I need some feedback on my website and how I can generate sales

  1. teraroza-tech.myshopify.com

  2. I’m new to this and I want some feedback on my website and some tips on how to generate sales.

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Hello @Alexander_Huggins great design overall but still need some CRO work

Hey @Alexander_Huggins you did a great job but you can do make more attractive store i think it is your first time to design or develop a store so feel free if you have any question about it

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Very nice. Wow factors!

The site loads fine and the layout is clean, so the foundation is there. But there are a few things working against you right now.

The spin-to-win popup that fires the second someone lands on the page is a problem. Nobody wants to hand over their email before they even know what the store sells. If you want to keep it, at least delay it by 30 seconds or trigger it on exit intent instead. Right now it just feels pushy.

Every single product showing exactly 4 reviews is a red flag. When a brand new store has perfectly uniform review counts across all products, visitors notice. It actually makes the store feel less trustworthy than having zero reviews. I’d remove the fake ones and start collecting real ones after your first sales.

The product mix is really scattered. You’ve got blood sugar watches, cervical traction devices, face steamers, bald head shavers, smart glasses, and wireless chargers all in the same store. There’s no clear category or audience holding it together. Someone shopping for a health device isn’t browsing for a head shaver in the same session. Pick 2-3 related product lines and build the store around those. “Tech gadgets” is too broad to build a brand around.

A couple more quick things. Some products are marked “Sold Out” on the homepage. If you can’t sell them, hide them. Showing out-of-stock items on your main page makes the store look neglected. Also, the navigation just says “Catalog” with no subcategories, so there’s no way to browse by type.

For generating sales specifically, the hard truth is that traffic won’t convert if the store doesn’t build trust. Get a custom domain, write a real About page, and narrow your product focus first. Then start with targeted traffic sources like TikTok or Pinterest for gadgets, not broad paid ads.

What kind of products are you most interested in selling long term?

Hi @Alexander_Huggins

Being new to this is totally fine but there are a few things worth fixing early before you start putting money into generating sales, because traffic into a store that isn’t ready just disappears.

First thing, get a custom domain. teraroza-tech.myshopify.com immediately signals to anyone landing on the store that it’s not fully set up yet. For a tech gadget store where people are already cautious about buying from somewhere they don’t recognise, that URL is working against you from the first second. A proper domain is cheap and it makes everything feel more legitimate instantly.

The homepage needs to tell people why they should buy from you specifically. Right now someone lands and sees a wall of products with no context about who you are or what makes this store worth trusting. Electronics and gadget stores are everywhere online and the ones that convert are the ones that give people a reason to stay. Even a short clear line about what Teraroza Tech stands for and who it’s for would make a real difference.

The number of sold out products is also something to address. When someone clicks on something they’re interested in and hits a sold out page it’s frustrating and it makes the catalogue feel neglected. Either restock those items or remove them until you can.

Add a slider cart. With a catalogue this diverse covering massagers, smartwatches, beauty devices and gaming gear, the cross-sell opportunities inside the cart are genuinely strong. Someone adding the pain relief knee massager should be seeing the smart neck massager or the hand pain relief device right there in the cart. A free shipping progress bar in there would also nudge people toward adding one more gadget to hit a threshold.

Don’t go installing separate apps for each of these cart features though. It adds cost and slows your store down noticeably. Something like iCart handles the slider cart, progress bar and in-cart cross-sells all together without the mess.

Hi @Alexander_Huggins

http://teraroza-tech.myshopify.com/ is currently not showing a customer-ready storefront, which makes the store appear unprofessional and prevents visitors from trusting or buying.

To make it look professional:

Remove the password and publish the theme

Design a clear homepage layout

Add products with quality images and descriptions

Create About, Contact, Shipping, Returns, and Privacy pages

Set up proper menu and footer navigation

Add logo, branding, contact email, and social links

Test mobile and desktop responsiveness

Connect a custom domain (not myshopify link)