Sandbox Blog

The Essential Shopify Store Launch Checklist

Posted by jesse on Jun 16, 2020 4:16:56 PM

You’re finally launching your Shopify store after all the hard work you put into it. It’s exciting but can quickly become overwhelming.

A million thoughts run through your mind. You aren’t sure you’ve completed everything necessary for a smooth launch day. Are all of your products loaded correctly? Have you created a marketing plan to promote your store? Does your website look trustworthy?

Instead of running around aimlessly as you start a business, entertaining every frantic thought, take a methodical approach to your store launch. Ease your mind and stay organized with this handy Shopify store launch checklist.

Why a launch checklist is so important


Your store looks great, your products are loaded and ready to go, and you’ve set up all of your social accounts. Are you forgetting something?

With so many moving parts, it’s easy to miss a simple but critical step in a successful business launch. When you need something to go well, a checklist can help reduce ambiguity and streamline the work that needs to get done.

Pilots and astronauts use checklists for every flight. In the 1930s, when Boeing crashed its B-17 during an early test run, the company instituted a flight checklist to ensure the safety of its pilots. Thanks to that checklist, Boeing pilots flew 18 of the bombers for a combined 1.8 million hours without incident, proving the plane’s worthiness to the U.S. Army. Furthermore, a study by the New England Journal of Medicine famously found that checklists help decrease complications and mistakes in medical care.

“Good checklists are precise. They are efficient, to the point, and easy to use even in the most difficult situations. They do not try to spell out everything—a checklist cannot fly a plane. Instead, they provide reminders of only the most critical and important steps—the ones that even the highly skilled professional using them could miss. Good checklists are, above all, practical.”

—Atul Gawande, The Checklist Manifesto

Even when the stakes are much lower, the pen to page approach is still a powerful way to cut through the fog and surface can’t-miss tasks. So, it makes sense to create a simple, effective checklist when you’re launching your Shopify store. Let’s explore how to do just that.

Your Shopify store launch checklist

  1. Add your chosen sales channels
  2. Add a custom domain
  3. Thoroughly review your checkout experience and payment gateway settings
  4. Prepare your standard pages
  5. Review your email notification settings
  6. Conduct a content audit
  7. Optimize all images on your website
  8. Install an analytics tool
  9. Have a prelaunch marketing plan
  10. Adjust your tax and shipping settings
  11. Make it easy for shoppers to contact you
  12. Install only the essential apps
  13. Set up your billing information

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1. Add your chosen sales channels

2017 survey by the Harvard Business Review found that just 7% of consumers shop online only. The consumer base is growing increasingly multi-channel—73% of consumers use multiple channels to conduct a single purchase with a brand, and spend 10% more than those who don’t use multiple channels.

Want to reap the benefits of multi-channel retailing for your online store? Find out how to choose the sales channels that will work best for you, then add the available sales channels to your store.

Here are some examples of online sales channels you can add to your Shopify store:

All sales channels connect with the core of your Shopify business, so you can easily keep track of orders, products, and customers across all platforms.

2. Add a custom domain

Adding a custom domain to your site gives you brand recognition and makes it easier for people to remember your URL.

You’ll want to conduct a domain name search first to see if your business name is available. If it is, and the name isn’t already a trademark in use by another business in your industry, you can purchase your custom domain name directly through Shopify.

If your custom domain name isn’t available, that doesn’t necessarily mean you have to go back to the drawing board. Here’s where you can flex your creative muscles. Pepper, for example, uses wearpepper.com for its URL.

You can also use a different top-level domain (TLD). A TLD comes at the end of a URL: .com, .edu, etc. You’ll notice that many websites use different variations, such as .gov and .org. Today, there are tons of TLDs to choose from.

Common TLDs in ecommerce include .store and .shop, but you can get creative here too. Driftaway Coffee’s website is driftaway.coffee, for instance.

3. Thoroughly review your checkout experience and payment gateway settings

Before you drive any traffic to your store, you’ll want to ensure people can actually complete a purchase. According to Baymard Institute, the average documented online shopping cart abandonment rate is almost 70%. It’s wise to fix any errors and remove friction at checkout, otherwise you risk losing more sales.

When testing your checkout process, you’ll want to make sure:
  • Shipping rates are surfaced during checkout
  • Discount codes can be applied in the cart
  • A shopper can edit their cart’s content
  • Familiar payment methods, such as PayPal and Shop Pay, are available
  • There is an option for order status tracking
  • The contact page can be easily accessed in case order editing is needed
  • An email notification is sent to confirm a purchase
  • A language and currency switcher and a shipping policy clearly stating who pays duties and taxes are both available if offering international sales and shipping 
With Shopify Payments you can place a test order on your site with a live payment gateway to make sure everything works.

4. Prepare your standard pages

It’s important to have a few pages that visitors can browse to learn more about your company. In Shopify’s research on what wins buyer and customer trust, we found that shoppers to a brand new store are looking for answers on whether the store is an upstanding business and if it treats its customers fairly.

Based on our research, these are the pages we most recommend online stores include in their sitemap:

Homepage. Your homepage is arguably the most important page on your site. It’s often the first place people land and, if not, the second place they go. The homepage is a place to establish the overall look and feel of your website and ensure you have clear navigation to browse your store.

Contact page. A Contact page offers shoppers reassurance a store is authentic. List a phone number, email, and retail address (if there is one). If potential customers can’t contact you with questions, you could be missing out on lots of sales opportunities. Consider including a contact form so they can send you a message without ever leaving your site. Kotn provides all the necessary contact info on its page, along with guidance around which contact method is best, depending on the customer’s question.

