I have had some traffic on my store but no bites. Can y’all take a look at my shop for a honest review? www.uareproof.com
Hey @uareproof
Just curious, did you not have a look at how your website looks on desktop? Huge product images on homepage which makes the website looks suspicious. See the attached screenshots below.
Product page is better, but your home page? Needs a lot of work.
Topic beyond exhausted.
Use the search. Find the many others like yourself wondering why they don’t get sales. Look at their websites. Browse their products. Look for similarities. Look for things you should change. Do your research. Look at your market. Look at your products. Look at your business model. It’s no one’s responsibility but the merchant.
Looked at the site briefly. Moeed is right about the homepage images on desktop.
One thing worth checking separately: where is your traffic actually coming from? There’s a big difference between organic search traffic and social media traffic. Social (TikTok, Instagram) converts at 1-2% on a good day, while someone who Googled a specific product they’re already looking for converts at 5-10%. If most of your visitors are coming from social, low conversion might just be a traffic quality issue, not necessarily a store problem.
What are your main traffic sources in the last 30 days?
@Moeed @Maximus3 is 100% correct.
Also have you noticed that you have 2 contact in the main menu?
You need to actually go on your own website and make sure things are working properly…
For new visitors trust is one of the biggest factors before they decide to buy. Many online stores struggle with conversions when visitors can’t quickly verify things like reviews, brand credibility or clear policies.
Stronger value proposition on the homepage, When someone lands on your site it should be very clear within a few seconds,
What the product is
Who it’s for
Why it’s different
More trust signals, Right now the site would benefit from things like.
Customer reviews
Real photos of people using the product
Clear shipping and return information
About Us story
Product page storytelling Instead of just listing features, focus more on how the product solves a problem. People usually buy because of the benefit, not the feature.
Your store doesnt look bad at all it just feels like its missing a few elements that reassure buyers. Many stores get traffic but no sales until they improve trust signals and product messaging.
Getting traffic but no sales usually means the problem is with conversion rather than traffic. When someone visits a store for the first time they decide very quickly whether they trust it or not. If the site doesn’t clearly show things like customer reviews, clear shipping and return policies, or real photos of the product being used, many visitors will leave without buying.
Another thing to look at is the homepage and product pages. A visitor should be able to understand within a few seconds what the product is, who it’s for, and why it’s worth buying. If that message isn’t very clear, people often just move on.
It’s also worth checking small things like navigation, duplicate menu items, slow loading pages, or unclear call-to-action buttons. Even small issues can affect conversions more than people expect.
The good news is that getting traffic means people are interested enough to click. Usually a few improvements in trust signals and product messaging can make a big difference in turning those visitors into customers.
Hii,
Traffic with no sales usually means people are curious enough to click, but something on the site is making them unsure before buying.
When going through the store, a couple of questions came to mind as a first-time visitor. what makes the product different and why someone should choose it isn’t clear in the first look. If the value or purpose of the product isn’t obvious right away, many visitors will leave before exploring further.
I was also curious if visitors are landing directly on product pages or mostly on the homepage. Do you see people adding to cart at all, or do they leave before that step?
It might be worth looking at whether the product pages clearly explain the benefits and build enough trust for someone seeing the brand for the first time, to move forward.
Hello I have checked your website , it seems like your website is poorly optimized for the conversion, this is the reason why even if people are coming in your website they are not buying anything for example header and footers looks poorly optimised also there are no trust signals like social proof, or reviews, you should work on gathering social proofs, customer reviews also look for the abandoned cart etc if people are not checking out there could be issues related to payment or delivery charges or taxes etc.
Hi @uareproof
Traffic with no sales is one of the most frustrating places to be because you know people are at least finding you, something is just stopping them from pulling the trigger. Let’s figure out what that is.
The brand name uareproof is interesting but the store needs to back that up with a stronger story. What does “proof” mean in the context of this clothing line, proof of what exactly? That kind of identity question needs to be answered front and center on your homepage because right now someone can land, browse, and leave without ever understanding what makes this brand worth buying into. Streetwear and casual clothing is a brutally competitive space and the stores that win are the ones with a clear point of view that resonates with a specific person.
