In the past I would have focused on API limitations and technology agility during peak times. Before we started using BigCommerce, we originally thought that their infrastructure would allow for an infinite number of requests, but we had to discover that poorly written scripts could greatly increase the amount of time it took users to experience their site. The lesson learned was how important it is to have a synchronized digital toolchain. So now I advise developers that they need to do extremely extensive stress testing on their API calls prior to their go-live date to ensure that they maintain their primary control of the system during major sales events and that technical precision at the backend is the key to providing a high-performance, highly resilient storefront.
Here's some free advice for your BigCommerce launch: figure out your data integrations before you go live. I didn't, and we ended up with order messes and wrong report numbers. After taking extra time to test everything, we caught a shipping plugin error early that would have wrecked our fulfillment. Trust me, that upfront work saves you a massive headache later. If you have any questions, feel free to reach out to my personal email
If only I had known when I started my BigCommerce store how much of an impact marketplaces such as Mercado Libre would have on e-commerce. According to forecasts from various sources, Peru's B2C e-commerce market is expected to exceed USD 100 billion by 2033. It was approximately USD 15-16 billion in 2024, with over 80% of all transactions occurring via mobile devices. However, independent stores are at a great disadvantage in building trust and traffic without a significant marketing investment. Below are some key takeaways I learned the hard way: Driving direct traffic is extremely difficult. It is estimated that marketplaces account for 60-70% of all e-commerce sales. I wish I had started selling my products on Mercado Libre while simultaneously establishing my brand and had allocated 20-30% of my budget to pay-per-click (PPC) advertising from day one. If you do not offer local payment options on your website, you will experience high rates of cart abandonment, or "lost sales". Logistics is very difficult. For this reason, having multiple carriers and determining shipping zones based on realistic distances is extremely important when shipping to provincial areas. Electronic invoicing through SUNAT is required by law, and mobile optimisation is essential for compliance. Both factors affect conversions in a mobile-first place.
I've launched hundreds of sites over 35+ years, and here's what consistently bites people: **they don't get enough actual humans testing the site before launch.** Everyone thinks automated testing tools catch everything, but they don't. I learned this the hard way when a client's form was technically "working" but sending submissions into a spam folder nobody checked for three weeks--we lost actual sales before someone finally tested it themselves. **Get your ex-girlfriend to look at it.** Seriously. We had a furniture store owner's teenage nephew find that their mobile checkout buttons were completely hidden on certain Android devices. The dev team had only tested on iPhones. Another time, a friend's mom pointed out that nobody over 50 could read the gray text on a slightly less gray background--something the 30-year-old design team never noticed. **Test a real purchase with real money before you go live.** Not a test transaction--an actual purchase. One of our Shopify clients finded their discount codes were applying twice, essentially giving products away at 60% off instead of 30%. They would've hemorrhaged money if we hadn't caught it during a live test purchase the night before launch.
We wish we had known how fast parts complexity overwhelms storefront logic. HVAC catalogs look simple until variations create silent dead ends. We built a fitment questionnaire only after returns exposed gaps. Start with a decision tree that mirrors technician thinking. Map every question to a SKU set and exclusion rules. Put that logic on category pages not only product pages. Also require serial or model inputs before showing compatible accessories. This reduces wrong carts and support tickets while raising conversion.
I wish I'd known that **tracking and analytics setup needs to be bulletproof before you flip the switch.** We launched an e-commerce site for a franchise client on BigCommerce, and their conversion tracking was firing on page loads instead of actual purchases. For three weeks, we thought we were crushing it--until we realized the data was completely wrong and we'd been optimizing toward garbage metrics. We had to pause campaigns, audit every tag in Google Tag Manager, and rebuild the conversion funnel from scratch. Cost us about $4K in wasted ad spend and two weeks of momentum. Now I never launch without a full tracking audit: test purchases, event verification in GA4, and cross-checking revenue numbers against the actual CRM. The other brutal lesson? **Your site speed on mobile will kill you faster than bad creative.** One client's product pages were taking 8+ seconds to load because of uncompressed images and a bloated theme. Their paid traffic was solid, but bounce rate was 74%. We stripped it down, optimized images, and switched hosting--bounce rate dropped to 38% and conversions doubled in the same ad campaigns.
I've built websites for over 20 years and launched my own agency in 2020, so I've seen plenty of platform launches go sideways. Here's what I wish I'd known earlier that applies to any e-commerce platform, BigCommerce included. **Local search optimization matters way more than you think.** When I started focusing on local businesses, I finded that 46% of all searches are local, and "near me" searches have exploded by 500%+ in recent years. Most store owners obsess over their product pages but completely ignore their Google Business Profile and local directory listings. One of my HVAC clients saw their lead flow jump dramatically just by properly optimizing their local presence--even though they had a solid website already. **Your conversion setup needs to be dead simple from day one.** I've seen businesses lose leads because their checkout process required too many steps or their "call now" button wasn't prominently placed. We build one-click calling directly into search results for our clients, and the difference is massive. Don't wait to streamline--78% of local searches result in an offline conversion, so if your contact process has any friction, you're bleeding money. **Track real metrics, not vanity metrics.** Early on, I got caught up in website traffic numbers instead of actual lead quality. Now we guarantee our clients 5 qualified leads because we learned that 10,000 visitors mean nothing if none of them convert. Set up proper conversion tracking from launch day, not six months later when you're trying to figure out why sales are flat.
