Agent provides an internal note detailing:

    • The Guidance, Articles, or Macros it referenced
    • The source of any account information it used
    • A prompt for your feedback to continually refine and improve responses

    Excited to see how AI Agent can transform your brand? Book a demo.

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    min read.
    Create powerful self-service resources
    Capture support-generated revenue
    Automate repetitive tasks

    Further reading

    How To Offer Free Shipping

    How to Offer Free Shipping and Lift Revenue

    By Jordan Miller
    10 min read.
    0 min read . By Jordan Miller

    Free shipping has become so ubiquitous in ecommerce that shoppers now expect it. 

    According to a survey conducted by Forbes, 77% of respondents abandoned their cart because they were unhappy with the shipping options. 84% made a purchase because it qualified for free shipping. 

    Free shipping isn’t always an option for ecommerce stores though, especially for those with small margins or where shipping is expensive for every order. 

    These are the best strategies for how to offer free shipping, even if you’re unsure it’s something your business can afford. 

    {{lead-magnet-1}}

    Is offering free shipping in ecommerce worth the cost?

    Free shipping has become a key differentiator in a very crowded ecommerce ecosystem, with 75% of customers now expecting it on all orders. 

    Offering free shipping can drive more revenue for your business, encourage repeat business, decrease cart abandonment, and even pull customers away from your competition. 

    Let’s be clear: Offering free shipping for all products is not sustainable for most businesses. But free shipping is not all-or-nothing. Below, explore why providing free shipping in some capacity is worth the expense for your business. 

    Benefits of free shipping for ecommerce companies

    Encourage customers to become repeat buyers

    One survey found that 90% of consumers consider free shipping to be the primary factor driving them to shop with online retailers more frequently. And, according to Gorgias, repeat shoppers generate 300% more revenue than first-time shoppers, on average.

    Repeat customers generate 300% more revenue than first-time shoppers, on average.
    Source: Gorgias

    When customers are online shopping, they remember easy experiences, which includes not having to pay for shipping when they find something they love. A stress-free experience (without unpleasant surprises at checkout) creates loyal customers who want to shop with your business long term. 

    📚 Recommended reading: Learn why customer experience is a largely untapped revenue stream for most ecommerce brands. 

    Incentivize higher average order volume (AOV)

    On top of that, some free shipping models encourage customers to place larger orders, generating more revenue per customer.

    Take the minimum order value model (what you might call the Amazon not-Prime model), where shipping only becomes free once the cart reaches a certain subtotal. Depending on which study you prefer, at least 84% — and perhaps as many as 93% of customers — have added items to their cart to qualify for free shipping, increasing average transaction value and potentially total revenue per customer.

    Sway customers away from competitors

    When you offer free shipping and a competitor doesn’t, that single difference can pull new customers your way — and away from the competition. When 90% of consumers consider free shipping their top incentive and a full 60% of them expect free shipping no matter what, offering it is a huge differentiator for your customer base. 

    📚Recommended reading: 7 Strategies for Creating a Customer-Centric Post-Purchase Experience

    Decrease cart abandonment

    One firm determined the overall rate of cart abandonment in ecommerce stores is north of 75%, and unexpected charges (including shipping charges) at checkout are the top culprit.

    Reasons for cart abandonment during checkout.
    Source: Baymard

    In other words, providing free shipping — and keeping other unexpected fees out of the checkout process — will reduce cart abandonment and increase conversion rate for typical ecommerce businesses.

    {{lead-magnet-2}}

    Is your online store ready to offer free shipping?

    Making the decision to implement free shipping isn’t always as simple as flipping a switch. It takes careful planning and even more careful execution. Consider the following factors to help you understand the cost of free shipping for your business and decide if it’s the right move for you.  

    Understand how much shipping costs your ecommerce business

    The demand for free shipping has changed the way that small businesses choose to operate. For example, writer Amanda Mull at The Atlantic reveals how free shipping priorities (and algorithms favoring the vendors who offer it) have hurt numerous small business owners on Etsy. 

    If you’re operating on razor-thin margins and you’re already struggling to be price-competitive, pivoting to an always-free shipping model might not be feasible. Even if your margins are healthy, for many smaller ecommerce retailers, blanket free shipping isn’t sustainable or feasible—nor are the extra costs that come with it.

    Next steps: How to calculate shipping costs for your business 

    On a spreadsheet, compile the shipping costs for every product you sell — from the smallest and lightest to the largest and bulkiest — to all four corners of the US (if you’re a US-based store) and anywhere you ship internationally. 

    This cost will differ based on your preferred shipping carrier, too. Compare rates between FedEx, UPS, and USPS to see who has the most affordable option — we’ve linked shipping calculators for each above. Once you have these numbers, calculate your average shipping cost. Then, multiply it by the average number of orders you get in one month. 

    You’ll also want to look at your best-selling items and calculate how much it costs to ship them, as you’ll likely be sending these out more often than other items in your catalog. 

    Don’t worry about exact numbers here. The goal is to get a ballpark number to compare with your monthly revenue. If your estimated shipping costs will put you in the red, free shipping may not be the best option (even with the bump in orders). If this is the case, consider qualified or flat-rate shipping instead — more on both below. 

    📚 Recommended reading: Our list of shipping best practices for ecommerce businesses.

    Consider flat-rate shipping instead

    Offering a flat-rate shipping charge is one way to give customers a low-cost shipping option without absorbing the entire cost yourself. 

    Even if you can’t afford free shipping, charging one flat shipping cost for all orders on your site incentivizes larger orders. And, if you can keep the flat rate low, it can convince customers who just want to make a small order to convert. 

    Set up flat rate shipping in Shopify

    Setting up flat rate shipping is quick and easy if you use Shopify: Here’s how to do it.

    Determine your free shipping limit

    Most brands can’t support universally-free shipping. That’s why a qualified free shipping option based on factors like order size or location is such a good option. 

    The most straightforward way to offer qualified free shipping is to set a minimum order amount. But in terms of your bottom line, this minimum threshold needs to be high enough that you aren’t losing money on most transactions.

    Here’s a formula for calculating your free shipping threshold:

    The formula to calculate your free shipping threshold.

    Free shipping threshold = (Average shipping cost per order / gross profit margin percentage as a decimal) + average value of an order

    Free shipping threshold = ($10 / .30) + $50

    Free shipping threshold = $83.33

    The result you get from this formula is the average amount at which free shipping won’t create a loss for you.

    Now in some cases that figure will be too high to be all that relevant. “Free shipping on orders $350+” can make sense for some retailers, but not those with an average ticket of $50.

    Fit Small Business gives additional formulas for calculating a minimum threshold that still operates at a loss. 

    Consider free shipping for returns

    Customers hate paying for return shipping. If you can afford it, letting shoppers return an item for free is a great way to avoid driving them away. It also can create repeat business, low-effort experiences, and encourage loyalty. 

    Of course, free returns leave you vulnerable to expensive spammers and order spikes. So, tighten up your return policy and try to incentivize exchanges over returns to protect lost revenue.

    Find other ecommerce differentiators besides free shipping

    Ecommerce is a wide field, and your business is competing for only a small slice of the market. Look for differentiators with lower cost pressures and high levels of impact that may be unique to your industry or market.

    Free shipping isn’t the only thing that matters. Fast delivery also makes a difference in many industries and markets. Can you outmaneuver your competition by offering next-day shipping, even at a premium price? Perhaps your customers will be willing to pay for faster service if it isn’t available elsewhere.

    Here are a few other areas you might explore in search of other ecommerce differentiators:

    • Unique services
    • Ecosystem effects (think Apple: “Our products all work better together, so stick with us across our catalog”)
    • Value-adds (freebies, discounts on future orders, etc.)
    • Multiple shipping and delivery options, including fast or flat rate
    • Eco-friendly shipping or packaging approaches

    Similarly, you may not be able to prioritize free shipping until you figure out other logistics like inventory management, order management, order fulfillment, order tracking, and returns management.

    How to offer free shipping on a budget

    If you’re ready to put together your free shipping strategy, use these tips to craft a program that’s enticing to online shoppers without destroying your bottom line.

    1) Increase product prices to absorb the cost of shipping

    According to research from the Baymard Institute, 48% of shoppers abandoned their cart because the extra costs were too high. People like the transparency of seeing one price without getting surprised by additional fees at checkout. 

    Speaking generally, most customers would prefer to pay $50 for an item that ships free than spend $45 on the same item, only to discover an additional $5 charge for shipping in their shopping carts. Even though you’re passing shipping costs onto the customer in other ways, you still give buyers the perception of lower costs overall. 

    Consider raising your prices to include shipping costs to limit surprises at checkout and increase transparency. 

    2) Offer a “free shipping for orders over” model to incentivize higher AOVs

    Offering free shipping when a customer reaches a minimum price threshold can be a powerful strategy for raising ticket value.

    Customers will frequently add more items to reach that threshold, increasing average order value (AOV), overall revenue, and your business’s order volume as a whole.

    To make it easy for customers to see how close they are to free shipping, add an app to your ecommerce store (like the Essential Free Shipping Bar for Shopify stores) that shows progress visually. For example, Gorgias customer OLIPOP makes it easy for folks to see how many more packs of soda they need to purchase to get free shipping. 

     

    Offer a subscription product to increase customer lifetime value (LTV) and offset the cost of free shipping.
    Source: OLIPOP

    This is also a great way to build upselling into your strategy. When customers are looking for additional items to meet the free shipping threshold, consider showing items that pair well at checkout. This automation is easy to add via the app store if you’re on Shopify, and you can see how OLIPOP sneaks in suggestions in the screenshot above.  

    If you’re going to offer completely free shipping, make sure you use it as a marketing tool and make it very clear to shoppers. For example, Woxer uses a banner at the top of its site to announce that it offers free shipping across the US no matter the order total.

    Advertise free shipping on your ecommerce website to increase conversion rate.
    Source: Woxer

    A cohesive and realistic shipping strategy is highly valuable to any company that ships products to people because it is part of your brand image.

    📚 Recommended reading: Our guide to creating an ecommerce shipping and fulfillment strategy. 

    3) Offer subscription-based products to increase LTV

    In a survey conducted by Salesforce for CFO, more than half of survey respondents said that 40% of their revenue was made up of subscriptions. 

    A subscription format is powerful because it ensures repeat purchases and raises the overall lifetime value (LTV) of customers who opt in. If you choose to become part of the subscription economy, you could choose to offer free shipping on subscriber orders only. That way you limit the amount of free shipping you give, and further incentivize shoppers to sign up for a subscription. 

    4) Limit free shipping to certain items, customers, or locations

    Stores with wide product catalogs that include many low-dollar items may not be able to offer blanket free shipping. But, you can limit free shipping to certain high-dollar product categories, select items within those categories, people who live within a certain distance, or VIP customers.

    How to offer free shipping affordably as an ecommerce brand. 5 strategies (listed below).

    Here are a few approaches you can use to limit free shipping: 

    • Shoppers must reach a designated spend threshold
    • Free shipping is limited to members (like Amazon Prime or Madewell Insider) 
    • Free shipping is limited to shoppers with a certain number of points in a loyalty program (a service like LoyaltyLion can help you manage this) 
    • Shipping costs are location based (For example, US only if your store is located there) 
    • Products that cost over a certain dollar amount automatically qualify 

    5) Partner with a third-party logistics company to offer free (sometimes two-day) shipping at scale

    Partnering with a third-party logistics company allows you to split inventory across multiple fulfillment centers throughout the nation. That means they’ll end up closer to customers’ homes, which reduces shipping costs because of location proximity, and means that you can offer faster shipping for less cost. 

    ShipBob is a great option for this, as they’re a trusted global fulfillment company.  

    Take care of your shoppers with the Gorgias + ShipBob integration. Sync shipping data with your helpdesk, reduce tab-shuffling, and help you improve customer experience during fulfillment. 

    6) Optimize your packaging for cost

    Shipping fees are calculated based on item weight, size, speed, and distance to destination. And the size and weight of your packaging contribute to that cost. Cutting down on the dimensions of your packaging where possible and using lighter-weight mailers can lower the cost of each package. 

    📚Recommended reading: 8 Tips to Minimize Shipping Costs and Maintain Quick Delivery

    7) Create a limited-time free shipping offer

    There’s nothing quite as powerful as a ticking timer, whether it’s a 15% off coupon that’s only good for the next hour or a sale that only lasts for the weekend. Discounts are powerful, but free shipping can be just as enticing.

    Consider adding free shipping promotions to existing promotional events such as holiday sales, store anniversary sales, Black Friday and Cyber Monday, and other seasonal events pertinent to your industry and market.

    Time-limited holiday sales can be effective, but they also tend to be some of your busiest sales windows in any given year. If you could use some additional help with your logistics this upcoming Black Friday and Cyber Monday, check out our complete guide to BFCM logistics.

    📚Recommended reading: The 12 Best Shipping Software Tools for Ecommerce Stores

    Provide world-class customer service with Gorgias

    Free shipping is often one key to a world-class customer experience in ecommerce. But whatever you choose to do with your shipping policies, you absolutely must pair it with world-class customer service and support. Customers will appreciate your free shipping, but they’ll love you (and show it through repeat business) when you outpace the competition in terms of customer service.

    Gorgias is an all-in-one customer service and helpdesk platform built for ecommerce businesses like yours. It integrates with a variety of different apps, like LoyaltyLion, Attentive, and Klaviyo. We operate at the speed of ecommerce, empowering you to serve and scale like never before. We also offer support for logistics like free shipping and order management, largely thanks to our many ecommerce integrations.

    Ready to see what Gorgias can do? Get started for free right now!

    Best Bigcommerce Apps

    The 26 Best BigCommerce Apps: Create a Profitable, Seamless Ecommerce Experience

    By Jordan Miller
    24 min read.
    0 min read . By Jordan Miller

    BigCommerce is a widely used ecommerce platform that comes equipped with a variety of built-in sales and marketing tools. But if you really want to optimize your BigCommerce store — and build the kind of shopping experience that retains customers and drives revenue — you’re going to want to take advantage of third-party BigCommerce apps to round out your ecommerce tech stack

    To help you choose the right solutions for your online store, we’re taking a look at the 26 best BigCommerce apps on the market today broken down by category. 

    (If you ended up on this guide but don't use BigCommerce, check out our list of the best apps for Shopify or the best Magento extensions instead.)

    What to look for in a BigCommerce app

    While searching for BigCommerce apps, you’ll of course want to ensure that a given app solves your problem at a manageable price point. However, if you’ve ever shopped for software, you know it’s not that simple. 

    Like any other ecommerce tool, you’ll also want to investigate each app’s integrations, customizations, and ongoing support:

    1) Integrates with your other ecommerce tools and platforms

    BigCommerce’s apps work best when they work together. By integrating your email marketing app with your shipping app, for example, you can send automated shipping updates to customers. Integrating your customer support platform with your returns and exchanges app means your agents can check and share updates on customer returns and offer product recommendations for an exchange without leaving the helpdesk.

    These are just two examples of how it can be beneficial to choose apps that can integrate with your other ecommerce tools. Of course, it's also important to choose apps that will integrate with your ecommerce platforms, which is why all of the apps in our list integrate with the BigCommerce platform.

    2) Allows for customizations

    Plug-and-play solutions that don't offer much room for customization may seem convenient at first. But as your business grows and scales, though, you are likely to find that these solutions no longer meet your needs like they once did. Even if you use pre-made templates, you’ll at least want some level of customizability to ensure you don’t have to go app-shopping and move to a new piece of software when you learn the template no longer suits your needs.

    {{lead-magnet-1}}

    3) Receives regular updates

    Even the most well-polished apps still require regular updates and maintenance to continue functioning correctly. In addition to scheduled updates and maintenance, it is also essential to choose apps whose providers are willing to work with you to quickly correct any bugs or issues that come up while you are using the app. This makes great customer support a vital quality to look for in BigCommerce app providers no matter what type of app you are purchasing.

    Also, we’ve noticed that when developers release an app on multiple ecommerce platforms, the Shopify version tends to get more attention. That’s why we recommend checking the BigCommerce app marketplace, not the app’s website, for customer reviews and product update history.

    Best marketing BigCommerce apps

    No matter how great your products are, you aren't going to generate a lot of sales without an effective marketing strategy. Thankfully, these marketing BigCommerce apps can provide you with a range of marketing capabilities that are sure to take your marketing efforts to the next level. 

    1) Yotpo Product Reviews

    Yotpo helps you generate and manage product and site reviews, as well as other forms of social proof like testimonials and user-generated content (UGC). We’ve written how ecommerce product reviews are one of the best ways to instill confidence in your site’s visitors and nudge potential customers to make a purchase. 

    Yotpo is the best tool for managing that process, thanks to the automation features for collecting and displaying reviews on your site.

    Unique features

    • Provides review request templates for collecting more customer reviews and showcases reviews on your website
    • Turn reviews into paid ads on Facebook
    • Collect and showcase customer photos and videos on product listings

    What users think of this app: 4.59/5 ⭐

    • Excellent customer support to resolve issues
    • Widgets for requesting reviews lead to a boost in product reviews
    • Provides plenty of features for managing loyalty and referral programs

    Are you a Gorgias user? See how Yotpo integrates with Gorgias.

