Reducing cart abandonment

How to reduce cart abandonment by leveraging the right test questions and templates
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Image of shopping cart with person online shopping in background

Loss of revenue caused by cart abandonment is one of the most frustrating pain points for an ecommerce business. The average rate of cart abandonment is 70%, according to the Baymard Institute, equating to a loss of about $18 billion in annual sales revenue. But luckily, it’s not all bad news. While every retail website has its fair share of window shoppers, lurkers, and comparison buyers, there are steps you can take to reduce cart abandonment proactively. 

For B2C organizations, the customer experience relies heavily on various digital touchpoints. Optimizing your shopping experience across channels and devices can significantly reduce cart abandonment and improve your customers' overall shopping experience. 

By adopting UX best practices and usability testing, your organization can empty abandoned carts and regain control over conversions. It's all about taking the following steps: 

  1. Optimize a customer's path to purchase
  2. Design a checkout process that gains trust
  3. Ensure your experience is convenient and enjoyable for shoppers

To see human insight in action, watch the highlight reel below. See what it’s like to get video feedback from everyday consumers as they shop your brand and give feedback on CTAs, navigation, the checkout process, and more. 

What is cart abandonment, and what causes it? 

Shopping cart abandonment occurs when customers leave the ecommerce website before completing the purchase. The cart abandonment rate defines the ratio between visitors who complete the purchase and those who fail to complete the checkout process. The average ecommerce conversion rate is 1.92%, and about 98% of visitors globally fail to complete their purchases. 

If your ecommerce organization struggles with cart abandonment, identifying friction points is a good place to begin your investigation. Below are common factors to consider: 

  • Hidden costs: While a product page may offer one price that a customer is comfortable with, one may not be happy to find that when they’re ready to check out, extra fees and costs are suddenly visible. 55% of shoppers abandon carts for this reason, according to Dynamic Yield.
  • Unclear or lengthy checkout process: Customers want the online retail experience to be quick and seamless, like checking out in-store. If there are too many pages to get through or a site requires unnecessary information, customers can be clicks away from leaving for a competitor.
  • No guest checkout option: As a customer, you’ve likely experienced being close to checkout only to find out that you must sign up for another account. Offer shoppers more flexibility with an effective guest checkout design, and have them sign up for an account on their terms.
  • Limited payment options: In person, customers have plentiful payment options, from digital wallets and contactless payments to cash or cards. Online stores need diverse options to replicate this flexibility or risk losing a customer.
  • Need for more shipping options: If you look at top retailers, many offer standard shipping, expedited shipping, or a buy online, pick up in-store option. While you can’t always guess your customers’ preferences, you can correctly assume they want options and the freedom of choice.
  • Slow-loading pages: While not all shoppers may be in a hurry when shopping online, we can all agree that no one wants to wait on a slow-loading page.
  • Lack of consumer trust: Shoppers are hesitant to share their credit card details and personal information on a site they don't trust. If you fail to convince your customers that you will protect their data and identity, they’ll most likely abandon your ecommerce site without making the purchase. 17% of consumers cite this factor as a cause for abandonment. 

The 6 elements you should be testing—and which test types and templates to use 

1. Consumer trust and confidence 

Shoppers want to know whether your site is safe and whether their data is safe with you. Lose customer confidence, and you might lose your sale. Increase conversions by maintaining your customer’s trust and confidence throughout the checkout process. Find out what security information is important to customers and whether they can easily find it. 

Ask shoppers: 

  • Do you trust this site or app? Why or why not? 
  • How confident are you in providing this company with your financial and contact information?
  • Is it important for you to see third-party verifications? 
  • Do you pay attention to privacy policies? Explain your answer. 
  • Is there an organization that you trust more? Why do you trust them more?

Use this test type: 

Opt for a classic unmoderated test. Structure your tasks around a hypothetical checkout process, and ask your test participants how they assess the site or app security. 

Use this template: 

Data privacy template: Optimize data privacy for transparency, accessibility, and trust—and pinpoint all friction points customers may come across. 

2. Return policies and guarantees 

Brick-and-mortar shoppers know they can talk with an employee if things go awry with their purchase or if they change their mind. Online shoppers need a similar safety net. Ask your testers to find your return policy (and perhaps your satisfaction guarantee, price match guarantee, etc.), and ask them whether it’s easy enough to find and whether they have any concerns or fears that haven’t been addressed.

Ask shoppers: 

  • Are you able to find information about returns and exchanges?
  • How do you feel about the return and exchange policy?
  • Does a return policy affect your perception of a business or motivation to purchase? Why or why not? 

Use this test type: 

For your study, consider asking a customer to go through an actual return process with an ecommerce organization. Since this may not be completed in one study alone, consider a diary or longitudinal study that evaluates habits, prolonged processes, and perception changes over time. 

