The average WooCommerce checkout abandonment rate is 70%. This guide covers how to measure your conversion rate, identify the biggest drop-off points, and implement proven fixes for cart, checkout, and payment friction.
Dynamic pricing lets you automatically adjust WooCommerce prices based on quantity, customer role, cart total, or time. This guide covers the best plugins, rule strategies, and how to avoid margin erosion.
Gift cards generate upfront revenue and bring new customers to your WooCommerce store. This guide covers setup, redemption flows, the best gift card plugins, and strategies to maximise breakage revenue.
Step-by-step guide to connecting WooCommerce with GA4, enabling enhanced ecommerce tracking, and setting up the key reports that show you where revenue is coming from and where customers are dropping off.
Product bundles increase average order value by 20–35% in WooCommerce stores. This guide covers fixed and dynamic bundle types, the best plugins, pricing strategies, and how to display bundles for maximum conversion.
WooCommerce only shows revenue. Here is how to track your real profit — cost of goods, payment gateway fees, shipping costs, and more — with spreadsheets or plugins.
Your WooCommerce dashboard shows revenue, not profit. Here is the real math — including payment fees, shipping costs, and COGS — and why $10,000 in revenue is not $10,000 in profit.
Step-by-step guide to auditing your WooCommerce store speed — understand your PageSpeed score, Core Web Vitals, and what to fix. Free online tool and WordPress plugin included.
How to install and use the free WooCommerce Speed Audit plugin — one-click PageSpeed audits for your Shop, Cart, and Checkout pages plus headless compatibility scanning.
How to migrate from WPBakery Page Builder to Gutenberg — step-by-step conversion process, tools, pitfalls, and whether you should skip Gutenberg and go headless instead.
Shopify looks cheap at $29/month but apps, transaction fees, and Plus pricing push real costs to $1,500-5,000/yr for growing stores. Here is an honest breakdown and the alternatives.
Self-hosted ecommerce means running your own commerce backend on infrastructure you control. No transaction fees, no vendor lock-in. Here is how WooCommerce, Medusa, and Saleor compare.
An honest comparison of WooCommerce, Medusa, and Saleor for open source ecommerce. Ecosystem size, developer experience, content management, and when to choose each.
Before you leave Shopify, understand the real challenges: SEO regression, data migration, customer password resets, and payment gateway transitions. Here is how to migrate safely.
The real cost of building a custom ecommerce store: SaaS ($1,500-5,000/yr), traditional WooCommerce ($3,000-15,000), custom headless ($25,000-75,000), or a starter kit ($500-2,000).
Variable products, gallery rendering, and related product queries make WooCommerce product pages slow. Here is what actually causes it and how headless fixes the root problem.
The WooCommerce cart page bypasses all caching by design. Every load executes PHP, queries the database, and recalculates totals from scratch. Here is why and what actually helps.
The WooCommerce admin bypasses all caching, runs expensive postmeta queries, and competes with visitor traffic for server resources. Here is what causes it and what genuinely helps.
The average WooCommerce store runs 30-50 plugins, adding 200-800ms of PHP execution and up to 2MB of assets per page. Here is how to measure, reduce, and ultimately eliminate plugin bloat.