    2) Klaviyo

    As one of the top marketing automation apps for ecommerce stores, Klaviyo offers a range of features designed to help you optimize your email marketing campaigns and SMS marketing flows. Klaviyo’s marketing platform also offers list segmentation tools and a user-friendly analytics dashboard that you can use to gauge the performance of your campaigns.

    We prefer Klaviyo over its competitor, Mailchimp, because of Klaviyo’s superior SMS offerings and better segmentation features.

    Unique features

    • Enables you to automatically launch campaigns based on triggers such as cart abandonment triggers, price drop triggers, and back-in-stock triggers
    • Provides a large library of pre-built templates and flows that make the campaign creation process far less time-consuming
    • Makes it easy to segment your SMS and email lists based on a wide variety of customer data

    What users think of this app: 4/5 ⭐

    • User-friendly and easy to set up
    • Provides a wide range of pre-built triggers to choose from
    • A capable email builder that makes it easy to create branded emails

    Are you a Gorgias user? See how Klaviyo integrates with Gorgias.

    3) Attentive SMS Marketing

    Attentive’s SMS and email marketing solution simplifies building and optimizing campaigns while remaining compliant with SMS and email marketing regulations. This platform is designed to help store owners grow their subscriber lists and run high-impact campaigns thanks to advanced segmentation.

    Unique features

    • Customizable integrations thanks to Attentive's Public APIs and developer resources
    • Rewards management functionality to reward and engage loyal customers
    • A/B testing capabilities
    • Audience manager to target customers with personalized messages
    • Business intelligence to help measure campaign performance

    What users think of this app: No reviews on BigCommerce

    While Attentive’s listing in BigCommerce doesn’t have any reviews, here’s what Shopify users think of the app:

    • Easy to install (within a week or two)
    • Helps makes SMS a top marketing and customer engagement channel
    • Better for retailers with significant existing traffic

    Are you a Gorgias user? See how Attentive integrates with Gorgias.

    4) Onollo Social Media Manager

    Onollo is an ecommerce social media management app that allows you to extract product data from your BigCommerce store in a single click, making it easy to create promotional posts without the need to extract product information manually. Onollo also allows store owners to schedule posts ahead of time for automatic publishing.

    Unique features

    • Extracts product data such as product descriptions, photos, URLs, and pricing with a single click
    • Provides an organized dashboard for tracking your social media posts
    • Provides a calendar for scheduling posts

    What users think of this app: 5/5 ⭐

    • Great customer support
    • Convenient and easy to use
    • Streamlines the process of managing multiple social media accounts

    Related reading: Our top tips for using social media to provide retention-worthy customer service.

    5) Omnisend Email Marketing & Newsletters

    Omnisend is an email marketing tool that lets you segment subscriber lists based on many data types. With many pre-built email and SMS workflows and templates, you can quickly create automated email marketing campaigns based on customer behavior triggers. Omnisend's BigCommerce app offers free and paid plans.

    Unique features

    • Detailed analytics and reporting that you can use to segment your subscriber lists
    • The ability to create a wide range of custom triggers for launching automated email campaigns
    • Excellent 24/7 customer support

    What users think of this app: 4.37/5 ⭐

    • Appreciate the app's balance of simplicity and powerful features
    • Some issues with campaigns getting marked as spam
    • Many reviews shout out Omnisend’s quick, helpful customer support

    Are you a Gorgias user? See how Omnisend integrates with Gorgias.

    Best sales-focused BigCommerce apps

    According to data from Oberlo, only 1.94% of ecommerce website visits convert into a purchase. If you would like to keep the conversion rates on your store as high as possible through retention and upselling, here are four excellent BigCommerce sales apps to leverage.

    6) LoyaltyLion

    With LoyaltyLion, BigCommerce store owners can improve customer retention by creating customizable loyalty programs. LoyaltyLion makes it easy to manage every aspect of your customer loyalty program, including automatically awarding points for predefined customer actions that can be spent online or in-store and a variety of marketing tools for promoting your loyalty program to both existing and new customers.

    Unique features

    • On-site notifications to alert customers when they have points available to spend
    • Allows you to embed loyalty components on product and post-purchase pages
    • Provides loyalty email templates and point statements for one-to-one email marketing campaigns

    What users think of this app: 5/5 ⭐

    • Highly customizable
    • Makes it easy to A/B test your loyalty program
    • Provides useful analytics and insights

    Are you a Gorgias user? See how LoyaltyLion integrates with Gorgias.

    7) Unlimited Upsell

    Unlimited Upsell helps you upsell customers and maximize average order value (AOV) by showing a pop-up box at checkout that suggests additional products that may be a good match for whatever’s in their cart. For example, if a customer clicks “Check Out” with a laptop in their cart, you can use Unlimited Upsell to automatically recommend they also get a laptop case (or any other accessory).

    Unique features

    • 100% mobile-friendly
    • Flexible display settings, including countdown timers
    • Easy-to-use editor to create a pop-up that’s coherent with your brand

    What users think of this app: 4.2/5 ⭐

    • Great, in-depth settings to configure exactly what shows up to which customers
    • The app sometimes fails to load properly
    • Works fast to start generating upsells

    Related reading: Our guide to effective upselling in ecommerce.

    8) Smile.io

    Like LoyaltyLion, Smile.io is another solution for creating and managing loyalty and referral programs. With Smile.io, you can assign rewards points for a wide range of customer actions, create VIP programs with tiered rewards, and promote customer referrals by awarding points, coupons, and discounts for referrals and social shares.

    Unique features

    • Enables you to automatically assign reward points or search by customer name to adjust points manually
    • Provides on-site pop-ups to remind customers when they have points available to spend
    • Automatically rewards points for customer actions and events such as repeat purchases, social shares, customer birthdays, and many more

    What users think of this app: 4.7/5 ⭐

    • User-friendly interface
    • Allows you to customize the design and features of your rewards program
    • Easy for customers to use as well

    Are you a Gorgias user? See how Smile.io integrates with Gorgias.

    Best customer service BigCommerce apps

    According to data from Microsoft, 90% of Americans consider customer service an important factor when deciding which companies to do business with. With these customer service BigCommerce apps, you can ensure that you are providing an optimized customer experience on your BigCommerce store while at the same time reducing the workload of your customer support team.

    9) Gorgias

    Gorgias is a powerful customer support solution (also called a helpdesk) that provides everything you need to begin offering your customers a better experience with your store, including live chat widgets, self-service options, and a convenient help-desk for accessing customer support resources and creating support tickets. 

    Since Gorgias was purpose-built for ecommerce businesses, we're proud of how deeply it integrates with BigCommerce. You can see customer information pulled directly from BigCommerce, including past orders. You can also control order management from within Gorgias, processing refunds, cancellations, and much more without leaving Gorgias.

    Gorgias also integrates with most of the tools on this list for a more unified customer experience hub. Check out our app store to see if your favorite apps integrate.

    In addition to improving the quality of your customer support, Gorgias is also designed to reduce the burden on your customer support staff by providing customer self-service solutions, automating ticket prioritization, and more. 

    To see for yourself how Gorgias can optimize your customer support process, be sure to sign up for Gorgias today (including a 7-day free trial).

    Unique features

    • Integrates directly with BigCommerce to display customer information next to every conversation
    • Allows you to insert BigCommerce-specific variables in Macros (templated responses) for faster, personalized responses
    • Fast-loading live chat widgets that won't slow down your website
    • Allows customer support agents to manage customer support tickets from a single, user-friendly dashboard
    • Provides a wide range of Rules for automating a variety of customer support tasks
    • Empowers your customers to help themselves with a help center and self-service automation flows

    What users think of this app: 5/5 ⭐

    • Very helpful for prioritizing customer inquiries to ensure that the most important inquiries receive the fastest possible response
    • Excellent customer support
    • Allows store owners to reduce the size of their customer support team while still providing swift and high-quality customer support

    Related reading: Our list of the best customer service platforms for ecommerce.

    10) Tidio Live Chat & Chatbots

    Tidio offers live chat and chatbot capabilities for your BigCommerce store, with AI-powered chatbots that allow you to automate a portion of your customer support conversations and handle incoming chat requests around the clock. 

    Unique features

    • Receive live visitor notifications when someone visits your site
    • The ability to program chatbots to showcase promotions and discounts to improve your conversion rate and boost sales

    What users think of this app: 3.3/5 ⭐

    • Appreciate the live chat app’s free pricing option
    • Find the chat a bit buggy: “90% of the time it will not let you log in”
    • Difficult to uninstall without developer support

    Related reading: Our list of the best live chat apps for BigCommerce.

    11) Answerbase

    One of the best ways to reduce your customer support ticket volume is to provide customers with plenty of self-service resources. With Answerbase, store owners can easily create knowledge bases, FAQ pages, and community Q&A forums, providing customers with the ability to access answers to common questions without having to contact the store's customer support team. 

    Unique features

    • Allows you to create both public and private knowledge bases and community forums
    • Indexes Q&A content on search engines to boost your website's SEO
    • Provides insights and analytics for identifying high-value content/the questions that customers ask most frequently

    What users think of this app: 5/5 ⭐

    • Great for passively improving SEO
    • Reduces customer support ticket volume
    • Limited feature set compared to a more robust helpdesk solution

    Related reading: Our guide to improving customer experience with customer self-service.

    12) Tawk.to

    Tawk.to is an app that allows BigCommerce store owners to integrate live chat windows into their online store. In addition to live chat tools, Tawk.to also provides an easy-to-use knowledge base builder as well as a ticketing system for creating, prioritizing, and assigning customer support tickets.

    Unique features

    • Provides the option to hire live chat support agents at a rate of $1/hour
    • Enables you to tag and assign conversations to members of your support team
    • Allows you to monitor the activity of customers on your website in real-time

    What users think of this app: No reviews on BigCommerce

    • Pre-purchase chat boosts conversions
    • Easily integrates with numerous ecommerce platforms, but doesn’t offer the functionality of those platforms natively
    • Most of the app's best features are available in the free version

    Related reading: Our comprehensive guide to live chat support, including a discussion of how smaller teams can manage live chat.

    Best site optimization BigCommerce apps

    According to data from Intergrowth, 70% of online marketers say that good SEO is more effective at generating sales than PPC ads. With site optimization BigCommerce apps, you can ensure that your website ranks as highly as possible for relevant searches without the need to hire an SEO service.

    13) SEOKart

    SEOKart is a company that provides several exceptional SEO services, including image optimizer, bulk website optimization, rank trackers, and more. If you are looking for an all-in-one solution to improve your website's ranking, working with SEOKart is a great option to consider.

    Unique features

    • Provides a free site evaluation with no obligation to sign up for the service once the evaluation is complete
    • Optimizes metadata like meta descriptions, alternative text, meta titles, and more
    • Multilingual and culturally-specific keyword research and content development for boosting international SEO

    What users think of this app: 4.9/5 ⭐

    • Great for improving local SEO
    • Enables store owners to execute a comprehensive SEO strategy with minimal effort and know-how
    • Excellent customer support

    Related reading: Our guide to ecommerce search engine optimization (SEO).

    14) Shogun Page Builder

    Shogun Page Builder is an app that simplifies the process of customizing your BigCommerce storefront while at the same time ensuring that all of your store's pages are fast-loading for optimum SEO. As a drag-and-drop page builder, Shogun Page Builder provides a broad range of customization options that do not require any coding knowledge to implement.

    Unique features

    • Speeds up the pages on your BigCommerce store for improved SEO
    • Makes it easy to A/B test the pages that you create
    • Provides 30+ quick-start templates for creating landing pages, product pages, and more

    What users think of this app: 4.81/5 ⭐

    • Great for building landing pages
    • Plenty of customization options
    • Incredibly easy to use

    {{lead-magnet-2}}

    15) FavSEO

    FavSEO is a solution that offers everything you need to boost your store's SEO, including an SEO audit to identify existing SEO issues, keyword research to help you populate your site's content with targeted keywords, a link-building strategy that is executed on your behalf, and tools for tracking your website's ranking over time. Starting at $799/month, FavSEO certainly isn't a cheap solution, but it is one of the best apps/services available for maximizing a website's SEO with minimal effort.

    Unique features

    • All audits and services are performed manually by an expert team of SEO professionals
    • Focuses on creating high-authority backlinks rather than simply increasing your backlink count by any means possible
    • 24/7 chat and email support

    What users think of this app: 4.78/5 ⭐

    • Boosts a website's SEO without any effort or knowledge required from the app's users
    • Responsive and helpful customer support
    • Optimizes your social media profiles in addition to your website

    Related reading: Our list of top ecommerce growth tactics to find (and keep) new customers.

    16) Swerve Redirects

    Swerve Redirects is a simple solution for finding broken pages on your website (404 errors) and adding 301 redirects so customers get routed to a functional page. Setting up these redirects is possible, but the tool simplifies the process so even merchants without technical savvy or a dedicated website manager can avoid sending shoppers to dead pages.

    Unique features

    • Maximizes search engine optimization (SEO) by finding and redirecting broken links
    • Super-simple 301 redirect management
    • 7-day free trial

    What users think about this app: 5/5 ⭐

    • Works well and simplifies finding 404 errors
    • Much better than manually looking for broken links, which was the old solution
    • “A must have app!”

    Best marketplace and inventory management apps

    As your store grows and you add new products, you’ll need to pay extra attention to your stock levels, product categories, and presence on marketplaces like Amazon, Walmart, and Etsy. The following apps help you manage your inventory and provide a great experience for shoppers by avoiding listing products you don’t have available.

    17) Stock Sync

    Stock Sync is an inventory management app that helps you monitor and update your product stock without much tedious, manual work. The app is especially useful if you operate with limited stock, sell a wide variety of items, or have a small team that can’t spend hours manually updating product pricing and availability. 

    Unique features

    • Include or exclude products from your feed depending on availability to avoid overselling
    • Manage stock coming from multiple suppliers (or drop shippers)
    • Sync inventory to multiple vendor websites

    What users think of this app: 4.4/5 ⭐

    • Good price compared to similar products
    • The customer service team is a bit slow
    • Saves a lot of time per week, especially if you have products in a CSV file already

    18) Marketplace Connector by CedCommerce

    Marketplace Connector helps you integrate your BigCommerce store with over 11 marketplaces at once, including:

    • Walmart
    • Etsy
    • Google Shopping
    • Wish

    It’s a great tool for brands hoping to break into multi-channel selling because you can get your products on multiple websites without constantly having to switch between different apps and manually merge inventory data.

    Unique features

    • Profile-based bulk upload so you can update all products at once
    • Real-time synchronization of price and inventory on all platforms
    • Automated inventory updates avoid overselling products

    What users think of this app: 4.82/5 ⭐

    • Easy to integrate with your BigCommerce store
    • Great, prompt customer service
    • Some complaints about the Etsy integration

    Related: Our guide to social media commerce, or selling on your brand’s social accounts.

    19) Sellbrite

    Sellbrite is a multi-channel listing platform that makes it easy to sync products across multiple marketplaces. If you sell products on Amazon, eBay, Etsy, or other platforms in addition to your BigCommerce store, utilizing Sellbrite will enable you to update listings across platforms with a single click and manage all of your orders from a single dashboard.

    Unique features

    • Automatically syncs products even if the SKUs vary between channels
    • Allows you to print shipping labels or route orders to a fulfillment service
    • Allows you to upload bulk listings of up to 100 listings at a time per channel

    What users think of this app: 4/5 ⭐

    • Makes listing products to multiple sales channels far less time-consuming
    • Easy to set up and use
    • Excellent customer support

    Related reading: Our comprehensive guide to ecommerce inventory management.

    Best payment and recurring payment apps for BigCommerce stores

    Making it easy for customers to pay for their purchases is essential if you want to create a path of least resistance between your store visitors and a completed sale. With these BigCommerce payment apps, you can provide your customers with a variety of convenient and secure payment options.

    20) Recharge

    Recharge is an app that allows BigCommerce store owners to sell subscription-based products or services. In addition to providing customers with subscription payment options at checkout, Recharge also makes it easy for customers to manage their subscriptions either through SMS or through a pre-built customer portal.

    Unique features

    • Reduces churn by giving customers the option to pause or alter their subscription rather than canceling it
    • Integrates with all popular payment processing solutions to allow subscription-based payments
    • Provides actionable insights that you can use to optimize your subscription offerings

    What users think of this app: 3.83/5 ⭐

    • Plenty of customization options
    • Makes it easy for customers to edit their subscriptions
    • Strong integrations and easy setup

    Are you a Gorgias user? See how Recharge integrates with Gorgias.

    21) Bolt One-Click Checkout

    Bolt Checkout is an app that creates a friction-free checkout process by allowing customers to check out with a single click. Once a customer signs up to the Bolt Checkout network, their information is saved and auto-filled each time they purchase a product even if it is their first time visiting the store, creating a hassle-free checkout process that helps store owners reduce their abandoned cart rates.