My biggest mistake? Not spending more time on product photos and descriptions before we launched. Figuring out BigCommerce's catalog was a pain, but it was crucial for jewelry buyers who zoom in on every detail. Good visuals meant fewer customer questions and more decisive purchases. Honestly, hire a professional photographer and get all your specs right from day one. It saves you so much trouble later. If you have any questions, feel free to reach out to my personal email
I wish I'd known how much site speed actually matters for SEO on BigCommerce. I once added a bunch of fancy apps to my store and my rankings dropped because the site slowed down. Now I keep things simple and choose speed over extra features. If you're starting out, test your site on different phones and computers all the time. It prevents so many problems later on. If you have any questions, feel free to reach out to my personal email
One of the most critical lessons often overlooked before a BigCommerce launch is the sheer importance of optimizing the 'Checkout Experience' over the 'Storefront Aesthetics.' While a beautiful design builds initial brand trust, the actual conversion happens at the finish line; many merchants realize too late that complex shipping rules or a lack of localized payment gateways are major friction points for global customers. I wish more store owners knew that a successful launch isn't just about going live, but about ensuring that your API integrations and data flows are stress-tested for scale before the first surge of traffic hits. Prioritizing a seamless, mobile-first checkout process from day one will save you more revenue—and headaches—than any high-resolution banner ever could. Furthermore, understanding the nuances of the built-in SEO tools versus third-party apps early on allows for a much cleaner site structure that pays dividends in organic search long after the launch hype fades. Focus on the plumbing of the site first, and the decorations second.
I wish I'd known how critical message alignment is between your ad - landing page - checkout flow before launching e-commerce stores. We had a client (Corefirst) who was running ads with zero sales, and when we dug in, their messaging completely fell apart halfway through the buyer journey. Their ads promised one thing, the landing page talked about something slightly different, and by checkout the customer was confused about what they were actually buying. We fixed the messaging to tell one consistent story from click to purchase, and they went from basically $0 to nearly six figures monthly within a few months. The lesson: walk through your entire customer journey like you've never seen your brand before. If there's any disconnect between what the ad says and what the page delivers--or if your value prop shifts even slightly--you're bleeding conversions. We've seen 40%+ drop-off rates just from misaligned headlines between ad copy and landing pages. Test the whole flow, not just individual pieces. One confused moment kills the sale.
As a support manager, I never thought about how much the default transactional logic would dictate my support team's workload during the first 90 days post-launch. With all the excitement around the visual theme, the real friction comes from gaps between when the customer gets their order confirmation and when they receive their delivery notification. If you do not proactively customize the automated triggers and self-service order tracking, you are voluntarily introducing a flood of "Where Is My Order?" tickets that will drain your operational efficiency. We have consistently found that successful launches are all about prioritizing the post-purchase work flow above how pretty your home page is. This shifts your support from a reactive model to a proactive model in which your system answers the next question before the customer even thinks to ask it. Getting an early start on mapping out these communication triggers will help you avoid the burnout that can occur when a "successful" launch destroys your operations. Launching an online store is a marathon of little decisions, and it can be easy to feel overwhelmed by the technical checklist. However, every order placed: is tied to someone who is waiting for a confirmation that their purchase was a good decision. Once you complete the communication part properly, the rest of the tech stack becomes infinitely easier to manage.
As an agency that's helped brands launch on BigCommerce and other platforms, one thing I wish more founders knew upfront is that traffic without conversion clarity is just expensive noise. A lot of teams obsess over theme design and paid ads before they've nailed their offer, positioning, and on-page messaging. I've seen launches where the tech stack was flawless but the product pages were vague. No clear differentiator, no strong proof, no objection handling. The result was decent traffic and disappointing revenue. The hard lesson is that your store isn't just a catalog. It's a sales argument. If I could rewind most launches, I'd spend more time on the first 30 percent of the funnel. Tight headline, crystal-clear value prop, sharp FAQs, and social proof that actually answers buyer doubts. Get that right, and everything else gets cheaper. Get it wrong, and you just pay more to learn the same lesson.
