From Visit to Purchase: Optimizing Your Store’s User Journey

TMO GroupMarch 20, 2026
From Visit to Purchase: Optimizing Your Store’s User Journey

Many established D2C brands have already built reliable traffic acquisition engines, with paid media, SEO, content, and social channels delivering a consistent flow of visitors. Yet, when traffic metrics are set alongside revenue figures, underperformance is often difficult to attribute to a single cause: visitors browse without adding to cart; add-to-cart rates appear reasonable but checkout completion lags; checkouts are initiated but transactions don't follow through.

Industry data suggests this pattern is widespread. According to IRP Commerce, the global average e-commerce conversion rate stood at just 1.56% as of February 2026. For many brands, the instinct is to respond by increasing traffic investment. However, as we've explored in previous articles, persistently low conversion rates tend to reflect systemic friction distributed across multiple stages of a user's journey.

Low Conversion? Diagnosing 6 Types of Friction in eCommerceFrom insufficient contrast to path deviation and promise-to-delivery clarity, we explore 6 type of user frictions and how to identify them.

Low Conversion? Diagnosing 6 Types of Friction in eCommerce

This article examines each stage of the D2C conversion funnel, identifies where friction most commonly occurs, and makes the case for a full-funnel diagnostic approach over fragmented optimization.

Looking to address a conversion bottleneck? Contact TMO to learn about our Website CRO Audits: a full-funnel assessment of your e-commerce's shopping experience.

What is a D2C conversion funnel?

In e-commerce, a conversion funnel is the sequence of user actions that leads from first visit to completed purchase. In analytics terms, that journey is typically measured through milestones such as session start or landing, product view, add to cart, checkout initiation, shipping and payment submission, and purchase. Friction at any point reduces the yield of the steps that follow.

In practice, those moments are shaped by what users encounter across distinct sections of the site. For diagnostic purposes, this article examines the funnel through the pages and touch points where drop-off typically occurs: entry pages, navigation, Product Listing Pages (PLPs), Product Detail Pages (PDPs), cart, and checkout. This lens helps identify where behavioral friction is actually being created across the purchase journey.

1. Homepage & Traffic Entry

D2C site visitors are not a homogeneous group. Even when entering through the same page, their intent can vary considerably. Drawing on UX research principles, visitors to a D2C homepage can generally be grouped into three intent types:

User TypeBehaviorCore NeedDrop-off Risk
Goal-directedArrives with a specific product in mind; navigates directly via search or menuFast, low-friction path to the target productExits immediately if search results are inaccurate or absent
ExploratoryBrowsing without a defined objective; relies on visual cues and featured contentDrawn in by bestsellers, new arrivals, or trending categoriesLeaves without action if the homepage fails to guide them forward
EvaluativeFirst encounter with the brand; assessing whether it merits further engagementQuick read on brand credibility and professionalismBounces if the value proposition is unclear or unconvincing

A homepage that does not account for all three intent types will generate unnecessary drop-off at the very top of the funnel.

Entry points are more dispersed than they appear

For brands running paid media and content marketing, the homepage is frequently not where visitors actually land. Campaign landing pages, PDPs, and promotional pages each function as entry points with their own conversion responsibilities. Optimizing the homepage while overlooking these high-traffic pages means meaningful leakage is occurring at first contact, losses that typically surface in analytics as little more than an elevated bounce rate.

2. Navigation & Category Exploration

Navigation structure is one of the most consistently underdiagnosed sources of conversion loss on D2C sites. Unlike checkout abandonment, which is measurable and relatively visible, navigation friction produces gradual, diffuse drop-off that is difficult to trace back to its structural cause. The symptoms appear as high category page bounce rates or below-benchmark add-to-cart figures, while the underlying problem goes unidentified.