    Unique features

    • Provides plenty of metrics and insights into your customers' buying behaviors
    • Integrates with a wide range of payment processing solutions, including credit cards and PayPal
    • Promises 50% higher conversion rates by streamlining the checkout process

    What users think of this app: No reviews on BigCommerce

    While Bolt doesn’t currently have reviews on BigCommerce, users on Shopify often mention the following in reviews:

    • Great data visualization features
    • Protects against fraudulent orders and offers a 100% fraud chargeback guarantee
    • Responsive and helpful tech support team

    Related reading: Our guide to reducing cart abandonment (with a better checkout experience).

    Best shipping and fulfillment BigCommerce apps

    Shipping and fulfillment are often some of the biggest hassles associated with running an online store. If you would like to make your shipping and fulfillment process as streamlined as possible for you and your customers alike, these three shipping and fulfillment BigCommerce apps are certainly worth checking out. For expanded lists, check out our lists of the best shipping software for ecommerce and the best returns management software.

    22) ShipBob

    ShipBob is an inventory management solution that is a lot like Amazon FBA for BigCommerce store owners. With ShipBob, you can ship your products in bulk to ShipBob fulfillment centers across the country. Once you've shipped your products to ShipBob's warehouses, ShipBob then takes over all inventory management and order fulfillment responsibilities, freeing you up to focus on growing your business.

    Unique features

    • Gives you the option to choose which carrier you would like to use
    • Order returns are processed on your behalf
    • Reduces the time it takes to get products to customers by shipping products from the fulfillment center that is nearest to the customer who placed the order

    What users think of this app: No reviews on BigCommerce

    ShipBob doesn’t have any reviews on BigCommerce but Shopify reviewers often mention:

    • The platform is easy to navigate
    • Makes it easy to monitor orders and returns
    • Plenty of flexibility regarding order fulfillment options

    Are you a Gorgias user? See how ShipBob integrates with Gorgias.

    23) ShipStation

    ShipStation is an app that is designed to streamline and automate your order fulfillment process. With ShipStation, BigCommerce store owners can import orders from multiple stores and channels, utilize bulk updates and automation processes to quickly process and fulfill orders, compare rates across carriers (like USPS, UPS, and FedEx) and print shipping labels, then finally send customers automated shipping updates.

    Unique features

    • Connect with multiple platforms/marketplaces at no additional charge
    • Make it easy to set up shipping rules that will automate your order fulfillment process
    • Provides an inventory management dashboard for viewing your stock levels, allocating stock, or setting inventory alerts

    What users think of this app: 4.08/5 ⭐

    • Easy to set up and use
    • Automations make setting up shipping rules more efficient than manual creation
    • Makes it easy to combine multiple orders into a single shipment

    Related reading: Our list of ecommerce shipping and fulfillment best practices.

    24) AfterShip 

    AfterShip is an app that makes it easy for you to keep customers updated about the status of their orders. In addition to enabling you to send out automated shipment notifications, AfterShip also allows you to create a branded order tracking page that your customers can access at any time.

    Unique features

    • Integrates with 953 different carriers as well as a wide range of other apps and platforms
    • Provides detailed analytics that you can use to optimize your store's post-purchase experience
    • Allows you to track orders across multiple sales channels and carriers from a single dashboard

    What users think of this app: 4.59/5 ⭐

    • Plenty of customization options
    • Provides real-time tracking updates to customers and store owners alike
    • Simple setup with a user-friendly interface

    Are you a Gorgias user? See how AfterShip integrates with Gorgias.

    Best automation and productivity BigCommerce apps

    All of the above — marketing, sales, site optimization, inventory management, and shipping — will be impossible if you spend half the day on tedious tasks. These last apps help you streamline and automate your workflows so you spend less time on repetitive tasks and more time growing your business.

    25) Zapier

    Zapier is an online automation platform that connects apps and services that don’t have native integrations. If you have two apps that can’t already share data or trigger actions from one to the next, Zapier is a great way to play developer and create automation between them.

    Unique features

    • Multi-step Zaps to trigger many actions based on a single event
    • Use Filters to set parameters around when Zaps fire
    • Search Zapier’s Zap library to borrow Zaps that other users already made

    What users think of this app: No reviews on BigCommerce

    While Zapier’s BigCommerce listing doesn’t have any reviews at the moment, reviews on G2 often mention:

    • Zapier can connect 50,000+ application
    • Pricing is a bit high, especially for small business owners
    • Zapier University helps users understand how to make new or complex Zaps

    Related reading: Our detailed guide to customer service automation.

    26) Alloy Automation

    Alloy Automation is a no-code solution. It’s similar to Zapier but custom-built for ecommerce brands using ecommerce platforms like BigCommerce. Alloy has an extensive library of pre-built automations and workflows for marketing, customer service, shipping, fulfillment, tagging, and other manual tasks that slow your team down. 

    Unique features

    • Automate email and SMS messages for marketing, order status, and more
    • Track inventory with automation to avoid ever running out of stock
    • Tag and segment customers automatically based on specific parameters for better marketing and customer experience

    What users think of this app: No reviews on BigCommerce

    While Alloy’s BigCommerce listing doesn’t have any reviews at the moment, customers from Shopify often mention:

    • Superior, attentive customer service
    • Some automations you can’t find elsewhere
    • The platform is constantly improving and adding new features

    Are you a Gorgias user? See how Alloy integrates with Gorgias.

    Enhance your BigCommerce store’s customer experience with Gorgias

    Choosing the right BigCommerce apps can provide you with a lot of powerful capabilities designed to make life easier for you and your team and turn your BigCommerce store into a sales-generating machine.

    At Gorgias, we are proud to offer BigCommerce cutting-edge tools our clients need to provide exceptional customer support that drives revenue. We also offer self-service and customer experience automation features that save your support team’s time for the highest-value conversations.

    Check out our BigCommerce integration to learn how top brands like Barbara Sturm, Good Ranchers, and First Aid Beauty combine Gorgias and BigCommerce to offer a world-class, loyalty-worthy customer experience.

    Hiring For Customer Service

    Hiring for Customer Service: A 6-Step Framework to Recruit Top Agents

    By Jon Tucker
    24 min read.
    0 min read . By Jon Tucker

    When you say the word “growth,” most brand leaders think of customer acquisition, paid ads, or the newest marketing trend — probably something about TikTok influencers. And while acquiring customers is important, we know that truly sustainable growth comes from loyal customers, organic referrals, reviews, and repeat buyers — all of which stem from your customer experience. And at the core of that customer experience is your customer service team.

    Your customer service agents spend more time interacting with customers than any other department, including marketing and sales. They manage VIP customers, repair at-risk relationships, and have the opportunity to chat with customers at make-or-break moments (like right before a sale). In other words, your brand’s growth hinges on the quality of your customer service team.

    We can’t offer any algorithms or magical software to find and hire talented agents. Hiring takes time, experience, and a strategic approach. That last part — a strategic approach to hiring — is what I’m here to provide. 

    At HelpFlow.com, we run 24/7 live chat and customer service teams for over 100 brands. We’ve hired hundreds of customer service agents successfully and built scalable, robust customer service operations that provide great customer experiences and drive growth for brands we work with. 

    In this post, I’ll walk through the framework we use step-by-step. My goal is to help you or your hiring managers simplify your customer service hiring process, find high-impact customer service professionals, and transform your brand’s customer service from a frustrating cost center to a seamless and scalable revenue driver.

    But first, what’s really at stake here? 

    {{lead-magnet-1}}

    Bad customer service will kill your brand

    If you are like most ecommerce brands, you hire customer service reps when your team needs additional support to keep up with tickets. This purely reactive approach means your support team will always be buried in tickets or onboarding new team members. The constant scramble means they’ll never have the bandwidth to think strategically, improve processes, or work on higher-impact initiatives to help the business.

    Here’s the snowball effect we often see. First, your agents become overworked with an ever-growing number of tickets to process each day. This endless sprint to keep up contributes to extremely high turnover in the customer service industry. According to Harvard Business Review, CS reps typically last a job for about a year. 

    The snowball effect of bad customer service

    As agents start to burn out and fall behind, customer service experience quality suffers. Customers feel frustrated with slow response times and often disappointed with incomplete or ineffective solutions from junior agents hired just a few months before. A downtrend in customer satisfaction is common with brands as they start to scale. 

    Eventually, a poorly run customer service operation starts to have a direct effect on sales. First-time shoppers give low NPS scores and never develop brand loyalty. Customer complaints start to appear, scaring off potential customers, and referrals dry up. 

    As the quality of service goes down, the cost of customer service goes up because you have to spend more time hiring and training customer service representatives that won’t be productive for weeks, if not months. Replacing an employee typically costs 1.5-2x their annual salary when you factor in all the costs, according to Gallup

    The business sees these poor results and high costs, and refuses to invest in the department, which leaves them even more under-resourced. The cycle continues.

    Great hiring processes can accelerate growth

    A great customer service team (that’s not over-worked and under-resourced) will stop this vicious cycle. But beyond answering customer inquiries and managing ticket load, they’ll systematically improve your brand’s customer experience and, by extension, growth engine.

    An excellent customer service team will create replace the vicious cycle with a positive one by:

    • Improving your shopping experience by collecting customer feedback, building self-service resources, and studying data for high-impact opportunities
    • Intercepting new visitors with proactive support to raise the conversion rate
    • Helping customers who have unsatisfactory experiences, winning some of them back
    • Encouraging happy customers to purchase more, leave reviews, refer new customers, and remain loyal to your brand
    Customer service accelerates growth with repeat purchases, custoemr reviews and referrals, on-site conversions, and more.

    Ready to learn how to fill your customer service positions with agents who will make an impact? Let’s get into it. Here’s our 6-step framework to hire the best customer service teams around.

    1) Assess your customer service hiring needs

    The first step to hiring great customer service reps is to shift from a reactive hiring process to a proactive one. When you hire reactively, you tend to rush hiring and training to get a body in a seat processing tickets as quickly as possible. Of course, this leads to low-quality interactions and dings to brand perception. By proactively forecasting customer service needs, you’ll have time to run a more thorough hiring process to find and hire the ideal candidate.

    Here is a quick overview of how to forecast customer service volume:

    1. Identify the percentage of orders that typically turn into support tickets. For example, if you historically get about 20 tickets for every 100 orders then you can forecast that 20% of your future orders will turn into tickets. 
    2. Use the traction to ticket ratio to forecast how many tickets you expect to receive in the future, based on your sales forecast for the upcoming quarter or another time period. 
    3. Use the agent ticket capacity per day, accounting for PTO and sick leave, to determine how many agents you need to process that upcoming ticket volume. Account for ramp-up time for new team members.
    Forecast hiring needs
    Source: Gorgias

    The three tips above are just a snapshot of a true forecasting process. Check out our framework for customer service forecasting for more detailed guidance.

    Forecasting will help you predict your future needs and shift to a more proactive approach. Remember to give yourself enough time to conduct a thorough hiring process and onboarding program. If you anticipate needing two new agents in Q4, start collecting applications by early Q3.
    Forecasting is just one strategy to understand when you should hire. Here are a few additional signals that could mean your team is understaffed: 

    1. Declining metrics: Each week, you should check on important metrics that measure your customer service management such as first response time, handle time, and customer satisfaction. If you start to see these metrics decline, it could mean your team can’t keep up with ticket volume and needs additional support.
    2. Team morale: As part of your customer service team meeting cadence, you should have regular team huddles, manager-led 1:1s, and anonymous climate surveys.  Managers should work to foster trust and open dialogue so agents can share their stress. Don’t be afraid to ask them directly about their workload. If agents start to report challenges, especially if the concern comes up across multiple agents, you may need to staff up. 

    You may find that you need additional support, but you may not need to hire people full-time to solve the problem. You may be able to support your core team with other solutions such as:

    1. Efficiency improvements: If you’re like most brands, you’ve frankensteined together a customer service process, piece by piece. Consider doing a workflow audit to identify opportunities to improve the team’s workflow with process improvements, email templates, and customer self-service options. 
    2. Changes to coverage schedules: You may have the right amount of agents, but simply have a schedule that leads to ticket buildup. For example, if everyone is staffed M-F, response and resolution times will suffer over the weekend. Look into your hour-to-hour ticket volume, especially on conversational channels like live chat and phone, and schedule agents whenever you have peaks in incoming tickets.
    3. High-quality outsourced help: Hiring full-time employees is cumbersome and expensive, and sometimes more than you need. By working with a high-quality outsourced team, you can bridge the gap to have additional agents on a custom schedule or just for a season of high volume. 
    4. Overtime opportunities: If your agents are currently salaried, you could change them to an hourly model so they can earn overtime during busy weeks. Don’t make this decision without consulting the agents. They might be enthusiastic, but they might also dislike that your solution for being understaffed involves working more hours.

    {{lead-magnet-2}}

    That said, you may conclude that you need to hire new agents. Here’s how to do it well. 

    2) Create a target hire persona for the role

    Before you start your search, I recommend taking some time to understand your hiring needs and describe your ideal candidate.

    First, take stock of:

    • Everything the customer support team does today
    • Everything the team wants to do but doesn’t have the bandwidth for
    • Everything the team currently does that could be phased out with process improvement or recalibration of ownership

    Once that’s done, you’ll be better prepared to understand:

    • What existing roles need to be filled or staffed up
    • What new roles need to be developed
    • What type of skills would match each of those needs — this is where your target persona comes into play
    Take stock of the first list of bullets to understand the second

    A target persona is a tool we developed to build clarity around your jobs to be done, the skills needed to accomplish those jobs, the type of person who would succeed in this role, and how you’ll measure that person’s success.

    The value is similar to an ideal customer profile (ICP) for sales and marketing. By defining the core qualities you need ahead of time, you can create a sharper job description, distribute the job posting in more targeted channels, and decrease the time it takes to find the right person.

    What to include in a target hire persona

    Your target hire persona should include mission, outcomes, competencies, and culture fit

    Below are the key sections to include in a target hire persona: 

    Mission:

    • What is the purpose of this position in your organization?
    • Why does it exist?
    • What will the role focus on?
    • Why are you hiring this person now?

    Outcomes:

    • How will you measure this person’s success?
    • How will you keep this person accountable to the mission described above?
    • Use specific, clear, and quantifiable outcomes to answer both questions above.

    Competencies:

    • What experiences and qualifications should this person have?
    • What attributes and customer service skills will help this person succeed? (For example, is it more important to be organized or empathetic for your specific needs?

    Culture fit: 

    • Separate from the role, what are the specific attributes that make someone a culture fit for your team? 
    • These will vary depending on the company, but it’s very important to define these so that you can screen otherwise qualified applicants if they aren’t a culture fit.

    Customer service agent target hire persona example

    We put together a full customer service agent target hire persona example that you can access and modify for your own needs. Consider revising the mission and outcomes slightly to match your needs, and adjust the target experience for your specific company.

    Have questions? Feel free to reach out

    3) Create a job posting that sells (and market it)

    Once you have a target hire persona completed, it’s time to start marketing- yes, I said marketing, just like how you grow your business. 

    Typically, when someone is hiring they simply put together a job description, post it on a few job boards, and work with the applicants that come in. This is especially true for customer service hires, which are unfortunately seen as low-value.

    This approach leads to a small number of low-quality applicants. The kinds of A-players you’re looking for aren’t scouring job boards and responding to basic job postings — they’re likely crushing it at their current role.

    Here’s how to create and distribute a job posting that reaches the right people and convinces them to apply:

    Sell the role in the job posting

    Remember, hiring is a two-way street. You have to impress the candidate just as much as they have to impress you. Don’t just publish a list of duties and requirements on a job posting website with an application link. Instead, sell the role (and the company) by using parts of the target hire persona above:

    Checklist for an effective customer service job posting, listed below

    Clearly explain the company’s current position, mission, and goals. Share a bit of the journey you’ve been on so far and the successes you’ve had. The right candidate will be excited about your particular growth stage and the opportunity to help you with the next leg of the journey.

    Also, dedicate some space to selling your team and unique company culture. This doesn’t need to be all rainbows and unicorns: great candidates know building a great company takes hard work. But they should be able to get an understanding of your company’s unique values, priorities, and ways of working. Describe and share examples about how your teams collaborate, the level of autonomy, accountability, coaching, and support they can expect, and the general vibe of a day-in-the-life of your team. 

    Finally, paint a very clear picture of what success looks like by sharing the outcomes and target metrics. This will ensure the applicants understand what you want to accomplish before your first conversation. Clear success metrics will also attract goal-driven people with an “I can do that” attitude. 

    This may seem like a lot of work, but you’ll save time by getting higher-quality candidates quickly, and in the long run, having to rehire due to rushing into a bad hire.

    How to drive a lot of quality applicants

    An enticing job description gets you halfway to an inbox full of strong applications. Now, you have to get that job description seen by a lot of high-quality candidates.

    Remember, great team members don’t typically spend their days scouring job boards to find a new job. You need to catch their attention in other ways to spark their interest in jumping ship and joining your brand.

    Your job posting should be shared with your network, team, job boards, customers, and more

    Here are multiple ways to drive a lot of great applicants for your role:

    Publish on multiple job boards. For example, if you are working with a remote team, consider publishing on WeWorkRemotely or Remote.co. If you are hiring locally, leverage a few different job boards such as Indeed.com or ZipRecruiter.com to get the best coverage. LinkedIn is also a good option for both local and remote hires. If possible, make the extra investment to make a premium or boosted posting. And, especially if you are in a challenging niche, consider specialized job boards and communities. The Support Driven Slack community, for example, has a job board for ecommerce community service positions. 

