CR
The share of visitors who complete a desired action, usually a purchase. Orders divided by sessions, shown as a percentage.
153 ecommerce, retail, analytics, and finance terms, defined in plain English. The jargon you'll see across your store, your reports, and your P&L.
The share of visitors who complete a desired action, usually a purchase. Orders divided by sessions, shown as a percentage.
The average amount spent per order. Total revenue divided by number of orders over a period; a core lever for bundling and upsell.
Average revenue generated per visit. Total revenue divided by sessions, which works out to conversion rate multiplied by AOV.
The percentage of people who click a link, ad, or element out of those who saw it. Clicks divided by impressions.
The share of sessions or product views that result in an item being added to the cart.
The percentage of shoppers who add items to the cart but leave without completing checkout.
The percentage of visitors who land on a page and leave without any further interaction.
The average number of items in each order; a measure of cross-sell and basket-building.
A single visit to your site by one user, covering all activity until they leave or time out.
The sequence of steps a visitor moves through toward purchase, such as view, add to cart, checkout, and buy. Each step's drop-off shows where to optimize.
A survey metric capturing how satisfied customers are with a product or interaction, usually scored on a 1 to 5 scale.
Another common abbreviation for conversion rate (see CR): the share of sessions that convert, and the most-used primary metric in A/B testing.
The average cost to acquire one new customer; total acquisition spend divided by new customers gained.
The total profit a customer is expected to generate across their whole relationship with the brand. Also written CLV.
The percentage of customers or subscribers who stop buying or cancel within a given period.
The percentage of customers who keep buying over a period; the inverse of churn.
Grouping customers by a shared starting point, such as first-purchase month, to compare behavior over time.
The share of customers who make more than one purchase.
A loyalty metric based on how likely customers are to recommend the brand, scored from -100 to 100.
A subscription option giving customers recurring delivery at a discount, improving retention and revenue predictability.
Dividing customers into groups by shared traits or behavior, such as new versus returning or high-value versus churn-risk, to target messaging and offers. Also called customer segments.
A program that rewards repeat purchases with points, perks, or tiers to increase retention and lifetime value.
Customer data a brand collects directly from its own channels such as its site, app, and email; owned and privacy-durable.
Data customers intentionally share, such as preferences from a quiz, as opposed to behavior inferred from their activity.
The logged-in area where a shopper manages orders, addresses, subscriptions, and saved payment methods.
Improving a site's content and structure to rank higher in organic (unpaid) search results.
Optimizing content so AI answer engines such as ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google's AI Overviews cite it; increasingly important alongside SEO.
Paid advertising on search engines to appear for relevant queries; often used interchangeably with PPC.
An advertising model where you pay each time someone clicks your ad.
The practice of systematically improving the share of visitors who convert, usually through testing.
Revenue earned for every dollar of advertising spend; ad revenue divided by ad cost.
The average amount paid for each click on a paid ad.
The cost per one thousand ad impressions.
The average cost to generate one conversion, sale, or lead from a campaign.
Showing ads to people who previously visited your site to bring them back to convert. Also called remarketing.
Content created by customers, such as reviews, photos, and videos, used to build trust and social proof.
The method used to credit conversions to the marketing touchpoints that influenced them.
Tags added to a URL to track which campaign, source, and medium drove a visit.
Encouraging a customer to choose a higher-priced or upgraded version of a product to raise order value.
Recommending complementary or related products, such as frequently-bought-together items, to raise basket size.
A persuasion principle that highlights limited availability, like low stock or limited drops, to motivate faster action. Best used only when genuinely true.
A persuasion principle that uses time pressure, like countdown timers or deadlines, to prompt action. Best used only when genuinely true.
Tailoring content, products, or offers to a visitor based on their behavior, source, or segment.
Detecting when a visitor is about to leave a page, often to trigger a last offer or capture an email before they go.
Software for sending and automating marketing email and flows, such as Klaviyo or Mailchimp.
The page a search engine returns for a query, where organic and paid listings compete for the click.
Schema.org markup added to a page that helps search and answer engines understand its content; it powers rich results and AI citations.
A standalone page built for a specific campaign or audience, focused on a single conversion goal.
A clear statement of the core benefit a product or brand offers and why it beats the alternatives.
A tracking cookie set by a domain other than the one being visited, historically used for cross-site ads and now being phased out by browsers.
Proactively answering the doubts that stop a purchase — price, fit, quality, returns — right at the decision point, often with copy, FAQs, or badges.