Now your cart has a slider which is good, but it’s doing the bare minimum. You have hoodies, tees, shorts and outfits and those naturally go together as complete looks. Someone adding a hoodie should be seeing matching shorts or a full outfit suggestion right there inside the cart, not having to go back and hunt for it themselves. That in-cart cross-sell is one of the easiest ways to get people to spend more per order and you’re currently not using it at all.
A free shipping progress bar inside that cart would also help a lot. Apparel buyers respond really well to thresholds because grabbing a t-shirt to hit free shipping feels like a win rather than extra spending.
Don’t install separate apps to piece all the cart stuff together. It slows your store down and costs more than it needs to. Something like iCart handles all of it cleanly in one app.
Is the entire webpage a T-shirt? And this T-shirt isn’t even fully displayed? I don’t know if it’s a problem with my internet connection. You could add a few more shopping cart buttons to the Home page. To be honest, if I were a customer, I might not know where to place an order.
Story of dime a tenthousand dozen dropshlpping.
It’s not magic it’s not some get rich quick scheme.
Do the work, and present your research of the problem just don’t point at a website.
You didn’t even bother to describe the actual business model; how you expect money in == “guaranteed” success.
Not good signs.
Research first, get self awareness asap or stay underwater and get mostly useless replies having you do busy work not solving the real business problem.
It’s literally that easy, and a literal rule
https://community.shopify.com/search?q=no+sales
https://community.shopify.com/guidelines
I took a quick look. The idea behind the brand is interesting, but when traffic comes in, and there are no sales. When someone lands on the page, they should quickly understand what the product is, who and why to buy.
Small things like clearer product descriptions, visible reviews, or very clear shipping info can make a big difference.
I think you can take a look at the product images, description, especially your collection page to make customer engage more instead of abandoning pages
hope it helps
Is your store new? A new store may take a little more time than usual to get orders because building trust is the first priority.
What You’re Doing Well
The brand identity is strong. “Your Identity. Your Mark.”. You clearly have a vision.
Photography is solid.
What’s Likely Costing You Conversions
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The catalog is very small 2 hoodies, 3 tees, shorts. When a new customer lands and sees only a handful of products they might think “is this store even real?” or they can’t find something that suits them and bounce.
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The homepage has no direct (CTA) on the hero. Your hero banner is beautiful but the text just sits there “Wear Your Truth. You Are Proof.” There’s no button directing people to shop.
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Zero social proof. This is probably the number 1 conversion killer for a new brand. There are no reviews, no star ratings, no customer photos, no UGC.
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Quick Wins
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Add a “Shop Now” CTA button to your hero banner
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Get reviews on your top products
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Expand the catalog or at add “Coming Soon”
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Add UGC to the homepage
Had a quick look. On desktop the hero images are so big that I can’t clearly see what you sell or where to click at first. I’d also add some basic trust (reviews / clear shipping info). Those two alone might help your conversion more than changing the traffic.
hello, I just checked your store you’re definitely getting traffic, but a few things might be stopping people from buying
First, it’s not super clear right away what makes your product a “must-buy.” When people land, you’ve got just a few seconds to grab attention, so a stronger headline and clearer message could help a lot
Also, I didn’t really see strong trust signals things like customer reviews, clear shipping info, or return policy. Those small details actually make a big difference when someone is deciding to buy
Your product pages could also use a bit more depth more images, clearer benefits, and answers to common questions. Right now it feels a bit light, which can make people hesitate.
Overall, I’d say focus on clarity, trust, and making the buying decision easier. That alone can turn some of that traffic into actual sales
Hope that helps
Hi there, I actually went through the store, some store owners had similar issues like a lot of low traffic, low conversions, low sales or no conversion at all…From my experience as a store owner as well, issues like this often stem from mismatched traffic (visitors aren’t your target audience), product page clarity (confusing descriptions or images), call-to-action (CTA) optimization, or trust signals (reviews, trust badges).Though sometimes the thing one thinks about may not be the real cause, only thorough frontend and backend store assessment could be used to discover the real issue. Looking forward to hearing back from you. Best regards, Marvellous.