    Another best practice is to share the role with your network. Send a few messages to peers who may know someone fit for the role and publish the posting on your social media. Also, encourage your team to do the same — they’ll be working with this new hire, after all. Again, don’t just copy/paste the link. Sell the role to attract the best candidates. 

    Finally, involve your customers in the recruitment process. One of your customers may want the job or know someone else who could be a good fit. Customers who love and use your products have a great head start: they’re familiar with your brand, your shopping experience, and the benefits of your products. And since customer service skills can be transferred from many other types of roles, your customer base may have more qualified candidates than you expect.

    4) Screen applicants async to avoid wasting time

    A great job description effectively shared means you’ll have a steady stream of applicants. You might feel overwhelmed with the workload of screening applicants to find the right hire. And rightfully so: Applicant screening can turn into a lot of work if you do it with typical in-depth reviews of each applicant and blocking out time for interviews. 

    Interviews are important, and we’ll explain how to hold a customer service interview below (including interview questions to use). But first, here’s how to effectively screen the large number of applicants you’ll receive to find the best possible hires. 

    Quiz them on the job posting

    Screening starts by gauging how well applicants read through the details of the job posting. If they’re not willing to spend the time reading and following the instructions on the job posting, odds are they won’t be detail-oriented in the role. 

    By asking a simple question or making a request deep within the content of the job posting, you can quickly screen whether applicants read it. For example, you can ask applicants to start their cover letter with, “ready to rock!’“ This way, you can skip over anyone that didn’t catch and follow the instruction. 

    Optional: Assign a micro take-home assignment

    At HelpFlow.com, we skip take-home assignments because our hiring process is so thorough. However, since customer support agents spend most of their days writing, you may choose to request a short writing sample at this stage.

    If you opt to include this step, consider keeping the writing sample very short — something applicants can complete in 10-15 minutes. However, be aware that more up-front work from your candidates means:

    • You’ll spend more time reviewing applications
    • You may lose some qualified job seekers due to a too-strenuous application process — but they likely wouldn’t be the most committed hire

    Send them a common customer question or one of your most common customer problems. Give them resources like a knowledge base article and your policies so they have all the necessary information. At this stage, you’re looking for their ability to communicate clearly and empathetically. 

    Request a brief video questionnaire

    Rather than jumping straight to an interview, send a brief questionnaire to the applicant so they can tell you more about their experience in a short video message. There are tools such as Spark Hire that make this easy. But a simple list of questions and instructions to send a response using a screencast tool like Loom is just as easy. 

    For the questionnaire, you should ask open-ended questions to get a sense of how their experience and capabilities fit your needs. You might also choose to include a fun, get-to-know-you question to get a better sense of their personality. 

    Asking why they think they are the best fit for the role is a good starting point, as it gives them the ability to provide more context than they typically would in a text response. Also, this gives you the ability to compare their experience to the target hire persona. The way someone answers this question typically makes clear if they’re a fit at a high level.

    Consider asking questions like:

    • Why do you think you’re the best fit for this role?
    • What are you looking for in your next role?
    • How are you looking to grow and learn?
    • What’s a mistake you made and learned from?
    • How would your friends and family describe you? 
    • If you could have any superpower, what would it be?

    In their video response, you’ll see their communication skills, confidence, and personality — without having to schedule dozens or hundreds of 30-minute meetings.

    5) Conduct two interviews to assess fit and experience

    Interviews can be time-consuming. They take time to schedule and conduct, especially if you put too many people through the entire interview process. Multiple rounds of screening ensure you only invest time in the most promising candidates.

    Ideally, your job posting results in hundreds of applicants. Your first screening (described above) gets you down to about a dozen, max. The first interview we’re about to describe gets you down to the single digits — about four or five. Then, you’ll only have to deeply interview those four or five candidates to find your new hire(s).

    1) A quick interview to assess skills and mindset

    Your customer service interview screening should be 10-15 minutes

    This first interview is a brief (20- or 30-minute) phone call to learn more about each applicant's skill set, goals, and mindset. Skills aren’t the only prerequisite for success: True rock stars have a growth mindset and will look at this opportunity as the next step in a passionate career.

    At the beginning of this interview, we like to build up the candidate’s confidence by saying something like, “We had ### applicants and you’ve made it this far, so you’re definitely a strong person for this role. We’re confident you’ll be successful regardless of whether you work for us or get scooped up by someone else.”

    Then, you’re ready to start asking questions.

    Questions to understand their goals and mindset

    • What does success look like for you a year from now?
    • What do you want to accomplish in this role?
    • What specific achievements will make you feel the most successful?

    These questions should feel familiar, and that’s because they should roughly align with the mission and outcomes you chose in the target hire persona. Of course, candidates didn’t read that document so it’s unfair to expect perfect alignment. But they will help you understand which applicants are the best fit for your needs.

    For example,  if your target hire persona was a systems thinker who can help with problem-solving and organization across your team, you might look for answers about strong processes and great teamwork. Alternatively, if you’re looking for a brilliant customer-facing agent, you might seek answers related to empathy and customer advocacy. 

    Also, a lack of clear, focused goals at this stage is a red flag. If someone answers vaguely or responds with a variation of “I just want a good customer service job and your company seems great,” then they’re not going to be a rock star on your team.

    Questions to understand skillset

    Skills are a difficult thing to discuss. If the candidate prepared well, they’ll likely know what skills you need for the role based on the job posting and find ways to weave those skills into their answers. They may also have completed courses or customer service certifications that indicate what they can do, but it's important to go beyond that and get a sense of real-world applications of these skills.We like to ask a series of questions that force candidates to reflect on their skills in a slightly different way. Here’s how we get there:

    • We’re going to talk to a few people you’ve worked with at the end of the application process, should you make it that far. What’s a role you succeeded in, and who was your boss in that role? If we talk to them later in the interview process, how do you think they’ll describe you? What parts of the job would they say you excelled at?

    Again, you’re looking for clear answers and alignment with your target hire persona. 

    Second, gauge which parts of the job they’re least skilled and excited about. Here’s how we might get at this answer:

    • Now I want to understand the opposite. What are some things that boss would say you’re not great at? Or maybe, what are some things you’re capable of doing but don’t love?

    To make this question a bit less intimidating, we usually share an example. We’ve often used the example, “I’m able to whip up some graphic designs for our website and they look pretty good. But graphic design is something I just hate doing. It’s a tedious process and I would rather have a marketing person handle that if at all possible, so I can focus on my strengths.” 

    This question allows the candidate to essentially complain about select aspects of the role. You’re not looking to trick someone into disqualifying themselves from the running. However, you are trying to avoid a situation in which you hire someone to spend all week doing something they’d rather avoid.

    Once they answer, consider asking follow-up questions to get more examples and context.

    Questions to understand teamwork and self-awareness

    • How would past supervisors rate you on a scale of 1-10?
    • How would your peers rate you on a scale of 1-10?

    These questions are quick and help you understand whether their previous answers were honest and self-aware. 

    Ask them for the name of two previous bosses and two previous colleagues. Explain that you won’t reach out to those people yet, but might if you extend an offer. 

    Once they give you names, ask how each person would rate them on a scale of 1-10 — insist on a single number for each. You’re looking for lots of 8s and 9s. If you see a trend of 7 or lower, that could indicate this person has — and may have oversold themselves when discussing their skillset earlier in the interview. Also, 10s across the board show a lack of self-awareness and growth mindset. 

    By the end of this interview, you’ll have a solid understanding of whether each candidate’s skills and mindset fit your needs. Move the best candidates onto the final interview, thank the rest for their time, and invite them to re-apply for future roles — after all, each role should have a specific target hire persona, and they might just fit your next opening a bit better. To thank them for their time, you can also refer them to anyone else in your network that’s hiring.  

    2) A deep-dive interview to know you have a great hire

    Your longer interview should be 2 hours.

    Each candidate that makes it to this final interview should be a pretty great fit for the role. Some companies might go straight to a job offer at this stage, but the risk of bringing on the wrong new hire still exists.

    The deep-dive interview will last two hours. Two hours might seem like a big investment. But two hours is nothing compared to investing two or three months into a candidate before realizing you need to start the hiring process over because they’re not a great fit.

    A deep-dive interview gives you a crystal-clear understanding of each candidate’s entire career history, their ability to communicate clearly and effectively in a long-format meeting, and their personality. After this conversation, you’ll have zero doubts about which candidate is your rock star.

    Here’s how the deep-dive interview works.

    Set up a two-hour conversational interview with a small panel

    When you invite the candidate to this meeting, be clear about:

    • The goal of the meeting
    • The format of the meeting
    • The list of attendees

    If you give the candidate some context behind such a long meeting, they can approach the interview with more preparation and less anxious energy. 

    As far as the list of attendees, you can make a decision based on your team’s makeup and availability. If possible, we recommend inviting the hiring manager, a senior manager, and a peer to introduce the interviewee to the team they’ll work with (and vice versa). However, you can also run the interview solo if that works better for your team. 

    A remote panel interview

    Once you assemble the panel and schedule the interview, the long-form interview itself is quite straightforward and formulaic. Here’s what it looks like:

    Discuss every full-time position the candidate has had, in chronological order

    Start from the beginning of the candidate’s resume and discuss each and every full-time role in their job history. For early parts of their career (or jobs that are not related to your open role) you can move quickly through these questions. But it is important to discuss each role.

    By digging into every single part of the candidate’s career with a standard set of questions, you will get a clear overview of how they’ve performed and what makes them tick. 

    Ask the same set of questions for each position

    What makes this interview process effective and simple is that you ask the same questions for each role. This gives the interview a conversational flow that produces powerful insights. Here are the questions:

    • What were you hired to do? This gives you an idea of the mission and outcomes they were hired to accomplish
    • What accomplishments are you most proud of? This helps you understand whether they accomplished those goals and what they value in terms of achievement
    • What were the low points of the role? This helps show the candidate’s self-awareness and growth mindset, and gives you a chance to spot red-flag trends — that said, recognize every job naturally has high and low points
    • Who was your boss? What was it like working with them? This gives you context for your reference call later on and tells you how the candidate likes to be managed

    Together, these answers give you a good idea of their specific experience in customer service roles, their experience with handling a helpdesk and the challenges of customer service, and some insight into their soft skills that a shorter interview could never provide.

    Don’t bother with a take-home assignment for these qualified candidates

    Many companies will assign a test assignment this late in the process to do a final check on the skillset and quality of candidates. We don’t recommend a test assignment — especially at this point — because assignments are too simple to game and sometimes give candidates a bad impression of your company because you asked them to do “free work.” 

    If you want to use an assignment, keep it short and earlier in the process. But at this point in the process, the deep-dive interview will give you much richer information. Specifically, it helps you understand what the candidate will actually be like on your team before you invest in onboarding and two or three months of work.

    6) Use reference checks to get more context and certainty

    Most people treat reference checks as a way to make sure the candidate told the truth on their resume and during the hiring process. That can be part of the process, but the greater value of reference checks is to get even deeper context into the candidate’s skills and work style.

    Checklist for reference calls, listed below

    Here’s how to approach reference calls:

    • Use the deep-dive interview to decide who to contact. If the candidate mentioned a particularly important or interesting relationship, success, or challenge, make a note to call their boss in that position to get more information.
    • Chat with references for 5-10 minutes. These conversations should be informal and conversation — you want the major takeaways about what it’s like to work with this person.
    • Give the reference person context. Start on a positive note, explaining that you’re hiring for a customer support role and the candidate in question seems like a great fit. 
    • Ask high-level, open-ended questions. Questions like “Is what they said true?” limit the conversation. Instead, ask questions like “What was it like working with this person?” or “What kind of role would this person excel in?”
    • Ask about strengths. For example, ask “What’s a project this person absolutely crushed? What responsibilities did they nail every time?” Ideally, the answers align with the candidate’s self-reported skills and strengths.
    • Ask about challenges. For example, say, “They mentioned [the challenge] at your company. How did they handle that challenge?”. Then, open it up: “What are some other areas of improvement for them?” By framing this positively as improvements, you’ll get more direct feedback about the candidate's rough spots. 

    Each call takes fewer than 10 minutes but gives you valuable insight into the highs and lows of working with this person. Again, similar to the deep-dive interview, you’re looking for patterns across reference calls more than any single answer. If the candidate’s answers line up with the answers you get during the reference checks, the candidate has high self-awareness and emotional intelligence — both important qualities in customer service. 

    By the time you go through the entire process with multiple candidates, you’ll be certain about the best fit(s) for your open role(s). And once you’ve run this interview process a few times, it will become much more efficient and much less daunting. 

    Bonus: How to choose a start date and win over unsure candidates

    As we mentioned earlier in this guide, hiring is a two-way street. You have to win a candidate over just as much as they have to win you over. Once you choose a candidate, here’s how to give yourself the best chance for an accepted offer and a successful start.

    An illustration of an offer letter: "You're hired!"

    Tips for sending an offer letter they’ll want to sign

    If all went well, the candidate should be thrilled that you offer them the job. However, they may be considering other offers and it never hurts to demonstrate that you’re a thoughtful employer that’s genuinely excited about working with them.
    First, consider giving them a call before sending the offer letter. Most candidates will appreciate hearing the enthusiasm in your voice and getting the news directly from the hiring manager, who they spent the entire process getting to know. Plus, you have the opportunity to get a verbal yes.

    When you send the letter, give them a sign-by date. This gives them some parameters, adds a bit of urgency to the decision, and helps you develop a contingency plan with other top candidates in case your top choice declines the offer.

    Last, consider asking everyone involved in the interview process to send a personal note to the candidate, especially if the candidate is on the fence. The candidate will end up working with these people, so an authentic and personalized note expressing excitement could make the difference between an acceptance and a declined offer.

    Choose a start date that works for candidates and your business

    Throughout the interview process, you should clarify when the candidates hope to start. Once you make the offer, don’t be afraid to encourage them to take a week or two off before starting the new job — they’ll appreciate the time off, plus it’s a signal that your company takes preventative measures against employee burnout. And if you’ve moved away from reactive hiring, this shouldn’t be too big of a hassle for your team.

    Last, if you’re hiring multiple agents, work to start them on the same day. This way, you can onboard in cohorts, giving each new hire a buddy for support and companionship. Plus, you’ll save time by giving each training session once instead of multiple times for each hire. 

    Master Hiring Customer Service Agents with HelpFlow.com and Gorgias

    The hiring process isn’t about filling seats, it’s about building a team that strengthens morale, tackles challenges, and ultimately drives your brand forward. While it’s definitely possible to hire agents more quickly, quicker isn’t always better. A single bad experience with a customer service agent can cost you customers and damage brand equity. A team of bad hires can kill the future of your entire company. 

    If you rush the hiring process, problems during onboarding, new-hire retention plummets, and the top talent you had before these bad hires start to leave. It’s better to invest time upfront to ensure you only hire A-player team members. 

    Want help scaling your customer support team with agents who can provide an amazing customer experience and work with larger company goals in mind? HelpFlow runs customer service teams for over 100 brands and can help you level up your customer service operation. Check out our Gorgias Premier Partner profile and contact us today to learn more.

    And if you’re struggling to streamline the workflow of your team and turn customer service into a profit center, check out Gorgias — the customer service platform built for ecommerce. Sign up for a free trial today.

    Shopify Social Media Integration

    The 10 Best Social Media Apps for Shopify

    By Ryan Baum
    7 min read.
    0 min read . By Ryan Baum

    According to data from Kepios, there are a total of 4.62 billion social media users in the world as of January 2022 — accounting for well over half of the earth's population. In other words, if you want to go where your customers are as a Shopify store owner, social media platforms are mission-critical.

    Social media may be a great opportunity but it isn't exactly low-hanging fruit. Social media is complex and time-consuming. Even seasoned digital marketing professionals can get bogged down by tedious tasks, low-return initiatives, and frustrating obstacles when it comes to marketing products to potential customers on social media.

    The good news is that utilizing the right Shopify social media apps can go a long way toward making your social media marketing campaigns more efficient and effective. To help you choose the ideal apps for your social media marketing and social media customer service needs, let's take a look at the 10 most powerful social media apps currently available on the Shopify app store.

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    1) Outfy - Automate Social Media by Outfy

    With Outfy, store owners are able to automate much of the work that goes into managing social media profiles by curating, scheduling, and publishing posts automatically. In addition to its convenient automation features, Outfy also enables you to easily create high-quality collages, videos, and GIFs to promote your products and boost brand awareness on social media.

    Shopify rating ⭐4.8 (1214)

    Price: From $15/month

    Key features

    • Provides a range of customizable promotional post templates
    • Auto-generates and publishes promotional posts based on a number of predefined settings
    • Makes it easy to turn your product pictures into collages, videos, and animated GIFs
    • Hashtag research for helping you select the most effective hashtags for your promotional posts to reach your target audience

    What users think of this app

    • Exceptional for auto-generating social media posts 
    • Easy to set up and use 
    • Hashtag research tools make it easy to select the ideal hashtags for promotional posts

    Related: Our guide to customer service automation — set repeatable, low-impact tasks to autopilot.