A free item offered when an order qualifies by value or product, used to lift conversion and average order value. Often abbreviated GWP.
Collecting a visitor's email or phone, often via a popup or offer, so you can remarket to shoppers who aren't ready to buy yet.
An experiment that splits traffic between two versions, a control and a variant, to measure which performs better on a chosen metric.
A test that varies multiple elements at once to learn which combination performs best; it needs more traffic than an A/B test.
The confidence that a test result reflects a real effect rather than random chance, typically set at 95% or higher.
In a test, the control is the unchanged version and the variant (or challenger) is the modified version measured against it.
The number of visitors or conversions a test needs to produce a reliable result.
A tool for deploying and managing tracking tags and pixels without editing site code.
Google Search Console, a free tool reporting how a site performs in organic search, including queries, indexing, and Core Web Vitals.
Google's analytics platform, built around events and sessions, used to measure traffic and behavior.
A visualization of where users click, move, or scroll on a page, used to spot friction and opportunities.
A recording of an individual user's session, used to observe real behavior and diagnose issues.
A small snippet of tracking code, such as the Meta pixel, that records visitor actions for measurement and ad targeting.
The percentage improvement a variant produces over the control in an A/B test. A +10% lift means the variant beat the control by 10%. Also called uplift.
In A/B testing, the probability that a measured result is not due to chance, commonly set at 95%. It pairs with statistical significance to decide whether to trust a test.
The share of users who leave at a given step of a funnel without continuing; the steps with the biggest drop-off are where optimization pays most.
Google's three real-user experience metrics (LCP, INP, and CLS) that influence search ranking, measured at the 75th percentile of visits.
How long the largest visible element takes to load. Good is under 2.5 seconds.
How quickly a page responds to user interactions. Good is under 200 milliseconds. It replaced First Input Delay as a Core Web Vital in 2024.
How much a page's layout unexpectedly shifts as it loads. Good is under 0.1.
The time from a request to the first byte of the response; an early indicator of server and network speed.
A legacy responsiveness metric measuring the delay before a page reacts to a first interaction; retired in favor of INP in 2024.
How quickly a page loads and becomes usable; a direct driver of conversion and Core Web Vitals.
The page for a single product, with its imagery, price, options, and add-to-cart; the primary decision point.
A category or collection page that lists multiple products in a grid, usually with sorting and filters.
A slide-out panel showing the cart contents without leaving the current page.
The area of a PDP containing price, options, and the add-to-cart button, where the purchase decision happens.
The portion of a page visible without scrolling; prime real estate for key messaging and calls to action.
The large, prominent banner area at the top of a page, typically with a headline, image, and primary CTA.
Letting shoppers narrow a product list by attributes like size, color, or price. Also called faceted navigation.
An add-to-cart button that stays visible as the shopper scrolls a long product page.
Signals that others trust a product, such as reviews, ratings, badges, and customer counts, used to reduce hesitation.
The element prompting a user to take the next step, like Add to cart or Shop now.
An expansive dropdown navigation panel that displays many categories and links at once.
A row of links showing a page's place in the site hierarchy, such as Home, Category, Product, to aid navigation.
A saved list of products a shopper wants to revisit or buy later.
A modal that previews product details from a listing page without a full page load, speeding up browsing.
The on-site search box and engine shoppers use to find products by keyword; autocomplete and typo tolerance make it convert better.
A chart or fit finder that helps shoppers pick the right size, reducing hesitation and returns.
A visual cue such as a security seal, guarantee, or free-returns icon that reassures shoppers and eases purchase anxiety.
Products surfaced to a shopper, such as You may also like, to drive discovery and lift average order value.
A thin banner across the top of a site used for promotions, free-shipping thresholds, or news. Also called a promo or notification bar.
A table that lays out products or plans side by side across key attributes to help shoppers choose.
Augmented-reality technology that lets shoppers preview a product on themselves, common in beauty, eyewear, and jewelry.
An on-site chat widget, staffed or AI-powered (a chatbot), that answers shopper questions in real time to reduce drop-off.
A short set of guided questions that recommends products based on a shopper's answers; a form of guided selling.
An interactive tool, often 3D, that lets shoppers customize a product's options or build before buying.
Designing a site so people with disabilities can use it, following WCAG standards; it reduces legal risk and often lifts conversion.
Anything that makes buying harder or slower — extra steps, unclear copy, slow pages, forced account creation. Reducing friction is a core goal of CRO.
