How to Increase Shopify Sales With a Mobile App

Shopify has quickly become one of the world’s most popular eCommerce platforms. It powers more than one million businesses across the globe.

In fact, Shopify controls 31% of the total eCommerce market share in the United States. 

It’s the most searched for eCommerce solution on Google, and the fastest-growing eCommerce platform in existence at the moment. So if you’re currently using Shopify to sell online, you’ve definitely made the right choice.

As a Shopify store manager, it’s your responsibility to make sure that products are selling. 

Having an eCommerce website is a good start, but it’s not enough to maximize the potential of your online store. A website alone, even if it’s mobile-friendly, is just the tip of the iceberg.

It doesn’t matter what you’re selling or what industry you’re in; your Shopify store needs a mobile app. 

There is a common misconception out there that mobile commerce apps are only used by enterprise stores and global chains. That’s a myth, and couldn’t be farther from the truth. 

The market dictates mobile app usage, and consumers worldwide prefer to shop via mobile apps. So any small or medium-sized business will benefit from a mobile commerce app as well.

You may not realize it, but your Shopify store is competing with big brands like Amazon. These companies have set certain expectations in the minds of your customers. So to stay competitive and reach as many people as possible, your Shopify store must adapt and launch an app.

As an expert in the mobile space, I created this guide to explain exactly how you can leverage a mobile app to boost Shopify sales. 

Push Notifications

One of the most significant advantages of a mobile commerce app is the ability to stay in contact with your customers. Communication is limited on a Shopify web store on its own.

Right now, you’re probably relying on email to reach shoppers. But lots of factors need to go your way in order for an email campaign to be successful.

First, you need to turn website visitors into email subscribers. That’s easier said than done. It usually requires a visitor to take at least a couple of steps to complete the process. If someone buys a product from your Shopify store, you might give them an option to automatically opt-in to emails, but some customers won’t go for that. 

Once someone joins your email list, communication still isn’t promised. Your emails need to be delivered and opened by the recipients. 

Considering the average person receives 121 emails per day, there is no guarantee that this will happen. 

That’s where push notifications come into play. To communicate with customers via push notifications, all they need to do is download your app from the app store.

In terms of engagement, push notifications beat emails in every category. 

That’s because push notifications appear on a user’s mobile device similar to a text message. The chances of them reading it and opening the message are much higher than a promotional email buried in someone’s inbox.

While you should definitely be using push notifications to drive Shopify sales, just make sure you do so with caution. Sending too many messages can be annoying, and it’s one of the reasons why users mute push notifications

As a Shopify store owner, you should only send push notifications that add real value to app users. 

  • Flash sales
  • Discount codes
  • Delivery notifications

These are ideal examples of what you should be using. Just saying hello or sending a weekly newsletter as a push notification won’t be effective and could ultimately backfire. 

Loyalty Programs

Loyalty programs are one of the best ways to retain your customers. 

A loyalty program gives people an incentive to spend more money and increase their shopping frequency. Both of these metrics will boost sales of your Shopify store. 

Can you have a customer loyalty program without a mobile app? Absolutely. But an app will really take your program to the next level. Here’s why.

For starters, it’s unlikely that your customers will visit your website on a daily basis. Even your best customers may only online buy from your Shopify store once or twice per month. They probably aren’t eager to check their loyalty status if they need to land on your website, log in, and navigate to their customer profile. So the program almost becomes an afterthought.

However, your customers use their phones every day. Your app is just a click away at any given moment. This makes it easy for them to track their status and gives them an incentive to reach the next level.

Take a look at some of the top reasons why people continue to participate in loyalty programs

Nearly 50% of people said that they participate because the program is accessible through a mobile app

If you look at all of the top mobile commerce apps on the market today, they all have customer loyalty programs. A simple mobile app builder, like BuildFire, has plugins that provide customer loyalty functionality for native mobile apps. This will be an easy way for you to drive customer engagement. 

I recently wrote an article about Sephora’s app and customer loyalty program. They took an old loyalty program and revamped it to drive sales and conversions on their app. You can follow their lead and take the same approach for your eCommerce app. Alternatively, you can create a loyalty program with full customization. 

Flexible Payment Options

With a mobile app, you can give your customers more choices when it comes time to collect payments. Don’t assume that everyone buying from your Shopify store has Visa or Mastercard.

You need to offer as many different payment options as possible. This will improve your conversion rates at checkout.

More than half of all checkouts on Shopify come from a mobile device. 

But 30% of mobile shoppers won’t complete the purchase process if the experience isn’t optimized for their device. An app is by far the best way to optimize mobile checkouts.

If you create an app for your Shopify store, it’s much easier for you to add different payment options to accommodate the preferences of mobile shoppers. 