From a conversion funnel perspective, navigation is the skeleton of the entire purchase journey. When the path carries ambiguity or imposes unnecessary steps, downstream optimization loses much of its value: users simply don't reach those pages. Common navigation friction points:

Friction TypeHow It AppearsConversion Impact
IA misaligned with user mental modelsCategory structure reflects internal business logic rather than how users searchUsers cannot intuitively locate their target category; bounce rate rises
Promotions displacing core navigationCampaign pages dominate primary menu entries, obscuring standard purchase pathsHigh-intent users cannot find their entry point
Excessive menu depthUsers must click through multiple levels to reach a target pagePatience is exhausted before product pages are reached
Information architecture problems are among the hardest for internal teams to surface and among the most consistently identified through a structured CRO audit.

3. Product Pages: PDP & PLP

The Product Detail Page is where visitors make the transition from interest to add-to-cart action. It is also the most functionally complex page in the funnel, required to simultaneously communicate product value, build purchase confidence, address objections, and prompt a decision.

Too much information increases cognitive load; too little fails to support the purchase decision, particularly for higher-ticket products. Calibrating this balance effectively requires grounding in actual user behavioral data and an objective UX evaluation: internal assumptions and accumulated convention are rarely sufficient on their own.

The PLP: an underestimated conversion stage

Product Listing Pages determine how many visitors actually reach a PDP. How users filter, compare, pause, and disengage on a category page directly sets the ceiling for everything downstream.

PLP DimensionUnderperforming StateHigh-Performing State
Filter optionsBased on inventory structure or internal categoriesBased on how users actually make purchase decisions
Product card informationImage and name onlyPrice, key attributes, ratings, stock status
Default sort orderListed by date addedSorted by relevance, sales volume, or rating

Case Example: 

ASOS has continuously refined its PLP filtering system, introducing multi-dimensional options including style, color, fit, and size with promotional flags and color variant previews directly on product cards. Users are able to gather sufficient comparison information without leaving the listing page, measurably shortening the path to the PDP.

ASOS' Product Listing Page

4. Cart & Checkout

By the time a visitor reaches the cart, they have already completed the most demanding part of the journey: finding the product, evaluating it, and forming an intent to purchase. This is the highest-intent stage of the funnel, and correspondingly the stage where losing a user carries the greatest cost. 

According to Baymard Institute research (2025), the leading reasons users abandon during checkout include:

ReasonShare of Abandonment
I was browsing / not ready to buy43%
Extra costs too high (shipping, etc.)39%
Delivery was too slow21%
I didn't trust the site with my credit card19%
Had to create an account19%
Too long/complex checkout process18%
Return policy wasn't satisfactory15%
Website had errors/crashed15%
I couldn't see total order cost upfront14%
Not enough payment methods10%

The data points to an important conclusion: the majority of checkout abandonment is not driven by a genuine change in purchase intent, but by process friction that brands have the ability to identify and address.

The cart as a final confidence checkpoint

The cart page is where users make their last value assessment before committing to checkout. When cart information lacks clarity, policy reassurances are absent, or the page introduces distracting elements, users who were close to completing a purchase may choose to defer, often permanently.

Checkout Drop? How Customization Can Boost Your ConversionsTailoring checkout to your business is key to healthier conversion rates. Learn how to diagnose and approach your store's next optimization.

Checkout Drop? How Customization Can Boost Your Conversions

Mobile checkout as a compounding friction point

Over 70% of e-commerce traffic arrives via mobile, meaning the majority of checkout attempts occur on mobile devices. Yet the mobile checkout experience is typically the most under-adapted part of the purchase journey. Form usability, payment flow, and CTA accessibility on smaller screens all influence whether a transaction completes. For most sites, this remains an area of material, addressable leakage.

5. Trust & Credibility

Trust is an ongoing evaluation that users conduct at every stage of the funnel. From the first impression on the homepage to the payment screen at checkout, users are continuously assessing: Is this brand credible? Does this product deliver what it claims? Is my data handled responsibly?