The set of product photos and media on a product page, with thumbnails, zoom, and video, that lets shoppers inspect a product before buying.
A unique code identifying a specific product variant for inventory and sales tracking.
Extra inventory held as a buffer against demand spikes or supply delays, to avoid stockouts.
How many times inventory is sold and replaced over a period; a measure of stock efficiency.
The percentage of received inventory sold in a period; units sold divided by units received.
The price a manufacturer recommends a retailer charge for a product.
The lowest price a retailer is permitted to advertise a product for, set by the brand.
A model where the retailer sells products that a supplier ships directly to the customer, holding no inventory.
An outside provider that handles warehousing, fulfillment, and shipping on a brand's behalf.
The process of picking, packing, and shipping orders to customers.
An omnichannel option where customers order online and collect in a physical store. Also called click-and-collect.
A unified shopping experience across web, mobile, store, and marketplace that shares inventory and data.
When an item cannot be purchased because its inventory has run out; the problem safety stock is meant to prevent.
The approval and process for a customer to return an item; a smooth returns flow builds buyer confidence.
Adjusting prices in real time based on demand, inventory, competition, or customer segment.
One-tap payment options like Apple Pay, Shop Pay, and PayPal that skip manual form entry to speed up checkout.
Financing that lets shoppers split a purchase into installments, such as Affirm, Klarna, or Afterpay.
A forced reversal of a payment initiated by the customer's bank, often from a dispute or fraud.
The service that securely authorizes and processes online card payments between the store and the bank.
Letting shoppers complete a purchase without creating an account, a proven way to reduce checkout friction.
A one-tap payment method that stores card details, such as Apple Pay, Google Pay, or Shop Pay, to speed up checkout.
A checkout that collects all information on a single page instead of multiple steps, reducing drop-off.
The order value at which shipping becomes free, such as free shipping over $50, used to lift average order value.
Total sales before any costs are subtracted; the top line of the income statement. Also called gross revenue.
The total value of goods sold over a period, before deducting fees, discounts, or returns.
The direct cost of producing or buying the products sold: materials and manufacturing, not overhead.
Revenue minus COGS, shown as a percentage of revenue; what is left to cover everything else.
Revenue from a product minus its variable costs (COGS, shipping, payment fees, variable marketing); what each sale contributes to fixed costs and profit.
Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization; a proxy for operating profitability that strips out financing and accounting effects.
Spending on long-term assets like equipment, buildings, or major software that deliver value over multiple years.
Ongoing day-to-day running costs such as salaries, rent, software, and marketing, expensed in the period incurred.
A statement summarizing revenue, costs, and expenses over a period to show net profit or loss. Also called an income statement.
The revenue and costs tied to a single unit, typically one customer or one order, used to judge whether growth is profitable.
Monthly and Annual Recurring Revenue; predictable subscription revenue normalized to a month or a year.
Topline revenue minus returns, discounts, and allowances; the sales actually retained.
The decision of whether to purchase an existing solution or develop it in-house, weighing cost, speed, and control.
A strategic planning framework assessing Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats.
Selling to other businesses rather than consumers; typically higher order values, negotiated pricing, and account-based buying.
Selling directly to individual shoppers; the standard retail ecommerce model.
A brand selling straight to shoppers through its own channels, bypassing wholesalers and retailers. Also written DTC.
Selling goods in bulk to retailers or businesses at a discount, who then resell to end customers.
A platform where many third-party sellers list products under one storefront, such as Amazon or Etsy.
Selling products or access on a recurring basis, trading one-time sales for predictable recurring revenue.
An architecture that separates the storefront from the commerce engine, connected by APIs, for flexible, omnichannel experiences.
Assembling a stack from best-of-breed services such as cart, search, CMS, and PIM, connected via APIs rather than one all-in-one suite.
A central system for product data such as attributes, copy, and images that syndicates to storefronts and marketplaces.
The system of record for finance, inventory, and operations across a business.
Software that routes and tracks orders across warehouses and stores, enabling split shipments and BOPIS.
Software that unifies customer data from every source into a single profile for segmentation and personalization.
The system used to create and manage site content and pages without hand-coding.
A defined way for software systems to talk to each other; the connective tissue of headless and composable stacks.
A network of distributed servers that caches and serves site assets from locations near each user, improving load speed.
On-site search that understands meaning and intent rather than just matching keywords, often AI-powered, improving results for vague or natural-language queries.
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