About. Your About page is where shoppers go to learn more about your company, your brand, and the people behind your products. Many store owners overlook this page, but it can be an effective sales tool if approached in two ways:

  1. Shoppers often are trying to make sure a business will be around for the long term. An About page is a chance to show your store is real.
  2. Many shoppers are interested in a business’ mission and purpose and if the business shares any of their values. Sharing your brand’s purpose, principles, and why the business was started can win you new customers who support similar causes.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ). At launch, you might not have lots of information around which questions customers will ask the most. To craft an effective FAQ page, you can predict inquiries and also look at competitors to see what questions they answer on their websites. Universally, customers often have questions about shipping, return policy, and how to get in touch

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5. Review your email notification settings

Email is a powerful tool for online store owners. On your Shopify store, there are several automated emails you’ll want to customize before launch. Edit your email templates and create sequences that nurture your list and ultimately drive sales.

Set up an email marketing app like Shopify Email, Seguno, or Klaviyo, and consider the following emails:

  • Welcome series
  • E-receipts
  • Abandoned cart notifications
  • Order confirmation
  • Shipping notifications

6. Conduct a content audit

Sometimes you’ll be so close to your work, you won’t notice small mistakes like spelling, grammar, or broken links. Reviewing backward—starting with the last paragraph and working your way to the top—will help you spot errors you may have missed.

When it comes to your copy, consistency is one of the most important things to remember. Adopt to a particular editorial style guide, whether it’s MLA or APA. If you want to get creative with spelling or make up your own words, that’s OK, as long as it’s on brand, but be sure to be consistent across your site.

On the technical side, you want to look for broken links and 404s in particular, as well as any image-rendering and mobile responsiveness issues. Check out your site on different browsers and devices so you can understand if a bug is universal or device/browser-specific.

7. Optimize all images on your website

Slow-loading images can hurt your site’s user experience and performance in search engines, and slower load times have been shown to lower conversion rates. It’s important all your images are optimized for the web to ensure fast load times. Shopify handles the technical complexity of keeping your images fast, because we know speed matters for online stores.

Here’s what else you can do to improve load speed and optimize your images for web:
  1. Be descriptive when naming your images. This helps with the SEO ranking of your site and product pages. Use keywords that you’re trying to rank for.
  2. Optimize your alt attributes carefully. Alt attributes are used for web accessibility and SEO. Again, be descriptive and consider your target keywords.
  3. Reduce the size of your images. On Shopify, you can keep images at the same quality you’d use for print, but try to keep them at a reasonable pixel size. For example, a typical thumbnail image is 50 x 50 pixels, so there’s no need to upload an image that’s 4000 x 4000 pixels. 

4. Choose the right file type. For most online images, a good rule of thumb is to use JPEG images for photography and PNG images for graphics and icons. Learn about the image file types supported in Shopify.

5. Review your thumbnails. Your brand logo is incredibly important. It’s how customers associate the name of your business to a visual. Thumbnails show up all over ecommerce sites, so make sure they’re clear across their many sizes on your online store. 

6. Test your images. You’ll want to know what’s working and what’s not and, more importantly, why. Run some A/B image tests to see which types of images work best (i.e., contextual vs. white background).


8. Install an analytics tool

Analytics are important to set up from day one. This data will give you valuable insight into your visitors and customers.

Your Shopify store will have its own set of analytics reporting built-in, but you may also want to install a third-party tool. Google Analytics is one of the most well-known and popular analytics tools, but you can also look at SE Ranking, Piwik and Adobe Analytics. You can even use a combination of tools to analyze your business, but we recommend you get used to tracking these basic ecommerce metrics first.

9. Have a pre-launch marketing plan

Once you launch your site, you’ll want to make sure people know about it. The best way to do that is with a marketing plan.

Document your marketing plan so once you go live, all you have to do is follow the steps you’ve already outlined.

Again, we can look to Dollar Shave Club as an example. At launch, the razor company set out to disrupt an industry. It created a video to share its vision that quickly gained it brand recognition.

https://youtu.be/ZUG9qYTJMsI

10. Adjust your tax and shipping settings

You’ll want to check that your tax settings and shipping rates are appropriate for the product(s) you’re selling. Otherwise, you could unknowingly eat into your profits by not charging enough. Double check your tax and shipping settings before launching your store.

Depending on where your business and customers are located, you might need to add sales tax. Not sure which tax settings to use? Your best bet is to consult with an accountant familiar with taxes in your area.

11. Make it easy for shoppers to contact you

Remember that contact page we recommended you set up? That’s not the only place where you should have information on how customers can get in touch. You’ll want to include your business address, phone number, and even live chat on most pages of your website if you can.

According to ICMI, businesses that chat with site visitors have a 48% increase in revenue per chat hour, a 40% increase in conversion rate, and a 10% increase in average order value.  For those apprehensive about offering a new customer support channel, we have a great article to read that'll help you ace live chat as a small shop, How to Save Sales and Solve Customer Problems with Live Chat.

12. Install only the essential apps

Though there are tons of apps in the Shopify App Store, not all of them are essential for a brand new business. In fact, some won’t make sense for your online store at all.

When you’re just getting ready to launch, you’ll want to install only the most essential apps, and deciding which ones are most important will depend on your business and your industry. To help, we’ve compiled a list of free Shopify apps that can help streamline operations in your business, from marketing to shipping.

13. Set up your billing information

If you’re coming to the end of your 14-day free trial, set up your store’s billing information to ensure there aren’t any hiccups when your store finally goes live.


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