Site SectionUser's Core Trust QuestionEffective Trust Signals
HomepageIs this a legitimate, established brand?Brand credentials, press coverage, partner endorsements
PDPDoes this product actually perform as described?User reviews, ingredient or material transparency, third-party certifications
CartIs my order protected if something goes wrong?Returns policy reminder, secure payment badges
CheckoutIs my payment information safe?SSL indicators, recognized payment methods, security certifications
About pageIs there a credible organization behind this site?Founder background, brand values, sourcing or production standards

A trust gap at any single stage can create compounding hesitation. It won't necessarily trigger an immediate exit, but surfaces as drop-off further down the funnel. About pages, policy pages, and FAQs serve as deep trust anchors: they don't drive add-to-cart directly, but they determine whether a hesitant user decides the brand warrants their confidence.

eCommerce UI/UX: 7 Insights from Mobile Design in AsiaThese 7 engagement-boosting UI/UX design features from Asia are a must-have when localizing your eCommerce store in China and other markets.

eCommerce UI/UX: 7 Insights from Mobile Design in Asia

Why a Full-Funnel View Leads to Better CRO Decisions

Understanding the conversion funnel as a whole makes it easier to see how users move through the site, where progress slows, and where drop-off begins to compound. Looking at these stages together helps surface not just isolated symptoms, but the underlying points of friction that deserve attention first.

Site SectionCore Conversion TaskTypical Drop-off Signal
Homepage & entryRetain visitor; surface a relevant next stepHigh bounce rate, short average session duration
NavigationEnable the user to locate their target productHigh category page bounce, low add-to-cart rate
PLP & PDPConvert interest into add-to-cart actionLow PDP scroll depth, add-to-cart below benchmark
CartConsolidate purchase intentHigh cart abandonment, low checkout initiation
CheckoutComplete the transactionStep-by-step drop-off through checkout flow
TrustSustain confidence throughout the journeyAnomalously low conversion on high-traffic pages

This full-picture view also makes prioritization more practical. Instead of optimizing pages in isolation, teams can identify which issues are most likely to affect revenue, which problems are structural rather than local, and where limited optimization effort is likely to produce the strongest return.

A professional full-funnel CRO audit translates these questions from informed speculation into evidence-based conclusions:

  • Identification of high-value drop-off points that internal optimization has not reached
  • A prioritized optimization roadmap ranked by estimated revenue impact
  • A measurable conversion baseline against which future improvements can be tracked
  • Data-backed direction for site redesigns, reducing the risk associated with large-scale changes

Working With TMO: A Systematic View of Your Conversion Funnel

For most D2C brands with established traffic, there is typically more conversion potential within the existing visitor base than additional traffic investment alone can unlock. Systemic friction distributed across multiple funnel stages rather than concentrated in one visible problem area is a common reason revenue underperforms relative to traffic volume.

TMO's Website CRO (Conversion Rate Optimization)Audit provides a structured, evidence-based assessment of the complete conversion path from traffic entry to completed purchase. We identify friction at each stage, map the full customer journey, and deliver a prioritized optimization roadmap so your team has clear direction on where to focus for the highest revenue impact.

Get in touch with our CRO team to discuss your site's conversion challenges and explore which audit package is the right fit.

FAQ

What is the difference between a Landing Page CRO Audit and a Website CRO Audit?

A Landing Page CRO Audit focuses on specific high-traffic pages: campaign landing pages, paid traffic entry points, key PDPs, and is well-suited to brands that need targeted improvements with measurable short-term impact. A Website CRO Audit covers the entire customer journey from entry to checkout, and is the appropriate choice when conversion issues are distributed across multiple funnel stages and internal optimization has reached its limits.

Our team has already completed several rounds of optimization. Is a professional audit still worthwhile?

Internal optimization efforts typically operate within existing data views and established team assumptions, which can make it difficult to identify structural issues that fall outside the current frame of reference. A professional audit introduces an external, full-journey perspective that surfaces high-value drop-off points internal teams consistently overlook.

How are audit findings put into practice? 

TMO Group's audit delivers a diagnostic report and a prioritized optimization roadmap. Implementation can be executed by your internal team or supported through TMO's follow-on services. All recommendations are developed with practical executability in mind.

Which businesses are best positioned to benefit from a full-funnel audit? 

Brands that tend to see the strongest return share several characteristics: an established and stable traffic base; multiple rounds of internal optimization with limited overall conversion improvement; difficulty attributing conversion underperformance to a specific funnel stage; or a planned site redesign where data-backed direction would meaningfully reduce execution risk.

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