
I Ran Social Media for 5 B2B Companies — Here’s What Actually Got Results
2026-03-29
Cart Abandonment Is Not a Failure — It Is an Opportunity
2026-04-04I audited a client’s product pages and found a set of specific problems that, when fixed, increased their conversion rate by 40 percent. The client had been running A/B tests for months with very little measurable improvement. They were testing button colors, headline variations, and image placement — the typical things that conversion rate optimization guides tell you to test. None of their experiments produced meaningful results because they were testing the wrong variables. The real problems with the product pages were more fundamental than any surface-level test could address.
What Was Actually Wrong
The product descriptions were copied directly from the manufacturer. They listed features and specifications but did not explain why those features mattered or what problems they solved. The text was completely generic, the same descriptions that appeared on a hundred other retail sites selling the same products. There was nothing unique or persuasive about any of them.
The product images were technically adequate but only showed the product itself. There were no lifestyle images showing the product being used by a real person in a real setting. A customer could see what the product looked like but could not picture themselves owning it. Research consistently shows lifestyle images convert significantly better than product-only images.
Shipping information was hidden in a footer link. Customers had to click away from the product page, navigate to a separate policy page, find the information, and navigate back. Many did not come back. Every unnecessary click reduces purchase likelihood.
Customer reviews were placed at the very bottom of the page below the fold. Most visitors never scrolled far enough to see them. The social proof that could have convinced hesitant buyers was invisible to the people who needed it most.
There was no comparison information. Customers considering multiple similar products had no way to understand differences without opening multiple browser tabs.
The Changes I Made
I rewrote every product description with specific details about materials, use cases, and benefits. Instead of “cotton blend, machine washable” I wrote “made from a cotton-polyester blend that stays soft after repeated washing. Machine washable on cold. Tumble dry low. Tested through 50 wash cycles.” Specific details build trust in ways generic descriptions cannot.
I added lifestyle images to every product page showing the product being used by real people in natural settings. We hired a photographer for one day at $800. The conversion improvement paid for that investment within the first week.
I moved shipping information to a prominent banner above the add-to-cart button. “Free shipping on orders over $50. Estimated delivery 3-5 business days.” Clear, visible at the moment of decision.
I promoted customer reviews to appear right below the product description above the fold. Average rating and total reviews displayed prominently with highlighted testimonials.
I added a simple comparison table for products in the same category so customers could see differences at a glance.
The Results
Conversion rate went from 2.5 percent to 3.5 percent — a 40 percent increase. The changes did not require expensive software or lengthy development. They required looking at the page from the customer’s perspective and asking what information was needed to make a confident purchase. One thing that surprised me: the client had spent thousands on A/B testing tools testing minor variations like button colors. But they were testing the wrong variable. The fundamentals — clear descriptions, lifestyle images, visible reviews, transparent shipping — mattered far more than any optimization tactic. Fix the basics first. Then optimize the details.
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