    2) Chatdesk - Email & FB Support by Chatdesk

    According to data from Microsoft, 90% of Americans use customer service as a factor in deciding whether or not to do business with a company. With Chatdesk, you are able to outsource your customer support responsibilities to a team of hand-chosen customer support agents who are already fans of your brand. In addition to providing 24/7 live chat and email support, Chatdesk customer support agents also respond to all social media comments, mentions, and direct messages in real-time.

    Shopify rating ⭐5.0 (14)

    Price: Free plan available

    Key features

    • Customer support agents are hired and trained on your behalf, and Chatdesk makes an effort to hire agents who are already "superfans" of your brand
    • Social media integration for responding to comments, messages, and mentions across all major social media networks
    • Provides 24/7 support options to your customers

    What users think of this app

    • Reliable U.S.-based customer support agents 
    • Social media integrations are ideal for turning social media platforms into additional customer support channels. 
    • Exceptional for driving conversions with pre-purchase chat conversations

    For Gorgias customers, learn more about our Chatdesk integration here. 

    3) Facebook Messenger Marketing by ShopMessage

    Facebook Messenger Marketing is a Shopify app by ShopMessage that allows you to create automated Facebook Messenger marketing flows. These flows are triggered based on a wide range of customer actions, such as cart abandonment and first-time purchases from new customers. This app also offers customizable opt-in popups designed to help you grow your Facebook Messenger subscriber list and shareable links that will direct to a FB Messenger marketing flow when clicked.

    Shopify rating ⭐4.3 (129)

    Price: $9/month

    Key features

    • Messenger Menu feature provides customers with a concierge-like experience by giving them on-demand access to targeted product recommendations, support links, or interactive FAQs
    • A guaranteed minimum ROI in your first paid month or you receive a full refund
    • Create Facebook ads that direct to FB Messenger marketing flows

    What users think of this app

    For Gorgias customers, learn more about our ShopMessage integration here

    4) Octane AI: Quiz Growth Tools by Octane AI

    According to data from DemandGen, interactive content elicits twice as much engagement as static content. Interactive content such as surveys and quizzes in particular can be especially useful for providing ecommerce store owners with zero-party data on their customers. 

    With Octane AI, you can create customizable surveys for your Shopify store, which you can use to learn what your customers like and dislike about their experience with your brand and products. Octane AI also gives you the ability to create customizable quizzes that you can use to provide customers with targeted product information and recommend new products. Best of all, quizzes and surveys created using Octane AI are easily shareable across all social platforms.

    Shopify rating ⭐4.8 (200)

    Price: From $50/month

    Key features

    • Octane AI popup gives personalized product recommendations, which users can access and add to their carts
    • Integrates with Klaviyo to target your SMS and email marketing campaigns based on data collected using Octane AI
    • Dynamic quiz functionality lets you display different questions and Octane AI popup styles based on the demographics of the customer viewing them

    What users think of this app

    • Product recommendation quizzes lead to increased sales 
    • Quizzes are customizable and easy to create 
    • Collects valuable zero-party data 

    For Gorgias customers, learn more about our Octane AI integration here

    5) Recart: SMS & Messenger by Recart

    Recart is an SMS, email, and FB Messenger marketing tool that lets you create popup opt-ins for growing your email list. It also offers a variety of automated flows and templates that you can use to make your FB Messenger marketing strategy more efficient. Additionally, Recart provides built-in SMS stats and a real-time dashboard for you to track your campaigns.

    Source: Recart

    Shopify rating ⭐4.8 (5506)

    Price: Free plan available

    Key features

    • Edit templates with a no-code, drag-and-drop editor
    • Personalize your campaigns with condition splits
    • Integrate the tool with others, such as Klaviyo, Gorgias, and Drip

    What users think of this app

    • Excellent for growing subscriber lists 
    • Abandoned cart recovery flows are highly effective 
    • Lots of useful integrations 

    For Gorgias customers, learn more about our Recart integration here

    6) 20+ Promotional Sales Tools by Zotabox

    Zotabox is a platform that offers over 20 different useful sales tools, including customizable banners, countdown timers, social sharing buttons, customizable forms, and push notifications. Whatever you might need to make your social media marketing efforts a success, there's a high likelihood that you'll find what you're looking for on Zotabox.

    Shopify rating ⭐4.8 (469)

    Price: From $12.99/month

    Key features

    • Embed videos on your website
    • Add customizable forms and live chat windows to your site
    • Source and display Facebook and Google reviews on your site

    What users think of this app

    • Excellent triggering options for popups 
    • Lots of useful solutions in one package 
    • All of the tools are highly customizable

    Related: How to transform live chat into your a top sales tool.

    7) Instafeed: Instagram Feed by Mintt Studio

    Instafeed is an app that displays your Instagram feed on your website. Instafeed also enables you to tag products in your Instagram posts in order to create a shoppable Instagram feed.

    Shopify rating ⭐4.9 (1183)

    Price: Free plan available

    Key features

    • Display Instagram content in an on-site widget for social proof through user-generated content (UGC) 
    • Expand the reach of your Instagram profile to your store visitors
    • Turn your Instagram profile into a social commerce channel via the option to tag products in Instagram posts

    What users think of this app

    • Improves the visual appeal of a Shopify store 
    • Great for converting Instagram into an additional sales channel 
    • Easy to set up and customize 

    Related: Our guide to Instagram for customer service.

    8) Facebook Channel by Shopify

    Facebook Channel is an app by Shopify that automatically syncs products from your store to your Facebook account, making it easy to sell and promote products on Facebook. Facebook Channel also allows you to easily create a variety of Facebook Ads campaigns, including audience-building campaigns and dynamic retargeting campaigns.

    Shopify rating ⭐3.5 (3785)

    Price: Free to install, additional charges apply

    Key features

    • Tag products in Facebook or Instagram posts
    • Create a custom storefront for your Facebook Shop
    • Access a variety of templates for setting up Facebook advertising campaigns

    What users think of this app

    • Seamless integration with Shopify  
    • One of the easiest ways to get a Facebook store up and running 
    • Makes it easier to set up effective Facebook advertising campaigns  

    Related: Our guide to Facebook Messenger for customer service.

    9) Minta Automated Social Videos by Minta Technology

    With Minta Technology, Shopify store owners can construct professional social videos and design image posts using a variety of attractive pre-built templates. Minta Technology also gives you the option to schedule social media posts for automatic publishing.

    Shopify rating ⭐4.8 (520)

    Price: Free plan available

    Key features

    • Embed videos on your product pages
    • Schedule posts up to two months in advance with the content scheduler
    • Create fully-branded images and videos for social posts with ease

    What users think of this app

    • Saves a lot of time otherwise spent scheduling and publishing posts 
    • Makes bland social media posts much more unique and eye-catching 
    • An impressive variety of templates to choose from 

    Related: Our guide to product photography to set customer expectations and boost sales.

    10) Gorgias - Live Chat & Helpdesk

    Gorgias is an all-in-one customer service helpdesk platform for Shopify stores. Gorgias offers a range of features designed to help you improve your online store’s quality of customer support, while simultaneously reducing your customer support team's workload. 

    But what makes Gorgias such an excellent social media Shopify app is the fact that Gorgias integrates with Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp. This allows your customer support agents to respond to messages and mentions across all social media channels from a single, user-friendly dashboard.

    Shopify rating ⭐4.4 (533)

    Price: From $10/month

    Using Shopify Inbox? Compare Gorgias vs. Shopify Inbox.

    Key features

    • Connect your social logins with your helpdesk: Generate a customer support ticket anytime someone messages your brand, replies to a post, or creates a post mentioning your brand on WhatsApp, Facebook, or Instagram
    • Live chat windows that can be easily transitioned to an email 
    • Automated Rules and templated Macros to improve your customer service quality and speed

    What users think of this app

    • One-click integrations with your social media accounts and other ecommerce tools (for marketing, shipping, customer reviews, referrals, and more)
    • Automate tedious customer support tasks to save time for your customer support staff and maximize their impact
    • Very helpful for prioritizing customer inquiries to ensure that the most important inquiries receive the fastest possible response
    • Excellent customer support to help you set up the tool and optimize your Rules, Views, and Macros
    • Convenient to have messages from all social channels (Facebook Messenger and comments, Instagram DMs and comments, and WhatsApp conversations) in one place

    Related: The best customer service software on the market.

    Gorgias lets you manage all of your Shopify social media apps, minus the headache

    Choosing the right social media apps for your ecommerce tech stack can provide you with a number of powerful capabilities, from the ability to automatically publish posts across numerous social networks to the ability to turn your social media profiles into convenient customer support channels.

    At Gorgias, we are committed to helping our clients make the most of their chosen social media apps by ensuring that Gorgias is capable of integrating with a variety of popular Shopify apps, including Recart, Octane AI, ShopMessage, ChatDesk, and beyond. To learn more about Gorgias's powerful integrations, be sure to check out our social media app integration page.

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    Ecommerce Community Management

    Ecommerce Community Management: What Is It and Why Does It Matter?

    By Ryan Baum
    14 min read.
    0 min read . By Ryan Baum

    Some customers will arrive on your website, place an order, and move on with their lives. But ideally, given the outsize returns of returning customers, your shoppers also have the option of joining a strong community where they can: 

    • Provide feedback that guides product development
    • See how other customers use your products
    • Engage with relevant (non-sales) content 
    • Stay up to date with your brand’s promotions and releases
    • Become a fully-fledged brand advocates

    Thanks to these customer engagement tactics, a community can lead to better word-of-mouth marketing, referrals, and repeat purchases. According to Gorgias research of over 10,000 ecommerce brands, community building can boost a brand’s revenue by an estimated 6%.

    In this article, we’ll take a deep dive into all things customer community management: what it entails, the benefits of community marketing at your company, steps you can follow to create a community management strategy, and tips and tricks to use once you’re in the thick of community management. 

    What is customer community management?

    Customer community management is the ongoing process of building and maintaining an authentic social network among your customers, staff members, and partners. You can host communities in various places: your brand's social media channels, dedicated online forums, or in person at networking events or brand get-togethers. 

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    Two examples of great community management from ecommerce brands include 310 Nutrition and Kitsch. 

    310 Nutrition sells meal replacement shakes and has a significant member base through their private 310 Nutrition Community Facebook group. There are over 400,000 members that engage in discussions related to the brand but also discuss nutrition and weight loss. It’s a place for like-minded individuals who share a similar goal of becoming healthier:

    310 Nutrition
    310 Nutrition

    Beauty accessory and hair care brand Kitsch utilizes a slightly different community management strategy through TikTok. Kitsch has over 45,000 followers on TikTok and focuses on educating about their products, debuting new products, and running giveaways for their loyal fans. The brand does a great job at keeping its TikTok videos authentic and educational, rather than feeling like a salesroom floor:

    Kitsch
    Kitsch

    The many benefits of a sound customer community management strategy

    In addition to boosting revenue, a community management strategy can increase customer engagement and happiness, serve as an additional channel for customer service, and provide a platform for your most loyal customers to share their thoughts. And that's just the tip of the iceberg. 

    So, what other benefits can solid community management offer?

    Increases customer engagement and customer satisfaction

    If your brand can run an effective customer community management strategy, you’ll start to see an increase in customer engagement as well as customer satisfaction. The more your brand's presence overlaps with where your customers are — especially online — the more you can boost engagement. For example, if you provide valuable content on Instagram and engage with people in the comment section, your audience will see your brand as authentic and committed to customers. 

    In turn, if customers engage with your brand, they will be more satisfied and will likely return as customers again and again. Even more, for 43% of customers, good customer service breeds more loyal repeat customers — and more brand champions ultimately means more revenue for your brand, thanks to the value of referrals, product reviews, and repeat purchases.

    These benefits come at a much lower cost than paid customer acquisition strategies, which require huge investments for customers who might only place one order with your brand — if that.

    First time shoppers have high-acquisition costs but low LTV per customers. Repeat shoppers and loyal customers cost less and generate more revenue.

     Related: Our guide to improving customer satisfaction (CSAT) scores, one of the most important metrics for long-term brand growth.

    Becomes another convenient and efficient customer service channel

    Online community management can also open additional customer service channels for your customers that are more convenient than contacting a call center, using your site’s live chat support, or sending an email. In the community management realm, this could be chatting with a service rep via direct message (DM) on Instagram or troubleshooting an issue on a public Facebook group forum. 

    Related: Our guide on customer support in ecommerce.

    Provides quality feedback about products or services from your most loyal customers

    Feedback is vital to your brand’s success, so additional spaces for customers to share feedback can be extremely valuable. You can even encourage customer feedback about products if your community management strategy includes online forums or social media pages like LinkedIn and Facebook. 

    However, there is some risk in asking for feedback in such a public setting. If you'd rather ease into it, you could create a survey that only shows the results to you and your team. Offer something to customers for their time — such as a gift card or entry to a raffle — to incentivize them to participate.

    Collecting customer feedback doesn't need to have a complicated format. For example, furniture brand Sabai uses Instagram polls to gauge customer interest in new product designs:

    Engage your community with interactive content like Instagram polls.
    Sabai

    This kind of customer research is a great way to stoke community engagement and mitigate future customer complaints.

    Creates more opportunities for upselling and cross-selling

    Community management strategies can be effective sales or upselling channels because they give you the chance to educate customers (and let customers educate one another) about how different or additional products can help their needs. 

    On top of straightforward product recommendations, you can practice upselling by sharing influencer or user-generated content marketing about new or premium products. Again, the goal isn’t to plug your products directly but incorporate them into content your community might like to see. 

    A great example of this is Glamnetic’s TikTok about the do’s and don’ts of eyebrow makeup, which features numerous Glamnetic products:

    Related: Our guide to ecommerce upselling and cross-selling for higher average order values (AOVs).

    Encourages customers to become your best brand ambassadors

    Lastly, a benefit of community management is the ability to create brand ambassadors. You can do this organically by engaging with customers with large followings on social media, but you can also do it more strategically through brand ambassador programs. 

    Brand ambassadors provide a type of advocacy that no paid ads could ever achieve. They convince their friends and followers to try your brand, then those friends and followers convince their friends and followers to try your brand, and the cycle continues. This is also a great way to create social proof, or reviews and testimonials you can attach to product pages and your website.

    One ecommerce brand that uses this tactic effectively is athleisure company Fabletics. The brand prides itself on being an inclusive, quality, affordable alternative to other high-end athleisure brands like Lululemon. Thus, Fabletics reflects this in their brand ambassador program, where they encourage real people to apply as influencers regardless of their status. In addition, they also work with celebrity influencers who have a passion for health and fitness, such as Kevin Hart and Maddie Ziegler.

    Jaxxon, another brand that creates a community around a niche — chain jewelry for main — capitalizes on brand ambassadors who share content on their own social networks.

    Jaxxon
    Jaxxon

    A step-by-step guide for creating a customer community management strategy

    So, now you have a better understanding of why customer community management has the potential to increase your brand's revenue. But how can you create a community that gets results? Here are six steps to building a customer community management strategy that works for your unique brand.

    1) Research social media community management platforms

    The first step in developing a community management strategy is to do your research.. Think about where your current customers frequent most when online and where your target audience is. For most brands, the easiest place to gather a group of people will be whichever social media platform you already use the most, whether that’s Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, or another platform. However, if you’re trying to launch a more :

    • Discord: A robust platform that lets you host channels, forums, private messages, multimedia sharing, and more
    • Reddit: A platform known for authenticity and impressive crowd moderation — be wary of Reddit’s anti-marketing guidelines, though
    • Slack: Mostly known for business teams, Slack can also host customer communities
    • Thinkific: A community platform that also offers great functionality for educational courses
    • Mighty Networks: The top-rated community marketing platform on G2
    • Tribe Platform: A community platform best known for its high degree of customization
    • A forum native to your website: If you want, you can also try and build community functionality directly on your website

    2) Create goals regarding what kind of outcome you’re looking for with your brand community

    Next, you’ll want to create goals that align with the outcomes you hope to see from the strategy. Your goals could be tied to revenue, customer service effectiveness, brand awareness, and public relations. Some example goals may include:

    • Higher customer retention
    • Lower contact rate for your customer service center due to customers finding answers themselves in your online communities
    • Increased interest in a new product or renewed interest in an old product
    • Better public perception of your brand

    {{lead-magnet-2}}

    3) Get to know your audience

    Though you likely have a solid idea of who your audience is at this point, you’ll want to continue getting to know your audience on the platforms you identified in step 1. You may realize you need a slightly different approach when applying your community management plan to TikTok versus a Facebook forum, for example. Though your audience may be similar in both places, folks expect quick, educational, and entertaining videos on TikTok. In contrast, they may want longer-winded discussions with other customers about your brand’s products on a Facebook forum.

    One way to stoke community engagement is to try and spark interactions. For National Baking Day, for example, chocolate brand Montezuma’s requested community members’ best recipes instead of just sharing recipes themselves:

    An interactive and engaging Instagram post from Montezuma
    Montezuma’s

    Related: Learn how Montezuma’s saves five hours a week and answers customer questions faster with Gorgias.

