I run an ecom site called Myloops, and while looking for ways to grow revenue, I realized I didn't have a traffic problem, but a conversion problem.
So I tried to figure out why conversion wasn’t higher.
I started using different AI tools to analyze my pages and suggest improvements. It helped, but it was honestly pretty painful:
-lots of back and forth
-rewriting prompts
-trying to extract something actionable
It worked… but it took a lot of time.
After going through that process and testing changes, I ended up increasing conversion by ~26%.
Most of the gains came from fixing clarity issues:
-making it obvious what the product is within a few seconds
-rewriting headlines around outcomes instead of features
-reducing noise around the CTA
-adding trust elements closer to the decision point
Nothing groundbreaking individually, but combined it made a big difference.
That’s when it clicked for me:
a lot of sites, like mine, don’t have a traffic problem — they have a clarity problem. And it's not just ecom, it's all type of sites who are selling something.
So I ended up building a small tool to automate this kind of analysis, because doing it manually with AI was just too time-consuming.
I’ve just opened a beta for it — if anyone wants to try it and give feedback, here it is:
Curious — for those who’ve worked on conversion for your site:
what changes had the biggest impact for you?
That 26% from clarity fixes is a great signal-especially because none of those changes are “new features”.
What I’ve been noticing across a lot of sites:
clarity issues aren’t random, they’re usually systemic.
Meaning:
it’s not just the headline or CTA-it’s how the entire flow builds (or breaks) expectation.
For example:
-headline promises X
-page explains Y
-CTA leads to Z
Even small mismatches there can quietly kill conversion.
The interesting part is that once you fix that alignment, improvements tend to compound across the whole funnel-not just the page.
Curious, did you see the lift mostly on the first interaction, or further down the funnel as well?
One more thing that’s been interesting in these cases:
a lot of “clarity fixes” are actually just removing hidden friction.
Not obvious stuff like bad design-but small things like:
-slight mismatch between promise and page
-too many micro-decisions before action
-unclear “what happens next” after click
Individually they seem minor, but together they create hesitation.
When you remove that, conversion jumps without adding anything new.
That’s why those 20–30% lifts often come from simplification, not optimization.