  • All major credit cards
  • All debit cards
  • Gift cards
  • PayPal
  • Venmo
  • Apple Pay
  • Google Pay

Lots of users already have these payment apps on their mobile iOS and Android devices. You can integrate checkout functionality and payment gateways with your app, which allows users to checkout as fast as possible. Sometimes they’ll just need a fingerprint to convert. 

One-Click Purchasing

This piggybacks off my last point in terms of speed and optimization in the checkout process. Mobile apps have changed the way people shop with one-click purchasing.

Think about your current checkout process. What steps does a customer need to take if they want to buy something?

I’m guessing the process looks something like this:

  1. Find product
  2. Add product to cart
  3. Navigate to cart
  4. Enter name
  5. Provider contact information (email, phone number)
  6. Enter email address
  7. Provide billing information
  8. Enter shipping information
  9. Finalize checkout

That’s a lot of steps. With each added step, it gives your customers an opportunity to change their minds, get frustrated, or make a mistake causing them to abandon the process. 

We have already established that nearly 60% of all Shopify sales come from mobile devices. So if you don’t have an app, then you’re forcing your customers to buy from your mobile site. Going through this checkout procedure on a small screen is tedious, and won’t result in high conversion rates.

Take a look at the top reasons for shopping cart abandonment

Aside from the cost, the two most common pain-points were related to speed and optimization. 

34% of customers abandon their purchase because the site forces them to create an account. So while you may be able to eliminate some of those steps in the future by having your customers create an account today, one-third of them still won’t convert.

26% of shoppers don’t buy because the checkout process is too long and complicated. 

Imagine that. Someone wants to buy what you’re selling. They add it to their cart but decide that it’s too much of a hassle for them to buy it. 

The solution is simple—one-click purchasing with a mobile app.

Amazon was the pioneer behind this trend. But it’s now widely used by eCommerce retailers worldwide. All you need to do is put some form of a “Buy Now” button directly on your product pages.

This skips the complicated checkout and need for customers to enter tons of information into form fields, which is a hassle from mobile devices. Users will already have their name, contact info, shipping details, and payment method saved on their customer profile within the app.

Checkouts can be completed in a matter of seconds, which will increase your conversion rates and decrease abandonment rates. You could even use this technology to experiment with your pricing strategy. 

Referrals

Lots of eCommerce businesses have some type of referral program. But not all of those programs are successful. 

The best way to implement a customer referral program is with a mobile app. Here’s why.

First, you need to offer an incentive for your customers to recommend your brand to other people. Monetary benefits will likely be the most successful. Something along the lines of a “give $20, get $20” campaign usually does the trick. Obviously, you can customize this to fit with your brand image.

Once the promotion is determined, you need to figure out how customers are going to share the offer with their friends. Without an app, this is complicated.

From a website, users will be forced to manually enter the names, phone numbers, or email addresses of people who they want to refer to. That’s not very practical, and most people will probably skip it. 

Here’s the thing. The majority of customers are willing to give referrals, but only a fraction of them actually do it. 

Mobile apps make it much easier for users to give referrals because an app can integrate with a user’s contact list. All they have to do is select the names of people that they want to refer. 

App development ultimately increases the chances that customers will send out mass referrals.

Mobile apps also integrate with social media platforms, so your customers can share promo codes directly on their profiles as well. 

At the end of the day, optimizing your referral program can drive a considerable boost in your sales. 92% of consumers trust recommendations from someone they know. So if a friend tells them about your brand, there is a good chance they will at least check you out.

That’s not all. A customer who has been referred to your brand is up to five times more likely to refer new customers. So you’re also boosting customer retention.

This will create a constant cycle of new referrals, which keeps your customer acquisition costs low and ROI high. 

Location-Based Promotions

The most successful promotions are relevant. You might be offering a great deal or discount, but if it’s not closely connected or appropriate for your customers, then it’s useless.

Earlier we discussed push notifications as a way to send offers to mobile app users. This is a benefit that you won’t get with a website alone. 

You can use your Shopify mobile app to leverage geofencing technology to deliver relevant promotions. Let me explain how this works. 

You can set up your app to integrate with the GPS on iOS and Android devices. So when a user enters a predetermined barrier within a location, you can automatically send them a push notification with a relevant offer. 

Let’s say one of your customers enters the lobby of a ski resort. You can instantly send a notification to their iphone about cold-weather gear. If a user walks by the beach, send them an offer for discounted sunscreen, sunglasses, or bathing suits. You get the idea. 

In addition to push notifications, you can also use a customer’s location to personalize the content they see when browsing on your Shopify app. 

For example, let’s say a customer with your app is located in Miami. It doesn’t make sense for snow boots to appear on their homepage. 

Using location-based services can improve the user experience and deliver relevant promotions in real-time. This increases the chances that mobile users will buy from your Shopify store app. 