    4) Craft valuable and thought-provoking content

    Building off step 3, you’ll want to set up a plan to create valuable and thought-provoking content to ensure your customers come back to the online communities you are building. The type of content you create for your community management strategy should align with your overall brand image, tone, and voice. 

    For example, let's say you're an ecommerce brand that sells sustainable mid-century furniture. Your community-based digital marketing strategy should include educational content that gives insight into your brand's sustainability: Where your products are made, how you source your materials, what your labor practices are, etc. In addition, you also want to create beautiful imagery (photos and videos) that showcase your brand’s furniture in real peoples’ homes. 

    For example, fashion brand Princess Polly (and their community members) create outfit inspiration videos that would be independently interesting, regardless of whether you bought the clothes through the brand. Of course, someone watching might also love a particular garment and head to the website:

    Related: Learn how Princess Polly helps customers 95% faster with Gorgias.

    5) Use tools to measure success and track customer insights

    In addition to the actual content that makes up your customer community management strategy, you’ll want to identify ways to measure the success of your program and track insights from your customers. One way to streamline this step is to find a tool that does what you need automatically. We'll highlight a few awesome insight tools below. Keep in mind that a great tool may require more financial investment upfront, but it will save you tons of time in the long run and should eventually pay for itself. 

    Powerful community management tools to explore

    • Gorgias: As an all-in-one customer support solution, Gorgias can be an excellent choice for your customer service team to keep up with both current customers and future customers alike through email, social media, and chat. 
    • Keyhole: Keeping an eye on what is being said about your brand at any given moment can be a whole job by itself. Using a social listening tool like Keyhole can simplify this process by aggregating all mentions of your brand on social media. You can even keep an eye on your competition this way, which can help keep your brand’s strategy fresh and engaging.
    • Tweetdeck: If your brand has a Twitter-heavy strategy, Tweetdeck could assist your team with keeping an eye on specific feeds, hashtags, lists, and even managing your own tweets and messages. The tool also allows for data-driven insights.  
    • Grytics: If part of your community management strategy relies on running a specific group or online community, such as a private Facebook group, Grytics could help organize your insights, engagement, and overall performance. 

    6) Assign a community manager to help your community flourish

    The last step in creating your customer community management strategy is assigning a community manager. A dedicated community manager on your team will help execute your strategy and ensure the communities you’re building are supported and continue to grow. 

    A community manager is similar to a social media manager, but there is one major difference. A social media manager typically posts and supports a brand from the inside. This usually means posting from a brand’s social media accounts. On the other hand, a community manager posts as a brand ambassador under their own accounts, not the brand's. The community manager will develop the community as a part of the community. A community manager can also be seen as a brand advocate. 

    A great community manager would manage your brand’s community with a seriousness that doesn’t jeopardize the brand but also a friendly and personable attitude to keep customers engaged. Specific tasks of a good community manager could include:

    • Ensuring customers' questions are answered
    • Moderating conflict within the community
    • Enforcing terms of service (TOS) policies
    • Keeping the community a positive place for customers to interact

    Tips and tricks for community management

    As you finalize your customer community management strategy and start executing it, here are some best practices to keep in mind to make it as successful as possible.

    Always provide a link back to your website

    A link to your brand’s website is never a bad idea because each link out there increases the chance of someone in the community going to your website, clicking around, and making a purchase. Even if your community manager can provide an answer with one sentence of text, try to find somewhere to link to on your website, such as an FAQ page

    Check out how Branch’s Help Center links back to the US (and Canada) store at the top of the portal:

    Branch
    Branch

    Stay consistent with the company branding tone while responding to customers

    Customers and even to-be customers come to know certain brands based on their tone. And even if you are new to community management, you can quickly become known if you create a unique brand voice and tone in online spaces and stick to it. 

    One great way to achieve this is with the help of template responses, which we at Gorgias call Macros. With Macros, you can create and maintain a library of templates for frequently asked questions. But unlike most templates, Macros include variables that automatically populate with information like [Customer name] or [Tracking number of last order]. These Macros accelerate your customer service representatives’s workflows without sacrificing personalization or quality:

    Gorgias

    Create community guidelines and enforce them

    Nobody wants to be the Rule Police, but community guidelines in online spaces are vital for mature, inclusive, and productive discourse. Successful community guidelines will also protect your brand if someone on a forum, for example, starts to get out of hand. Additionally, share your brand’s privacy and data protection standards with community members. 52% of social media users rate their privacy and data protection as highly important, so be sure to let them know how you protect their data.

    Ask questions, encourage users to share wins/questions, and find other ways to stoke engagement

    Remember that the community isn’t just a place for you to make announcements and sell your own products. Find meaningful ways to get people to talk to one another, share insights, and participate in the discussion.

    Always respond to community members in a reasonable time frame

    As part of your strategy, be sure to decide on what you and the rest of your team believe to be a reasonable time frame to respond to community members. If a community manager doesn’t respond to a community member’s question for several days, the likelihood of that member using the forum again is unlikely. 

    Keep content engaging

    Even if you are on a forum that uses mostly blocks of text, think of ways to keep the content engaging, such as incorporating photos, videos, infographics, and even podcasts (if applicable). 

    One company you can look to as a model for great content creation is Casper, an ecommerce brand specializing in mattresses and pillows. Beyond its diverse content on various social media platforms, the brand has the Sleep Channel on YouTube, which includes a 12-part series that features sleep meditations and bedtime stories.  

    Give back to your community

    Lastly, it’s vital to dedicate part of your brand’s community management strategy to give back to your community. This can ensure your brand keeps growing and supports brand loyalty among customers. Ways to give back could include things like hosting contests, giveaways, highlighting user-generated content, and providing other incentives to expand the community. 

    3 great examples of customer communities

    We’ve covered a few examples of great customer communities above, but here are three more that we see as the gold standard.

    310 Nutrition’s Facebook Community focuses on education

    Though we mentioned 310 Nutrition earlier, the brand is a perfect example of how to run a strong online community focused on education. The fitness and weight-loss brand provides tons of content in its private Facebook group from brand ambassadors who work for 310 nutrition and are experts in the industry, such as trainers and nutritionists. 

    The brand shares high-quality videos and articles with tips and tricks to encourage community members to stay motivated on their health journey. 310 Nutrition’s Facebook community also provides members exclusive promotions. All of these strategies help 310 Nutrition’s Facebook group attract new members regularly.

    Annmarie Skin Care encourages emotional connections

    Skincare brand, Annmarie Skin Care, combines its loyalty program (called the Wild & Beautiful Collective) with an exclusive Facebook group only open to loyalty-program members. Connecting a loyalty program to a closed online community can be a great way to give an exclusive benefit to loyal customers without investing too much overhead. In the community, loyal customers get exclusive content, access to the Annmarie team, and promotions. 

    AnneMarie Skin Care combines its community with a loyalty program.
    Annmarie

    Oracle offers multiple communities for its powerful software

    Even outside of the ecommerce world, online customer communities can be extremely beneficial. Oracle, for example, has different communities to bring together peers who use Oracle products and experts to help navigate the brand’s complex offerings. 

    Without this kind of interactive community, new and prospective Oracle customers might be confused about the company’s benefits and use cases. The community helps them learn those things without having to talk to a sales agent:

    Oracle
    Oracle

    Build a smooth, profitable customer experience with Gorgias

    Creating online communities for your customers can take your brand one step closer to improving the overall customer experience. Online community management gives customers a better shopping experience, more avenues to answer their questions, and boosts your company's revenue in the process.

    Efficient, helpful customer service and self-service resources like those offered at Gorgias can help you further your community management goals. Sign up and see how our platform can help streamline customer service interactions, automate repetitive tasks so your team members can focus on connecting with customers, and provide customer data to keep you and your team on track. Book my demo.

    Ecommerce Shipping

    Ecommerce Shipping: Creating a Shipping and Fulfillment Strategy

    By Ryan Baum
    20 min read.
    0 min read . By Ryan Baum

    Whether you’re a small business owner or part of a large ecommerce business, you know that shipping and fulfillment are a significant component of your brand. And you’re here reading this because you want to craft a stronger shipping and fulfillment strategy.

    We’ll get to that soon enough, but first, take a minute to think like a consumer. Take off your business-leader hat and put on your internet-shopper hat.

    Got the right hat on? OK, good. Now think about your last experience as an ecommerce customer.

    How did you approach your last purchase? Did you purchase from the absolute cheapest source, some obscure company you’ve never heard of? Or did you stick to brands and platforms you already know — ones you know you can trust to deliver?

    If you’re like most ecommerce customers, you picked something reliable. Because we all know that price is important — but getting what we need when we need it is even more important.

    And that’s exactly why it’s crucial for your business to create an ecommerce shipping and fulfillment strategy that works well for you and your customers.

    What is ecommerce shipping?

    Ecommerce shipping is the process of getting products purchased through an ecommerce storefront or platform from wherever they are to the customer’s specified delivery address. It is a multifaceted, complex process with many touchpoints, dependencies, and moving parts, and its core goal is a crucial one: getting the items people bought delivered to them accurately and on time.

    Because of the myriad complexities involved in ecommerce shipping, many companies rely on external partners for some or all of their shipping and fulfillment needs. And all companies, once they reach a certain point of growth, rely on some combination of software and apps to keep shipping, fulfillment, and inventory running smoothly.

    How your shipping strategy impacts your bottom line

    To the uninitiated, shipping seems like a commodity good, something to spend as little focus and resources on as possible so that teams can stay focused on the real work of the business.

    But experience and real-world statistics say otherwise.

    A cohesive and realistic shipping strategy is highly valuable to any company that ships products to people because it is part and parcel with your brand image. ShipStation’s second annual national consumer study found that 84% of ecommerce shoppers identified package delivery as the touchpoint that “stands out most in the ecommerce customer experience.”

    Customer shipping expectations: Fast, free, convenient, and trackable.

    In other words, get people the stuff they bought quickly, accurately, and with good communication, and you’re telling them something about your brand and company health. Fail to do so, and you’re still sending them strong messages — just not the messages you want them to receive.

    While your brand image matters, shipping strategy affects your bottom line more directly too. An even higher percentage of consumers in that same study — 92% — declared that they decide between vendors based on whether they can know their order will arrive when expected. 

    Your communication about shipping during the customer journey matters, too. While online shopping, customers hate few things more than having to pay extra for shipping, especially if it’s unexpected until they pull their credit card out at checkout — and put it away when they see a high shipping cost.

    Most customers would even prefer an increase in product prices over having to pay for shipping, according to a study from Wharton. In fact, unexpectedly high shipping prices are one of the main reasons for cart abandonment, according to a study from the Baymard Institute:

    Reasons for cart abandonment include unexpected shipping costs.
    Source: Baymard Institute

    If you’re regularly failing to deliver when promised, customers will take their business elsewhere.

    How your ecommerce shipping process connects to the rest of your business

    Your shipping process isn’t a self-contained unit. It has the potential to affect numerous other aspects of your business. Not only that, the reverse is also true: Other departments and facets of your operations can also affect your ability to ship well.

    Here’s just a partial list of the sorts of departments and functions that tie into most businesses’ shipping processes:

    • Inventory management and stock: Stockouts and misplaced items affect shipping ability
    • Customer service interactions: Can customer support agents see shipping status? Can your shipping strategy reliably achieve what they promise?
    • Refund and return policies (and the teams that execute those policies)
    • Partnering with shipping fulfillment companies or third-party logistics (3PL): Do they reliably meet expectations? Can you get the data you need from them?

    Shipping methods that online stores are offering customers

    There are multiple shipping methods used today, and not every option is right for every business. It’s a good idea to evaluate the shipping methods available for your business’s products and settle in on the methods that make the most sense given your audience, products, margins, and current logistics abilities.

    That said, most consumers expect fast, transparent, and often free shipping on most goods. As many as 77% have abandoned a shopping cart completely because they didn’t find the available shipping options to be satisfactory.

    Here are five popular shipping methods in ecommerce that you might consider implementing for your business.

    Two-day shipping

    Thanks to Amazon Prime, two-day shipping is the gold standard within ecommerce. If you don’t offer it and a competitor (even Amazon itself) sells something similar with two-day shipping available, you could miss out on sales.

    Pro: Can be a driver of sales and is widely available through 3PL and shipping fulfillment vendors

    Con: Can be too resource-intensive for smaller ecommerce businesses

    Same-day delivery

    Same-day delivery ships products and puts packages on doorsteps the same day that customers click “buy.” It’s a truly premium offering and a great way to differentiate from the competition, but it usually requires significant scale and investment to pull off.

    Pro: Consumers love receiving their order the same day

    Con: Same-day delivery highly dependent on the customer’s location and limited to select major cities, and the infrastructure and resource costs can be significant

    Overnight or expedited shipping

    Overnight or expedited shipping has gone by numerous names: Next-day air and one-day shipping are two of the most prominent. It’s faster than two-day but slower than same-day, and it usually comes with a (sometimes hefty) surcharge for fast delivery.

    Some companies (and carriers) use the term “expedited shipping” to refer to something faster than standard shipping but not as fast as express or overnight. If two-day (or faster) isn’t possible or isn’t the norm for your industry, you can differentiate yourself by offering a premium service, such as expedited delivery process or overnight shipping (or both).

    Pro: Gives consumers more control over delivery timeframes and allows sellers to pass the additional costs on to the buyer

    Con: Can add complexity and ambiguity (How fast is “expedited?”) to your ecommerce shipping strategy, and when customers pay more, their expectations shoot up dramatically.

    {{lead-magnet-1}}

    International shipping

    International shipping is a requirement if you’re a U.S. ecommerce firm that wants to ship directly to non-US customers. The same is true if you’re located on another continent and want to start shipping to overseas (including US) customers.

    Pro: International shipping is the only way to reach international customers if you don’t have globally distributed warehouses.

    Con: Can add an immense level of complexity and cost, leading most to rely on a global fulfillment partner

    Eco-friendly shipping

    Eco-friendly shipping refers primarily to the packaging elements a company uses both to package and ship a customer’s order. Instead of plastic and foam, ecommerce businesses can choose biodegradable and compostable materials to fill boxes and to package products.

    As far as the shipping itself, there isn’t a clear eco-friendly choice. All shipping has a carbon footprint, though carbon offsets are available for companies committed to leaving the smallest possible footprint.

    Pro: Eco-friendly choices care for the planet and signal to eco-conscious customers that a brand is deeply committed to protecting natural resources.

    Con: Eco-friendly packing materials carry a cost premium, and a major eco-friendly carrier does not exist.

    For example, Hive advertises its carbon-neutral shipping (which makes paid shipping easier to bear for some customers) and gives customers the option to also request an envelope to recycle certain packaging materials:

    Let customers know about additional charges for carbon-neutral shipping.
    Source: Hive

    How to calculate the true cost of shipping

    One challenge ecommerce stores face is understanding the real cost of shipping their products, as well as the true cost implications of faster shipping speeds.

    This is especially an issue for SMBs because the calculations for upgrading a fulfillment process are complex and, usually, expensive.

    Make sure you consider these four factors as you calculate shipping costs on an item.

    Dimensional weight

    Dimensional weight is a calculation that determines shipping cost based on the physical dimensions of a parcel rather than its actual weight. Trucks and cargo planes have a finite amount of cubic yardage, so dimensional size (or package size) is often as or more important than actual pounds or kilograms.

    Many carriers consider both dimensional weight and actual weight of items and charge your business for whichever is greater.

    Dimensional weight concerns are one reason to be as efficient as possible in terms of box size. Using the smallest box possible to ship an item safely is one way to minimize shipping costs.

    Shipping carrier

    Consumers tend to think of last-mile shipping companies like FedEx and UPS as generally interchangeable, but businesses know that this isn’t always the case. The cost to ship products varies across the — one might be the cost-effective option for small, local deliveries but more expensive for international orders.

    Additionally, certain industries with unique needs may need to consider specialized or niche carriers. While these may be able to deliver a higher level of service or a specific service the big guys don’t offer, costs will generally be higher.

    It’s a good practice to evaluate from time to time the available carriers for your shipping needs to make sure you’re still getting the best possible service and rates.

    Check out these shipping calculators to understand the speed and cost of top shipping companies:

    Shipping distance

    Shipping distance is another element that consumers don’t tend to realize (at least until they sell something on eBay or Etsy). Most major carriers divide the country (or the globe) into various shipping zones. The farther the distance between the origin and destination, the more you’ll generally pay.

    Pirate Ship has a great, interactive tool to show USPS’s variable shipping zones, which change depending on where you’re shipping from, impacting the total shipping cost. Here are shipping zones for a business in San Fransico, CA, for example:

    Shipping zones (distance from outgoing location) dictate shipping prices.
    Source: Pirate Ship

    Product handling and loading

    Handling is an area that’s easy for smaller businesses to overlook when calculating costs. This factor refers to the resource costs of physically finding a product in the warehouse and then picking and packing that product. Businesses face time and labor costs for this work, and this operating expense must be considered as a part of ecommerce fulfillment.

    How to structure your ecommerce shipping costs: 3 options

    Your business’s shipping costs are inconsistent and variable. If nothing else, your true cost varies based on how far an item has to travel. So how do you decide how to handle shipping with your customers?

    These three basic solutions cover the range of options, and each has its own strengths and weaknesses.