One thing I would have done differently was to get a better grasp on the way that BigCommerce handles complex product filtering for a catalog as technical as ours. When we first made the transition to BigCommerce, we didn't realize just how much our customer base would rely on very specific product attributes, such as torso length or hydration compatibility, to find the gear they need. We set up a more standard approach to product filtering, only to quickly realize that hikers are looking for ways to find gear that are far more detailed than simply by price point or even color. The important lesson learned was that "standard" out-of-the-box solutions often require significant customization to meet the high intent level of your customer base. As a result, we had to go back and restructure our product data to support a far more robust approach to faceted product filtering, which ultimately helped improve the overall speed and experience for the customer. If I had my way, I would have spent more time auditing the most detailed customer queries to ensure that the overall platform architecture was more conducive to supporting those discovery paths for the customer. It's taught us that the overall technical underpinnings of your store are just as important as the gear you are selling.
I wish I'd known that **traffic is worthless without a working buyer journey**. We see this constantly--stores launch, drive paid traffic, then wonder why sales don't scale. The answer is almost always buried in the conversion path, not the platform. Before launching, I'd map every single step from first click to checkout confirmation. Not just the happy path--map what happens when someone hesitates, when they hit the product page from mobile vs desktop, when they add to cart but don't buy. We run 200+ point audits on Shopify stores and find an average of 15-20 high-impact conversion blockers that existed from day one. BigCommerce is no different. The specific killer? **Assuming your product pages will convert because they look good.** I've watched brands with stunning design get a 1.2% conversion rate because their mobile cart flow had three unnecessary steps, or their shipping costs appeared too late. One client fixed checkout friction and average order value jumped 34% in two weeks--same traffic, same products, just less resistance in the path to purchase. Test your entire funnel under real conditions before you spend a dollar on ads. Walk through it on mobile. Have someone outside your company try to buy. Record their screen. You'll find issues you never saw because you know the site too well. Fix those first, then launch. Otherwise you're paying to find problems instead of paying to make sales.
BigCommerce Launch Lessons: "Should Have Known That!" I should've planned the timeline properly (scope the project in advance), because I didn't do that, and it caused chaos. I rushed in and did not have a detailed plan. Data migration, shipping setup, and custom integrations were all delayed, which made us miss deadlines and added a lot of stress. Next time, I will work backward from the launch date and plan every step out (assigning tasks to people creating checklists, and taking advantage of the services that a Launch Coach provides from BigCommerce early in the process). The result was fewer errors, months off the timeline for launch, and first-month sales increased by 30% due to smooth operations because I was able to plan. Planning is the key to winning.
Test your checkout flow on mobile. Seriously. At Japantastic, we were losing customers over untranslated buttons and slow-loading pages. They'd get frustrated and just leave. Now, before any launch, I walk through the whole purchase process on my phone and fix anything that makes me pause or feels clunky. It's a simple check that keeps you from losing sales. If you have any questions, feel free to reach out to my personal email
I wish I'd known how many "almost sales" you lose if your store isn't emotionally easy to buy from. Before launch, I was obsessed with making everything look beautiful, but the real magic is removing tiny points of friction: shipping surprises, confusing sizing, slow mobile pages, too many steps at checkout. Those little snags don't feel like problems to you when you're building, but they feel loud to a customer in a vulnerable moment of choosing something intimate. The lesson I learned is to treat launch like fitting lingerie: it has to breathe, move, and feel effortless. I now test the entire purchase flow on my phone like a real shopper, from product page to confirmation, and I tighten the details until nothing distracts from the feeling of "yes."
I revamped my BigCommerce approach after an initial launch failed where 75% of visitors abandoned their carts. Despite steady traffic, sales were zero because I underestimated checkout friction. I discovered that a glitchy Stripe integration and the lack of a "guest checkout" option were killing my conversions. I immediately implemented one-click guest checkout and Apple Pay, which caused abandonment to plunge to 42%. By removing these barriers, my revenue tripled within the first month. This failure taught me that a "rushed" launch is an expensive one; a rigorous pre-launch UX audit focusing on mobile flow and payment gateways is non-negotiable. I proved that in 2026, the last mile of the customer journey is where the profit is won or lost.
I wish I'd known how critical page load speed would be before launch. Sounds basic, but most people obsess over design and features while ignoring performance--then wonder why their conversion rates tank. I learned this working with Shopbox where we rebuilt their entire site on Webflow. Their old tech stack was bloated with third-party scripts and unoptimized images. After we compressed images, implemented lazy loading, and cut unnecessary fonts, their bounce rate dropped noticeably and user engagement improved immediately. The brutal truth: every second of load time costs you money. We saw this with Hopstack too--their 5-year-old design was bringing organic traffic but converting poorly because the experience was frustratingly slow. Once we stripped it down to a minimal, performance-focused build, their engagement metrics completely transformed. My advice? Run a Lighthouse audit before you populate your store with products. Fix performance issues when you have 10 products, not 1,000. It's exponentially harder to optimize after launch when you're already bleeding revenue from slow pages.