Improve Customer Convenience 

Every decision you make to improve your Shopify store needs to be based on the customer. Even if something is a bit more challenging or strenuous on your end, you can always make it work if it’s what the customer prefers. 

At the end of the day, customers prefer mobile apps over mobile websites. 

The number one reason why customers like apps better than websites for retail purchases is convenience. Beyond that, the other top benefits on the graph above are related to:

  • Speed
  • Stored settings
  • Benefits and rewards
  • Personalized content
  • Better deals

All of these reasons can be connected to the topics that we’ve already discussed in this guide. 

You can’t mimic or recreate these benefits from a website or even from a mobile site. The customer experience will always be better from a mobile app. 

When customers are happy, their shopping frequency increases and they spend more money per purchase. Mobile sales can easily cover the initial investment of creating an app for your Shopify store.

Enhanced Customer Service

Let’s continue talking about how the app benefits your customers. In addition to making things more convenient for people, a mobile commerce app allows you to provide better customer service. 

Customers can track the status of an order directly in the app once they complete the purchase process. They’ll see updates on when the order has shipped, and have access to the tracking information as well. You can even send them a notification when the shipment has been delivered.

Without an app, tracking a delivery can be a pain. You’re forced to send a separate email with the third-party tracking number. Customers must open that email, copy the number, open a new tab for the carrier’s website, paste the number, and then search for it. This isn’t practical.

But from an app, they can view the status of an order and shipment in just seconds with a couple of clicks.

Beyond that, you can also offer enhanced customer support directly in the app. If a customer has a question, your app can facilitate live chat with a customer service representative. 

Customers can submit inquiries or start support tickets within the app as well. 

Obviously, you don’t want to encourage customer returns. But with that said, returns are just part of being in the eCommerce business. So you might as well make them as easy as possible for your customers.

Follow the example of successful retail giants in the eCommerce space. Amazon uses its app to facilitate simple returns by generating a QR code. Customers just have to bring the item to a shipment center or UPS store and get the code scanned directly from the app.

The customer doesn’t have to worry about printing labels or packaging anything. They just bring the item and smartphone to a shipping center. Returns don’t get much easier than that. 

If your return process causes headaches for your customers, then they probably won’t buy from you again. But if you make this process simple, people will still be willing to buy from your Shopify store in the future, even if they weren’t satisfied with their initial purchase. 

Personalization

We briefly talked about this earlier when discussing payment methods and location-based promotions. But personalization is worth mentioning again on its own.

63% of customers want personalized recommendations from retailers. 

App development is the best way to give people exactly what they need. Apps make it easy to leverage AI technology. 

This type of technology will monitor the actions of users as they interact with your app. Based on their browsing behavior and purchase history, your app can automatically recommend relevant products to each unique customer. 

When a customer sees a relevant product suggestion, it increases the chances that they’ll buy it. Personalized recommendations are a great way to upsell and cross-sell mobile app users.

Either way, the end result will be an increase in your total sales. 

Augmented Reality

Augmented reality is another top trend in the technology world. This may not be for everyone, but some of you can definitely benefit from using AR to drive sales on your mobile app. 

Here’s how AR works. The app uses the device’s camera to project potential purchases in real-world scenarios on the screen. 

IKEA uses this feature to help its app users determine how furniture will look in their actual homes.

eCommerce mobile app

So if you’re selling anything that belongs in someone’s home, such as lamps, paintings, or wall hanging items, you could use this technology.

There are other ways to get creative with AR as well. 

Let’s say your Shopify store sells custom clothing. You can use a mobile app to help create a specialized, tailored fit for your customers. AR can get a person’s measurements without needing to see an actual tailor. 

The technology behind these features is a bit complex, but the opportunity is still there. 

Conclusion

Even if your Shopify store is doing well right now, it hasn’t reached its full potential if you don’t have a mobile app. 

The majority of Shopify sales come from mobile devices. So if you can’t adapt to this trend now, it could create big problems for your eCommerce business in the future. 

A mobile app gives you more opportunities to drive sales than a website ever could. 

You’ll be able to communicate with your customers using push notifications and location-based promotions. Loyalty programs and referrals are easier to implement on an app as well. Apps optimize the checkout process and make it easy for customers to buy using their preferred payment method. 

You’ve already made the right choice by using Shopify to power your eCommerce platform. Now it’s time to take that strategy to the next level by building a mobile commerce app.

If you want to increase Shopify sales, use BuildFire’s app development solution for your eCommerce store.

 

Ian Blair

Ian is the CEO and Co-Founder of BuildFire. He's a visionary leader and tech-driven strategist running a team and platform that powers 10,000+ mobile apps. Ian has been building mobile apps for 10+ years. He's also an expert digital marketer responsible for millions of organic site visits and hundreds of thousands of leads.