    Charge a flat rate

    First up is flat-rate shipping. In this model, you charge all domestic customers a set flat rate for shipping the same goods. The rate might scale based on the order value or some other metric, but customers in San Diego and Pittsburgh will pay the same rate — no matter what the true cost is to your business.

    Businesses with relatively small items or whose catalog entries are all roughly similar in size tend to choose this method. Coffee and tea ecommerce vendors are a great use case: Consumer orders are almost always relatively small, so internal shipping rates are a bit more stable.

    Pro: Calculating rates is simple, and repeat customers appreciate transparent, predictable shipping charges.

    Con: Flat-rate gets too complicated if your product catalog is large or varied, and you’ll likely lose money some of the time.

    Flat shipping rates help standardize customer experience.

    Charge a variable rate based on the market

    Variable rate shipping calculates the real shipping cost of a specific order (real-time carrier rates) and then passes that cost along to the customer. Some ecommerce platforms include this functionality: It’s a part of Shopify’s Advanced plan, for example.

    Note that variable rate shipping doesn’t tend to account for your own handling costs.

    Numerous Shopify vendors use this method to cover their shipping costs, as do most B2B sellers and wholesalers that charge for shipping.

    Pro: This method is the most “fair” to your business since you’re directly passing along real costs to your customers.

    Con: Especially on the consumer front, customers don’t like being surprised by shipping costs — and they aren’t accustomed to seeing the real cost. When you pass along higher shipping costs, you can fail to live up to customer expectations and risk increasing cart abandonments.

    If you offer variable shipping rates, consider including a shipping calculator on your site to set customer expectations early. Native Union, a tech accessory brand, lets customers input their zip code to estimate shipping costs and delivery times before they reach the checkout page. This is a great strategy to manage customer expectations, show off fast delivery options, and reduce cart abandonment (by avoiding unexpectedly high shipping costs at checkout):

    Native Union lets customers estimate shipping costs based on zip code.
    Source: Native Union

    Offer free shipping

    Free shipping is one more option you should consider. Of course, anyone in ecommerce already knows that “free shipping” isn’t really free, yet it’s what customers in many industries are looking for.

    Free shipping doesn’t have to be across the board. You can set an order minimum for free shipping, as Amazon and countless clothing retailers have done. Here’s an example of how Woxer advertises free shipping for qualifying orders on their website’s top banner as well as their cart dropdown:

    Woxer advertises free shipping all over their website.
    Source: Woxer

    When you choose free shipping, you still have to determine how to account for those costs. You have three options here:

    • Build shipping costs into retail prices (customer pays)
    • Eat shipping costs using your profit margin (you pay)
    • Build only part of shipping cost into retail prices (both pay)

    Pro: Free shipping drives sales, increases customer satisfaction, and incentivizes customers to stick with you (even when they’re still secretly paying the cost via higher retail price).

    Con: Usually requires raising selling price or cuts into a business’s margins

    Choosing a shipping carrier

    Choosing the right shipping carrier for your business requires evaluating what each of the available carriers offers you, along with how your product catalog lands in terms of how they calculate shipping charges.

    Each carrier uses its own unique fee structure, and all will offer you a shipping cost calculator to help you understand what your costs would be.

    While factors can vary considerably based on the parameters of your products, here are a few general considerations for the big four:

    USPS: Often the cheapest for ground shipping but not usually the fastest, the United States Postal Service already has an immense last-mile delivery architecture in place.

    DHL: With a specialization in international shipping, DHL is the preferred choice for many businesses that ship primarily overseas.

    FedEx: A carrier that excels at both national and international shipping, FedEx offers a range of shipping services. Small businesses should look into the FedEx Small Business program for offers and incentives.

    UPS: The iconic brown trucks get the job done as well, both nationally and internationally, with a range of competitive delivery options. Like FedEx, UPS offers a range of services for startups and small businesses, including integrations with ecommerce platforms.

    Choosing packaging materials for your ecommerce product

    Choosing the right packaging materials for your ecommerce product has numerous effects on your company’s bottom line. The packaging itself costs money, and your choice in packaging can affect carrier rates as well. Consider these factors as you choose packaging materials:

    • Protection: Can the item be damaged in transit? Is it sufficiently cushioned or otherwise protected to prevent this? What materials will you use to protect fragile products?
    • Material: Cardboard, Styrofoam, plastics, and more eco-friendly materials are all available. What’s the right balance of durability, sustainability, and cost for your business?
    • Size: Most shipping costs are based either on size or weight, so choose packaging that’s as compact as possible (while still providing the necessary protection).
    • Branding: Should your product stand out through custom, branded packaging? Is the boost to buzz and customer loyalty worth the added expense?

    Ecommerce businesses tend to make two very similar mistakes in packaging: choosing too large or too small of a box. Go too large, and you incur higher shipping costs due to dimensional weight. But go too small, and there isn’t enough room to cushion or protect your products.

    We love stationary brand Ohh Deer’s packaging, which is 100% recycled and doesn’t come with the plastic sleeves traditionally found in greeting cards. Plus, it’s extremely adorable and branded — great for customer delight:

    Ohh Deer's product packaging adds delight to the customer experience
    Source: Ohh Deer

    Providing shipping security for you and your customers

    Shipping security is one more area to consider in your overall shipping strategy. Strategic work here can protect your business and allay your customers’ fears.

    Provide tracking visibility for customers’ shipments

    In today’s ecommerce environment, customers want to be able to track where their shipment is and know exactly when it will be arriving. Basic tracking information is usually available through your carrier partner, but you can take things even further with proactive and branded shipping notifications using some of the integrations we’ll show you in the next section.

    And if you use Gorgias, you can make tracking numbers and order status available via self-service order management. In your live chat support widget, your customers can track a recent order, modify order details, report issues, and more. Here’s what the feature looks like in a live chat widget:

    Gorgias's live chat widget offers self-service order management.

    Related: Learn how to provide order tracking to your customers.

    Understand the role of shipping insurance

    When you opt for shipping insurance, you’ll be reimbursed for items that get lost, stolen, or damaged during the shipping process. Shipping insurance can provide your business with a sense of security especially if you’re shipping high-value items or items that can break easily. Here are some of the main use cases for shipping insurance:

    Reasons for lost packages include damage, theft, and more.

    Of course, shipping insurance can add significant cost. It also doesn’t directly affect your customers’ experience (they will expect a replacement product whether you’re reimbursed or not) but it can save costs for you. 

    Most businesses opt for shipping insurance only when shipping expensive, fragile, or easily stolen items.

    Related: Learn how to deal with lost packages in ecommerce.

    Create a returns program and handle returns logistics

    Not every ecommerce sale is going to work out. Customers may simply not like what they got. And defects and product failures happen to every company, no matter how tight your quality control.

    For these reasons, you need a clear plan for how you’ll handle returns (and reduce the number of return requests you receive). If you don’t put a plan in place, you can expect a whole lot more customer service tickets (and angry customers).

    Here are a few pitfalls to avoid as you craft your returns policies:

    • Unclear or buried return policy
    • Manual internal system for processing returns
    • Offering free returns without accounting for cost or volume

    Related: Get 10 best practices for handlind ecommerce returns.

    Our recommended ecommerce shipping integrations, apps, and tools

    Ecommerce shipping can be complex, but the right set of integrations, apps, and tools, can greatly simplify the process — and it can expand your capabilities and service offerings too.

    Below, we’ll show you some of the best shipping integrations we’ve found for the Big Three ecommerce platforms: Shopify, BigCommerce, and Magento 2. And while you’re at it, check out Gorgias’ own collection of shipping and fulfillment apps for the Gorgias platform.

    One quick note before we dive in: Some of these recommendations will repeat, and that’s intentional. If a world-class tool is available on multiple ecommerce platforms and works well on each one, we want you to know about it!

    Shipping integrations for Shopify stores

    Below, we’ll cover three of the best shipping-specific integrations for Shopify stores. Some of these also showed up in our broader Best Magento Extensions article. Feel free to give that a read if you’re looking for more apps, integrations, and functions beyond just shipping and fulfillment.

    Shopify Fulfillment Network

    Shopify Fulfillment Network is a relatively new service offered by Shopify, wherein stores on the platform send products to a third-part fulfillment center, contracted by Shopify, while manages and streamlines the rest of the shipping and delivery process. Consolidating fulfillment and shipping usually means stores can offer faster delivery times to more locations. However, Shopify Fulfillment Network is not cheap and remove a degree of control you have over such a core part of your brand’s customer experience.

    Benefits of Shopify Fulfillment Network.

    Check out our complete review of Shopify Fulfillment Network here.

    ShipBob

    ShipBob is a global logistics platform or third-party logistics (3PL) provider catering to the order fulfillment needs of direct-to-consumer (D2C) brands. If you’re looking for an end-to-end ecommerce shipping solution, ShipBob is a contender.

    ShipBob maintains its own network of warehouses in strategic locations and is known for its reliable fulfillment services. The company empowers D2C brands to offer same-day shipping and two-day delivery. It also allows brands to customize their shipping presentation with custom inserts and packaging.

    If you’re a D2C brand selling through Shopify and you’re looking for a 3PL partner, ShipBob is worth serious consideration.

    In addition to being one of the best Shopify apps, this app is also one of the best on BigCommerce, and it’s a Gorgias preferred partner.

    ShipBob vs. Shopify Fulfillment Network

    Read our head-to-head comparison of Shopify Fulfillment Network vs. ShipBob.

    ShipStation

    ShipStation is a cloud-based order management and shipping software solution that helps ecommerce businesses power their own logistics efforts. Order processing, inventory management, shipping label creation, and customer communication are all part of ShipStation.

    ShipStation connects online businesses with carriers, marketplaces, and channels in powerful ways, and it can give you access to preferred pricing with numerous carriers.

    The app’s Shopify integration helps you automate aspects of the shipping and label creation process and simplify international shipping.

    If your goal is to keep logistics in house (rather than use a 3PL partner), ShipStation is ideal software to help you control costs and increase efficiency.

    In addition to being one of the best Shopify apps, this app is also one of the best on BigCommerce and Magento 2.

    Order Printer

    Order Printer is a Shopify exclusive that allows businesses to create invoices, receipts, refunds, and packing slips all from a simple one-screen interface. These reports and invoices are rendered as PDFs, which can be automatically sent out to customers via email.

    With Order Printer, you can process multiple orders or print requests in bulk and automate attaching those PDFs to emails. It works with the Shopify POS so your sales agents can send off these documents while working in person with customers.

    Order Printer is a Shopify exclusive not available on BigCommerce or Magento 2. 

    Shipping integrations for BigCommerce stores

    These are our top three shipping-specific integrations in the BigCommerce app store.

    ShipBob

    ShipBob is a global logistics platform or third-party logistics (3PL) firm catering to the order fulfillment needs of direct-to-consumer (D2C) online retail brands.

    ShipBob maintains its own network of warehouses in strategic locations and is known for its reliable fulfillment services. The company empowers D2C brands to offer same-day shipping and two-day delivery. It also allows brands to customize their shipping presentation with custom inserts and packaging.

    If you’re a D2C brand selling via BigCommerce and you’re looking for a 3PL partner, ShipBob is worth serious consideration.

    In addition to being one of the best Shopify apps, this app is also one of the best on BigCommerce.

    ShipStation

    ShipStation is a cloud-based order management and shipping software solution that helps ecommerce businesses power their own logistics efforts. Order processing, inventory management, label creation, and customer communication are all a part of ShipStation.

    ShipStation connects businesses with carriers, marketplaces, and channels in powerful ways, and it can give you access to preferred pricing with numerous carriers.

    The app’s BigCommerce integration helps you automate aspects of the shipping and label creation process and simplify international shipping.

    If your goal is to keep logistics in house (rather than use a 3PL partner), ShipStation is the ideal software to help you control costs and increase efficiency.

    In addition to being one of the best BigCommerce apps, this app is also one of the best on Shopify and Magento 2. 

    AfterShip

    As the name suggests, AfterShip takes care of everything that happens after you ship your product. It offers automated shipment tracking, notifications, and branded updates so that you — not your carrier — control the information flow and customer communication.

    Delivery service options include FedEx, USPS, DHL, UPS, and more.

    BigCommerce’s AfterShip app also includes Returns Center, an interactive returns portal.

    In addition to being one of the best BigCommerce apps, AfterShip also offers more limited app integrations for both Shopify and Magento 2. Aftership also integrates well with Gorgias.

    Shipping integrations for Magento 2 stores

    Below, we’ll cover three of the best shipping-specific integrations for Magento 2 stores. Some of these also showed up in our broader Best Shopify Apps article. Feel free to give that a read if you’re looking for more apps, integrations, and functions beyond just shipping and fulfillment.

    ShipStation

    ShipStation is a cloud-based order management and shipping software solution that helps ecommerce businesses power their own logistics efforts. Order processing, inventory management, label creation, and customer communication are all a part of ShipStation.

    ShipStation connects businesses with carriers, marketplaces, and channels in powerful ways, and it can give you access to preferred pricing with numerous carriers.

    The app’s Magento 2 integration helps you automate aspects of the shipping and label creation process and simplify international shipping.

    If your goal is to keep logistics in house (rather than use a 3PL partner), ShipStation is the ideal software to help you control costs and increase efficiency.

    In addition to being one of the best Magento 2 apps, this app is also one of the best on BigCommerce and Shopify. 

    Easyship

    Easyship is a powerful cloud-based shipping platform that’s highly scalable and easy to implement. Customers use it to optimize their shipping efforts and gain access to pre-negotiated shipping rates with hundreds of global couriers.

    Easyship is a great tool for giving your customers visibility and choice in shipping, and it’s a simple way for companies to go global.

    In addition to being one of the best Magento 2 apps, this app is also one of the best on BigCommerce and Shopify. 

    Mageworx Shipping Suite

    The Mageworx Shipping Suite Ultimate is a heavyweight Magento 2 extension that covers all aspects of your shipping needs. Configure complex shipping rules, define shipping rates and methods, and customize everything to your heart’s content.

    Mageworx is powerful, but not simple to use. It’s best for larger ecommerce businesses with existing in-house resources dedicated to shipping and fulfillment.

    The Mageworx Shipping Suite is a Magento 2 exclusive, though Shopify offers a lighter-weight Free shipping & Promo bars integration. 

    Related: Review our roundup of the best shipping software for ecommerce.

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    Manage your ecommerce business’s shipping and customer service with Gorgias

    Shipping and fulfillment are complex parts of your business. So is customer service, and the intersection of the two areas is where many customer satisfaction battles are won — or lost.

    For the best customer impact, ecommerce businesses need a solution that lets them control customer inquiries like tracking, returns, the status of an order, and more from a single unified interface.

    Gorgias is the customer service and support platform built specifically for ecommerce. With Gorgias, you can track and follow through on every customer inquiry in one place, with rich customer history and powerful tools to surface the information you need, when you need it.

    Learn more on how Gorgias integrates with the ecommerce platform you’re already using:

    Ecommerce Customer Delight

    Customer Delight Is A Losing Strategy in Ecommerce: Here’s What’s Better

    By Jordan Miller
    13 min read.
    0 min read . By Jordan Miller

    Most ecommerce businesses understand that offering great products at a reasonable price isn’t enough. We know that customer experience is key to gaining long-term loyal customers, obtaining reviews and referrals, and growing in the long term. But too many brands believe that a great customer experience means surprising and delighting customers

    Frankly, handwritten notes and freebies don’t make for a great customer experience or a winning strategy. That’s not why customers reach out to your brand, nor is it what drives customer retention. They reach out to support for quick, helpful, effortless experiences; this is what makes top-notch customer service so important. Then (and only then) should you put the cherry on top with surprising, delightful extras.

    Why “surprise and delight” is not a viable customer service strategy

    Top-notch customer support is like an ice cream sundae, and efforts to thrill customers are the sprinkles and cherries on top. Sprinkles and cherries are great, but they don’t make for a satisfying sundae on their own. 

    Customers won’t be that amused if you make them wait on hold for 45 minutes and greet them with lighthearted jokes. Likewise, you’ll make a customer feel frustrated if you spend your budget on freebies but ignore implementing customer feedback about the product.

    More than anything, customers who contact a brand's customer service team want their problems solved quickly and well. Fast, helpful, low-effort experiences are the base of your sundae, and any extra efforts to delight the customer are sure to fall flat if you can't do that. 

    Customer service interactions tend to drive disloyalty, not loyalty

    According to Emplifi, 49% of consumers have left a brand in the past year due to a poor customer experience. Also, according to The Effortless Experience, an influential customer service book by best-selling author Matthew Dixon, customer service interactions are 4x more likely to drive customer disloyalty than they are to drive customer loyalty.

    Most customer service interactions make customers less loyal, not more loyal.
    The Effortless Experience

    If 20% of support interactions leave customers delighted and 80% leave customers frustrated, your greatest opportunity is to reduce frustration, not chase after hard-to-achieve delight. 

    Ecommerce customer delight isn’t linked to loyalty (and it’s expensive)

    The Effortless Experience also reveals that going “above and beyond” isn’t even what drives that 20% of loyalty-building interactions. While companies assume exceeding customer expectations generate superfans, customers are generally just as satisfied when companies simply meet their expectations.

