Most ecommerce founders obsess over ad cost and product pages. They tune hero images, rewrite product descriptions, and A/B test button colors. Meanwhile, the place where the business actually loses money — the checkout funnel — sits untouched and leaking. If you run a small ecommerce store and you’re trying to understand why traffic grew but revenue didn’t, the answer is usually waiting inside your checkout.
In my experience, the checkout funnel is where founders have the least visibility and the most assumptions. I’ve audited dozens of small stores and the pattern repeats: the top of the funnel gets scrutiny, the middle gets attention, and the bottom — where money changes hands — gets a wave of the hand. Let me show you what you’re probably missing.

The Average Checkout Loses 70% of Its Visitors
Industry research consistently shows that around 70% of initiated checkouts never complete. The Baymard Institute has tracked this for years, and the number barely moves — which means most stores have resigned themselves to it. They shouldn’t. A checkout that goes from 30% completion to 45% completion is a 50% revenue lift without a single new visitor.
For small stores, recovering even a fraction of that abandonment is more economical than scaling ad spend. Furthermore, better checkout flow makes ad spend more efficient, which compounds into the unit economics you’ll show investors or use to self-fund growth.
Miss #1: No Stage-by-Stage Visibility
Most small stores know cart-to-purchase as a single conversion number. They don’t know the drop-off at each micro-step in between. Consequently, when conversion drops, they don’t know where to look. That’s like a car losing fuel efficiency and only checking the tank.

Every checkout has at least five measurable stages. Track each one as its own metric, week over week:
| Stage | Trigger Event | Healthy Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Product → Add to cart | Click “Add to cart” | 5–12% |
| Cart → Checkout start | Open checkout page | 55–70% |
| Checkout → Address filled | Address form completion | 75–85% |
| Address → Payment method | Payment step reached | 80–90% |
| Payment → Purchase completed | Order confirmation | 85–95% |
These ranges assume warm traffic from someone already committed enough to add a product. If any of your stages sit below the low end of the range, you’ve found your leak. Specifically, most small stores lose the most between “cart viewed” and “checkout started” — that’s where shipping costs appear and buyers bounce.
Miss #2: Ignoring Mobile Drop-Off
Your desktop conversion might look fine. Your mobile conversion usually doesn’t. Yet most founders look at a blended conversion rate that hides the problem. Split the funnel by device and you’ll usually find mobile converting 30–50% lower than desktop at every stage.
Common causes: form fields too small, payment buttons below the keyboard, slow load on the billing step, autofill failing on name/address fields. None of these show up as “errors” — they show up as frustrated abandonment. In practice, fixing mobile usually lifts overall conversion by 8–15% on its own.
- Measure first: device-split conversion at each stage, not blended
- Test on real phones: emulator tests miss keyboard behavior and autofill issues
- Watch for payment keyboard: numeric input for card, mobile keyboard for name, email keyboard for contact
- Cut fields aggressively: every field you remove from mobile lifts completion measurably
Related: Website speed: why it matters and how to measure it covers how loading time in the checkout specifically destroys conversion on slower mobile connections.
Miss #3: Not Measuring the Cost Reveal
The single biggest abandonment trigger is “unexpected costs at checkout.” Shipping fees, taxes, service charges — revealed after the buyer committed emotionally. This is the moment most buyers bail, yet most stores don’t measure it as a distinct stage.

The fix is to measure drop-off at the exact step where cost changes. If your flow adds shipping fees on the “shipping method” step, that step should have its own event. When drop-off at that step exceeds 25%, you have either a pricing problem, a transparency problem, or both.
Solutions to test, in order of impact:
- Show total cost on the product page (estimate shipping by postal code early)
- Offer free shipping over a threshold and surface it on the cart
- Show taxes inclusively in the price for EU buyers — required by regulation anyway
- Progress indicator with dollar amount so buyers see the final total building up
Miss #4: Ignoring Payment Method Drop-Off
Each payment method you offer is a potential failure point. A card that fails validation. A wallet that refuses to load. A bank redirect that times out. Most stores treat payment as a single step, so they never see which method is causing problems.
Track payment initiated → payment succeeded per method. If your card completion rate is 90% but your bank-transfer completion is 60%, you’ve found either a UX problem or a legitimate fraud-filter issue — both worth knowing. In addition, some payment methods work poorly for specific countries; segmenting by country surfaces those regional failures.
Miss #5: Not Watching the Post-Purchase Moment
This isn’t technically checkout, but it’s where second purchases die. After the order confirmation, many stores send generic emails, skip the thank-you page optimization, and lose the warmest moment a customer will ever have with the brand.
Measure two things: the first-purchase to second-purchase rate over 90 days, and the newsletter signup rate from the confirmation page. These lead indicators predict whether you have a repeat-buyer engine or a one-and-done operation.
| Metric | Healthy Range (90 days) | Fix If Below |
|---|---|---|
| First → second purchase | 15–30% | Email sequence, replenishment nudges |
| Newsletter signup on confirmation | 10–20% | Better incentive on thank-you page |
| Refund rate | Under 5% | Expectation mismatch in product copy |
| Support tickets per order | Under 4% | Clearer shipping/tracking messages |
Related: Call-to-action buttons: how to track their performance covers how to instrument the buttons at each checkout stage so you can actually see the drop-offs.
A Quick Self-Audit
Answer these seven questions about your current store. Each “no” is a hidden leak:
- Can you name your completion rate for each of the five checkout stages?
- Do you track desktop and mobile conversion separately at each stage?
- Is drop-off at the “shipping/cost reveal” step measured as its own event?
- Do you split payment method success rates?
- Do you know your first-to-second purchase rate over 90 days?
- Have you tested the full checkout on a mid-range phone on a slow network in the last quarter?
- Is your cart-abandonment email sequence triggering off a real event, not just time?
Scoring: 7 yes = you’re in the top 5% of small stores. 4–6 = you’re normal. 3 or fewer = you’re leaking money and can recover it faster than any ad campaign would. For more on proper measurement discipline, the Nielsen Norman ecommerce usability research is an authoritative starting point.
Privacy-First Checkout Measurement
One concern I hear regularly: “Do I need invasive tracking to measure all this?” No. All five stages above can be tracked with first-party events you fire from your own site. No third-party cookies. No cross-site identifiers. Just your own backend saying “cart viewed,” “checkout started,” “payment attempted.”
In fact, first-party funnel data is more accurate than consent-dependent analytics, because it doesn’t evaporate when users opt out of cookies. Your server knows whether an order was placed — no consent banner required. See first-party data strategy: building analytics without third-party cookies for the broader framework.
Continue Learning
Explore more about understanding and improving your conversion flow:
- First-party data strategy: building analytics without third-party cookies — measuring without invasive tracking.
- The three revenue metrics every small team should track weekly — the numbers a checkout audit feeds into.
- Consent banners that don’t kill conversions — because some of that 70% drop-off is banner-related.
Bottom Line
The checkout funnel is where your traffic investment either pays back or disappears. Most ecommerce founders measure the top and skip the bottom. Track the five stages, split by device, isolate the cost reveal, audit each payment method, and watch the post-purchase moment. In conclusion, before you spend another dollar on ads, spend two hours understanding your own checkout. The ROI is almost always better than a new campaign.

