Challenge
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The Full Story
Are you losing customers before they even complete a purchase?
Our ecommerce mystery shopping experience revealed just how easily poor customer experience can block sales and damage brand perception.
We set out to buy T-shirts from four companies and then return them to evaluate each brand’s complete customer journey. We expected challenges during the return process, but surprisingly, some companies created barriers before we could even make a purchase.
These pre-purchase friction points offer crucial lessons for any business looking to optimize their customer experience and reduce cart abandonment.
Strict Policies and Poor UX Block Revenue
Two retailers didn't make it into our full mystery shopping study because their UX and CX issues prevented us from purchasing.
Tiny Boutique Barriers
One retailer only offered store credit for returns. We understood, given their size constraints, smaller businesses often can't provide full cash refunds due to cash flow limitations.
While this restriction meant we couldn’t include the retailer in our study, we appreciated that their policy was at least documented clearly. This transparency prevents customers from feeling misled later, even if it influences some purchasing decisions upfront.
That said, store credit-only policies may discourage purchases for some customers, especially if the return terms aren’t front and center.
Luxury Letdowns
On a luxury retailer’s site, our corporate credit card was repeatedly declined. The checkout system provided no explanation for the failure, leaving us guessing whether it was a location mismatch, card issue, or system error.
When we contacted customer support for help, the agents couldn't identify the cause either. Rather than exploring possibilities like policy restrictions on corporate cards, they simply instructed us to call our bank.
We experienced a similar situation with a second luxury brand.
Despite the high service standards expected of luxury brands, these agents weren't equipped to troubleshoot their own payment policies, leaving customers without solutions even when they wanted to complete a purchase.
Both luxury retailers we attempted to shop at demonstrated similar pre-purchase friction, ultimately forcing us to use a personal credit card to include the luxury tier in our study.
UX and CX Enhancements That Save Sales
Don't let poor customer experience cost you revenue. Following these best practices can transform your CX and remove purchase barriers:
Make Policies Transparent
State your return, exchange, and payment policies clearly throughout the customer journey. Users should understand exactly what they're agreeing to before clicking purchase.
When customers make uninformed decisions, they're more likely to feel frustrated when they discover limitations later. Clear, upfront communication about store credit policies, return windows, or payment restrictions empowers customers to make confident choices.
Although the tiny boutique we tried to mystery-shop had restrictive return policies, they earned points for clear policy communication. Transparency builds trust, even when policies aren't ideal.
Train Agents on Payment Policies
When agents can't provide answers, customers lose trust in your brand and often choose competitors. We experienced this firsthand when multiple luxury brands couldn't resolve our corporate card issue.
If you have restrictions on payment methods, ensure your support team knows about them and can troubleshoot effectively. Agents should consider payment policy conflicts as a first possibility when addressing checkout failures.
Prioritize First-Call Resolution (FCR)
Focus on solving customer problems completely on the first interaction rather than rushing through calls or chats.
When agents feel pressured by average handle time (AHT) metrics, they're less likely to investigate thoroughly.
This can create a cycle where customers contact support repeatedly with unresolved issues — and, in the worst-case scenario, have to re-explain their problem to every new chatbot or agent they encounter — ultimately leading to more frustration and longer total resolution times.
For those rare instances when an issue can't be resolved in a single interaction, ensure agents have access to the full context of previous conversations so customers never have to start from square one.
Resolving these friction points often requires collaboration between product, payments, and support teams. Strong cross-functional alignment pays off in smoother CX and fewer lost purchases.
Maintain Brand Voice Consistency
Empathy and brand voice continuity can't disappear when customers need help. This consistency becomes especially important when customers are experiencing purchasing difficulties and may already feel frustrated.
Cold, unhelpful responses during support interactions can completely undermine your brand experience. If your marketing and website reflect warmth and premium service, your customer support must match that tone.
Similarly, if your brand voice is polished and professional, overly casual support interactions can feel out of place and diminish the sense of credibility your brand has worked to establish.
Implementing AI tools can help agents standardize tone, style, and messaging across channels, so every interaction aligns with customer expectations.
Stop CX Issues Before They Impact Your Bottom Line
Poor UX and CX during the purchase process can derail transactions, damage your brand reputation, and drive potential customers to competitors.
At SupportNinja, we help companies identify and eliminate these gaps throughout the full CX lifecycle before they impact revenue, creating smooth customer journeys that convert visitors into loyal customers.
Want to see what we discovered when we could actually complete purchases? Dive into our ecommerce mystery shopping report to learn how four brands handle the full customer journey from checkout to returns, and which strategies drive the highest customer satisfaction.
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