    And 80% of companies who use customer delight as a strategy say they spend heavily on providing this delight: More overhead from giveaways, VIP kickbacks, refunds, and policy exceptions. Given that these delightful experiences don’t correlate to customer loyalty, this is not money well spent.

    Support’s biggest impact is to mitigate disloyalty by reducing customer effort

    If we zoom into what drives customers away, the most common issue is a high degree of effort — not a lack of gifts or delightful conversations. Common reasons for high-effort experiences include:

    • Multiple contacts to resolve an issue
    • Repeating information
    • Getting transferred between channels

    The negative impact of these high-effort experiences is staggering. According to The Effortless Experience, a whopping 96% of customers who had high-effort experiences feel disloyal to those companies afterward.

    image

    To put it simply, most companies are trying to go “above and beyond” before they effectively provide the baseline of customer service, which is a helpful and low-effort experience. 

    How to minimize customer effort: The better version of surprise and delight

    The key to customer retention is reducing customer effort. 94% of customers intend to purchase after a low-effort experience compared to a slim 4% after high-effort experiences, making it an essential part of a best-in-class customer experience. Lowering customer effort involves designing an intuitive user experience, decreasing the number of steps required to complete tasks, improving reply and response times (along with other key customer support metrics), and using forward resolution in support. 

    Here are five more quick wins to reduce customer effort in ecommerce:

    1) Offer self-service functionality on your website

    88% of customers expect your online store to offer some kind of self-service. Self-service resources could be as simple as a frequently-asked questions (FAQ) page or more interactive functionality to manage orders without having to reach out to customer support. 

    For merchants using Gorgias, you can set up a Help Center that does both in just a few clicks. Customers can read articles about your brand and shipping policy, and check their delivery status (which they do an average of 4.6 times for every order) instantaneously.

    Here’s a great example of self-service order management on Steve Madden’s Help Center:

    Steve Madden
    Steve Madden

    Learn more about self-service order management with Gorgias.

    2) List answers to pre-sales questions in a help center

    Once you have an FAQ page or customer knowledge base, one type of question to proactively answer is pre-sales questions. These are questions potential customers have while mulling over a purchase in their heads before hitting “Place order” at checkout:

    • Is it the right size for me?
    • Is it compatible with products I already own?
    • Can I return it if I’m dissatisfied?
    • Will it arrive before the holidays?

    If customers have to reach out and wait for an answer, they might just abandon the purchase and look for another online retailer that better addresses their questions. At least, that’s the case for the 63% of customers who attempt to solve issues via self-service support before reaching out.

    So, don’t delay in making clear sizing guides, shipping policies, returns policies, and other self-service information that your customers need to confidently make a purchase.

    3) Use forward resolution in customer support to avoid unnecessary follow-ups

    Forward resolution is the practice of solving anticipated issues for customers before the customer even thinks to ask.


    Let’s look at a real-world example: A customer inquires about shipping times to their local region. The support agent can see they have items in their cart that are on pre-order and, while answering the customer’s question about shipping time, also tells them that pre-order items are sent separately and that they can track delivery status through self-service. The agent has answered the initial question and forward-resolved two potential issues — reducing effort for the customer.


    If you can, audit multi-touch tickets from the past few months to understand which questions tend to have natural follow-ups you can proactively answer. Then, add that follow-up information to your templates, or Macros if you use Gorgias, to improve your customer experience.

    Here’s a Macro that not only answer’s a customer question about the location of an order, but lets them know when that order will be shipped:

    image

    Learn more about resolution time from Gorgias’s Director of Customer Support.

    4) Know more, ask les‍s

    One of the most damaging mistakes is making customers repeat themselves. Agents need that information to do their jobs well, but asking a customer to repeat their story at every juncture is a surefire way to damage a valuable customer relationship.

    Instead, give customer service representatives all the customer context they need from the jump. Gorgias’s customer sidebar gives agents valuable context like purchase and communication history (from Shopify or BigCommerce), reviews information, cart data, social media engagement, and much more so customers don’t need to constantly retell their story.

    image

    Learn more about Gorgias's customer sidebar (and how it helps you better understand and serve your customers).

    5) Make your support more convenient with automation and omnichannel

    90% of customers say an “immediate” response is important, and 78% of customers prefer a variety of support channels to get in contact with customer support. 

    To answer questions faster, consider using a customer support platform with automation features to help your team move faster and automatically respond to repetitive customer questions. Gorgias’ automated system can help you prioritize customer service requests, tag the appropriate agent, and close no-response tickets so you spend less time on admin work. And, with the help of pre-written Macros, automated Rules, and chatbot-like self-service flows, you can send instant, personalized responses to questions like, “Where is my order?”

    Gorgias

    Additionally, explore expanding to an omnichannel or multichannel ecommerce customer service strategy, which gives customers more touchpoints for your brand. Customers value the convenience of texting your brand, calling your brand, and hearing from you on social media. If you’re only available via email, you will likely lose customers due to high effort.

    Read our guide to omnichannel customer service or check out our unified helpdesk to learn more.

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    6 ways to delight ecommerce customers (once they have a low-effort experience)

    Don’t get us wrong, customers usually enjoy an extra bit of pizazz or a freebie. And those sprinkles can even boost your brand’s conversion rate in the short term and boost customer loyalty in the long term — as long as they’re not associated with a high-effort experience. 

    Take a look at the following customer delight strategies and consider adopting them only once you’ve developed a low-effort customer experience as a foundation.

     1) Offer free shipping (the new normal for customer satisfaction)

    According to a 2021 survey, 66% of customers expect free shipping with every online purchase. This means that free shipping is often more of an expectation than a bonus — thanks, Amazon. Nevertheless, offering free shipping to your customers can still be a great way to encourage customer delight in many cases.

    Customers love the word "free," even if the money that they are saving is only a few dollars. In fact, many stores can raise their product pricing slightly to make up for shipping costs and still see a boost in conversion rate from offering free shipping. 

    If you can’t offer free shipping to every customer, setting qualifying amounts is a good way to delight customers with free shipping while also driving higher average order values.

    Woxer is one ecommerce brand that offers free shipping on all domestic orders and some international orders. Plus — another best practice — Woxer makes this information easily accessible as a Quick Response in their live chat widget.

    Woxer delights customers by offering free shipping on qualifying orders.
    Woxer

    For more help on how to offer free shipping without losing too much money, check out our guide to offering free shipping.

    2) Launch a customer referral program

    Creating a customer referral portal or program offers dual benefits. For one, it helps your brand attract new customers by encouraging them to refer their friends, family, and colleagues through word-of-mouth advertising. Along with introducing your brand to new potential customers, referral programs can also be a great way to blow away your customers: Everyone loves the opportunity to earn discounts and rewards!

    If your ecommerce company has a strong net promoter score (NPS), you’re positioned to launch a referral program, capitalize on that goodwill, and delight your customers. If you want to start a referral marketing program, check out tools like Extole which systematically reward customers who bring you business via word of mouth.

    3) Post user-generated content on social media

    Recognition is its own reward, and a shout-out on social media is something most customers enjoy. Highlighting customers who use your products, positive customer reviews, and other delightful interactions allow you to celebrate customers and add social proof to your social media profile. It also reduces the number of content marketing materials you need to produce on your own.

    Marine Layer's Instagram is full of customer shout-outs and other user-generated content that your brand may be able to pull inspiration from:

    Marine layer
    Marine Layer

    4) Use loyalty programs to reward VIP customers

    Like a referral program, a loyalty program rewards customers for repeat purchases and continued brand loyalty. If your customer experience is already smooth enough to bring in repeat customers, delighting those superfans with rewards is a strong strategy.

    If you already use Gorgias, you can integrate loyalty platforms like LoyaltyLion to make the customer experience even more seamless. For example, esmi Skin Minerals uses Gorgias and its integration with Loyalty Lion to bring loyalty data into Gorgias and provide even more personalized, automated service to shoppers. Thanks to this powerful integration, esmi achieved a 58% boost in brand loyalty program enrollment and a 2X increase in average loyalty program member spend. 

    Learn more about how esmi uses Gorgias and Loyalty Lion to improve loyalty program enrollment rates and double the lifetime value of its loyal customers. 

    5) Celebrate customer milestones for loyal customers

    Even if you don’t have an official loyalty program, you can celebrate your VIP customers at key milestones like birthdays or the anniversary of their first purchase. On top of sharing some warm and fuzzies (and maybe free product), one benefit of this kind of celebration is to potentially get a shoutout from customers on social media for your surprise. 

    Check out our CX Growth Playbook to learn how to implement this tip with Zapier, plus read about 18 other tactics to drive growth through customer experience.

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    6) Optimize proactive customer service across the customer journey

    One way to delight customers is to move beyond purely reactive customer service, which requires customers to reach out to get help. With proactive customer service, a combination of directly reaching out to customers and creating self-service resources, you can help more potential customers, reduce cart abandonment, and improve your brand’s customer experience.

    Proactive customer support could include self-service resources, like those described above. It also includes non-intrusive chat campaigns, which let you automatically reach out to customers who display certain behaviors to offer support. For example, you could reach out to customers who linger on a product page to ask if they have questions about the product or need a recommendation on sizing.

    Here’s what Ohh Deer, an online retailer that sells delightful stationery, says about chat campaigns:

     “With chat campaigns, the goal is to remove any customer equivocation and get the customer to the product they really want.”
    – Alex Turner, Customer Experience Manager at Ohh Deer 

    Learn how Ohh Deer drives $12,500 each quarter through Gorgias chat.

    Delight and retain your ecommerce customers with low-effort support 

    The key to great customer service isn’t some sparkly delight. It’s efficient, convenient, and helpful support that customers can access in a variety of ways. 

    With Gorgias, ecommerce brands can access the tools and integrations they need to automate time-consuming tasks, provide instant answers, and reduce the number of times customers have to write in and wait for your customer support team’s answer. Through our platform, your customer support team becomes more than just a team to answer customer questions — it becomes a revenue-generating machine.

    Book a demo to see how Gorgias can help your ecommerce brand.

    Pricing Update 2022

    Announcement: New Features and Changes to Our Pricing and Plans

    By
    6 min read.
    0 min read . By

    Today, we’re announcing pricing updates for our Pro, Advanced, and Enterprise customers, along with customers using our Automate product. We’re also introducing a voice & SMS add-on that will allow you to communicate with customers on even more channels, enabling brands to continue providing the best customer support for their loyal customers.

    This follows our recent announcement of a $10 monthly starter plan (50 tickets), which makes our platform more accessible to all merchants.

    Over the past few years, we’ve proudly shipped many new features to serve our mission: empowering all merchants to deliver an exceptional customer experience that drives revenue.

    Now, with Gorgias, you can:

    • Interact with customers on more channels, including DMs and comments on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook — plus voice, SMS, and native help centers
    • Sell more products with chat improvements (including native Shopify product links) and revenue statistics
    • Work more efficiently with ticket auto-assign, improved Shopify actions, and live statistics that keep your team on track
    • Integrate with your favorite tools, including the most advanced Klaviyo integration on the market and 80+ other integrations since mid-2019

    Here’s a snapshot of the new pricing, which will go into effect in the next few months and empower further innovation on our product:

    image

    What is changing with our prices and plans

    Here's an outline of everything that's changing:

    Pricing increases for Pro, Advanced, and Enterprise plans:

    Pricing is changing for Merchants on the Pro, Advanced, and Enterprise plans.

    Updated pricing

    • Pro: $360/month or $3,600/year
    • Advanced: $900/month or $9,000/year
    • Enterprise: Contact us

    Billable ticket limit decreases

    We’re also updating the billable ticket limit for Basic and Advanced plans to better reflect the number of tickets merchants of this size typically see each month:

    Updated billable ticket limit:

    • Basic: 300 tickets/month
    • Advanced: 5,000 tickets/month

    Doubling down on Automate

    Automate includes several valuable features that allow you to automate up to 25% of total customer interactions. This means you’ll spend more time driving revenue through high-quality support and less time handling repetitive tickets, such as where is my order (WISMO) interactions.

    Some of the features only available in Automate include:

    We initially launched Automate with introductory pricing in late 2021. We had great feedback from early adopters, especially after improving features like updated Quick Response Flows and Self-Service Flows. Now that Automate is delivering on its promise, we're ending our introductory pricing for the add-on and the full price will be reflected for all add-on subscribers.

    Here is the updated Automate pricing:

    Updated pricing

    • Basic: $30/month or $300/year
    • Pro: $180/month or $1,800/year
    • Advanced: $450/month or $4,500/year
    • Enterprise: Contact us

    Legacy Self-Service features added to Automate

    Furthermore, some of our legacy customers currently have access to a smaller set of automation features, separate from Automate. We will discontinue support for those legacy automation features for monthly users by December 31st, 2022. For users on annual plans, we will honor their legacy features until their renewal date. We encourage all customers to explore Automate, which provides a superior automation experience.

    Automate overages increasing

    As part of this pricing update, overages for accounts with Automate will be increased to account for the cost increase for the account. This will help us avoid pricing anomalies and keep things fair for customers across the board.

    New features for some of our earliest customers

    Currently, some of our oldest customers are on plans that we no longer support. We will migrate customers to the plan that most closely matches their current billable ticket count. This migration will also grant access to a suite of new features that were unavailable on those legacy plans:

    We’re introducing a $10 plan for merchants that are getting started

    We’ve heard from merchants who just launched their stores that they need a way to chat with customers on their website and host help center articles that proactively answer common customer questions. So we introduced a $10 plan with up to 50 tickets, that includes most of the features available to other Gorgias users. We’re excited to serve more small businesses with this new plan.

    When are these changes happening?

    For our customers paying monthly, these changes will come into effect two billing cycles from today (September 21, 2022). Your plan and price will change by November or December 2022, depending on when you first signed up for Gorgias.

    For our annual customers, we will update your plan and prices in 2023 on your billing renewal date. Any annual customers renewing before the end of 2022 will keep their existing prices and features for another year, until 2023.

    Why are we updating pricing?

    Our product has grown and evolved significantly in the past three years since we last updated pricing in mid-2019. In order to continue on this trajectory, we plan to heavily invest in our product to bring even more value to our ecommerce merchants, growing their businesses.

    Here are the biggest recent areas of growth for Gorgias:

    Interact with customers on more channels

    As a merchant, you understand the importance of showing up where your customers are. We have made great strides in this arena to bring you to all of the places your customers are expecting you to be, all in your single Gorgias feed.

    image

    Our social media channels have evolved to best-in-class status, allowing you to interact with customers in all of the different ways they might reach out. Whether you’re responding to comments on your ads to increase return on ad spend or handling angry customers that slide into your DMs, we have you covered on major social networks.

    And when you want to help customers help themselves, we now have a robust help center to answer all of their top questions without human attention. You can even upgrade your help center with self-service features like order tracking.

    Sell more products

    Your customer experience should drive revenue — happy customers are the best fuel for growth.

    This belief is at the center of Gorgias’ philosophy and guides our product development. As a result, the Gorgias platform has gotten much better at driving revenue for our customers, resulting in $1.1 billion in support-driven revenue in 2021 alone.

    Want to learn more? Read our CX growth playbook to drive 44% more revenue through customer experience.

    image

    Our chat improvements and native Shopify product links turn your agents into sales reps, and our revenue statistics show just how much impact your team has had.

    And this is going to be one of our biggest areas of focus going forward, so expect lots of new features like refined chat campaigns, one-time discount codes, and advanced sales analytics.

    We’re even building a full-featured Revenue Add-on to help you increase your revenue impact. More on that in our Series C announcement.

    Work more efficiently

    Gorgias is built around the unique needs of ecommerce merchants, and we’ve designed the tool to be the fastest platform for ecommerce customer service teams right out of the box.

    Agent and team efficiency have been areas where our platform has seen some of the most improvement over the past few years.

    image

    We have Macro suggestions and a Rule library, now, to get you started fast and make sure you’re never at a loss for words. And you can make all the necessary edits to a given Shopify order without leaving the Gorgias platform.

    Plus, our advanced dashboards keep your whole team on track and show the impact of your process improvements in real time.

    When you spend less time on repetitive tasks and tickets, you can spend more time with the tickets that matter to your business — the ones that actually require human attention.

    Integrate your favorite tools

    In 2019, we had just started to connect with your favorite ecommerce apps.

    Now, Gorgias is your command hub for the entire customer experience, integrating data from all of your favorite apps to make it all more actionable. That’s a major way we help you make better decisions and provide a world-class experience for your customers.

    image

    Our Klaviyo integration has been upgraded to enable even more advanced functionality, and we have also added 80 other integrations that upgrade your support process.

    And we’re not done yet — with a host of new integrations coming soon, we’re going to keep bringing more insight to your first-party customer data — across all of the different platforms you use.

    Questions? Reach out to our team

    We understand you may have further questions about which changes will impact you. For further clarity, please check the emails associated with your account for a more detailed breakdown of the specific changes that apply to your account. You may also reach out to our support team or connect with your Customer Success Manager for additional details.

    Our mission continues to be helping merchants deliver an exceptional customer experience. We believe this is how you’ll build long-lasting relationships with your customers to maximize retention and grow your business.

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