Use this template: 

Feature prioritization template: See how shoppers and customers prioritize different features or projects in ecommerce. This template is especially useful when you’re on a tight deadline or creating a prototype. 

3. Customer service experience 

Some shoppers find comfort in the immediate availability of customer support. These types of support may be more than just FAQs and knowledgebases but real people or chatbots ready to talk. Consider asking your testers whether they know how to get help if they need it and what their preferred support method is. You might find that adding a phone number, chat button, or a 24/7 support icon gives shoppers the confidence to continue checking out even if they never end up needing support.

Ask shoppers: 

  • What’s the first thing you look for after receiving an order you placed online or through an app?
  • Do you feel you have enough information to follow up with customer service after making a purchase?
  • Who should you contact if you have questions or concerns about your order?
  • Do you prefer to place orders during business hours if you need customer service? 
  • Does 24-hour customer service influence your perception of a brand? 

Use this test type: 

A live conversation or a moderated test is sufficient to learn how customers prioritize customer service. A live conversation offers more opportunities to dig deeper, especially if you want to walk through the ecommerce experience alongside your test participant. 

Use this template: 

For an unmoderated test, use this website comparison template: See how your customer service compares to a competitor's by conducting a comparison study. You’ll understand what people prefer and why. 

4. Price and value perception

Online stores must combat the challenge of their competitors’ prices being just a browser tab away. If the customer has reason to question the value they’re receiving, nothing stops them from leaving you for another brand. 

Highlighting any applicable sales prices, shipping discounts, and total savings increases confidence in the value the customer is receiving. You may lose customer confidence if you reserve shipping costs, taxes, and other fees until the last page. You might also show your potential consumers a low-price guarantee to see the impact on their buying confidence.

Ask shoppers: 

  • Is the total price of your order clear? 
  • How important is the coupon code field to you? Explain your answer. 
  • How does price impact your purchasing decision?
  • Where do you go to compare prices and products?

Use this test type: 

Consider an unmoderated test to assess how your customers feel about pricing and value, and set up tasks to walk them through product pages and the checkout process. 

Use this template: 

Inflation and customer perception template: Gain further insight into what customers think and expect during an uncertain market and how it impacts their shopping habits. 

5. Ease of use 

The convenience of your checkout process can’t be verified by analytics alone. Your customer might get from page one to page three quickly, but did they accomplish everything they wanted to, and did they hit any confusing points along the way? Qualitative testing is the next logical step when your quantitative data shows there’s a problem. 

Ask shoppers: 

  • How could we have made this faster, more convenient, and easier for you?
  • Did anything frustrate you during the checkout process?
  • If you had to make this purchase again, would you use this store or a different one? If you’d use a different one, why? 

Use this test type: 

If you’re especially focused on website or app navigation, consider a card sorting study—a qualitative research method used to group, label, and describe information more effectively. You’ll learn how customers prefer to see categories and drop-down menus organized and how many pages are too many in a checkout process. 

Use this template: 

Needs and frustration discovery template: If your product is already live, use this template to explore customers’ experiences or frustrations with an ecommerce activity. 

6. Mobile experience 

Mobile shoppers have the highest cart abandonment rate, at 86%, compared to 70% of desktop shoppers, according to the Baymard Institute. 

To ensure a consistent ecommerce experience across devices, prioritize running mobile tests on your checkout process so that customers don’t encounter any issues when interacting with small screens.

Ask shoppers: 

  • Do you prefer checking out on mobile or desktop? Why? 
  • Is the checkout process consistent across channels or not? 
  • What would compel you to check out on mobile more? 

Use this test type: 

Consider an omnichannel study or multichannel test to test consistency across all devices. Opt for omnichannel testing if you want to test a single process that spans multiple devices. However, you’re suited for multichannel testing if you want to test the same process on various devices.

Use this template: 

Mobile app evaluation template: Assess critical app characteristics like appearance, ease of use, and trust.

Create a shopping cart that’s hard to abandon

While the top reasons for abandoned carts may shift with time, what you can count on is customers wanting a checkout process that’s upfront, quick, flexible, and trustworthy. Shopping cart abandonment may be a major concern for ecommerce teams, but with the help of consistent customer insight and usability testing, it no longer has to be a mystery. By regularly connecting with ecommerce shoppers to understand their needs and frustrations, from pre-launch to post-purchase, teams can eliminate friction points before they occur. Collecting human insight ultimately leads to better customer shopping experiences, increased sales and conversions, and enhanced customer loyalty.

Want to learn more?

Create ecommerce and online shopping experiences that convert with best practices, expert advice, user research templates, and more.