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Most e-commerce startups don’t have a traffic problem. They have a conversion leak.

I’ve been analyzing a lot of early-stage e-commerce startups recently, and there’s a pattern that keeps showing up.

Most of them don’t have a traffic problem.

They have a conversion leak.


On paper, everything looks like it’s working:

• traffic is coming in
• ads are running
• CAC looks “acceptable”

But revenue isn’t scaling the way it should.


What’s actually happening is much harder to see.

Visitors land on the site and in the first few seconds they’re trying to answer:

“Do I trust this?”
“Is this relevant for me?”
“What should I do next?”

If that’s not immediately clear, they don’t analyze it.

They leave.


The dangerous part is:

There’s no clear signal.

No error.
No alert.
No obvious break.

Just underperformance.


So most teams respond by doubling down on:

  • more traffic
  • more ad spend
  • more experiments

Instead of fixing the moment where the decision actually happens.


The shift I’ve seen in the best-performing stores is simple:

They stop asking:
“How do we get more visitors?”

And start asking: “Where are we losing the ones we already paid for?”


In many cases, fixing that has a bigger impact than scaling traffic.


Curious how others here approach this:

When growth stalls, do you look first at acquisition…

or at what happens after someone lands on your site?

posted to Icon for group Startups
Startups
on March 29, 2026
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