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Do you look at your ecommerce analytics and think: “Ok. What do we do with this now?”

Most CRO dashboards show revenue, sessions, conversion rate, and average order value. You take a look; some are up, some are down, you close it and move on with your life.

If you’ve ever had even a hint of that what-now feeling, you’re not alone. This is mostly because setting up a CRO dashboard is not as straightforward as it sounds. But with some groundwork and careful thought about what matters for your business, anyone running a Shopify store can set up a CRO dashboard that gives you clear guidance about how to improve your website’s conversion rate and make better business decisions.

In this guide, we’ll show you how to set up a CRO dashboard using the metrics that really matter in ecommerce.

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What Is a CRO Dashboard?

A CRO dashboard is a focused view of the metrics, customer behaviour, test activity and recommendations that show how well your store turns traffic into profitable revenue.

It is different from a normal ecommerce dashboard.

A normal ecommerce dashboard tells you what happened. Revenue changed. Orders changed. Conversion rate changed. AOV changed. Traffic changed.

A CRO dashboard goes one step further. It helps you work out why performance changed and where to look next.

For example, a normal dashboard might show this:

Conversion rate dropped from 3.1% to 2.6%.

A CRO dashboard should push the team to ask better questions:

  • Did traffic quality change?
  • Did fewer visitors reach product pages?
  • Did add-to-cart rate fall once they got there?
  • Did checkout completion weaken?
  • Did AOV rise at the same time, meaning revenue per session was less affected than conversion rate suggests?
  • Did the movement happen on mobile, paid traffic, returning customers or one product category?

That is where the value is. A good conversion dashboard narrows the field of possible explanations.

It does not give you all the answers. It tells you where the next piece of evidence should come from.

Should a CRO Dashboard Focus on Conversion Rate?

A useful CRO dashboard is a working tool for deciding where to focus. It should show where revenue is being created, where it is leaking, what might be causing the leak, and it should point you to which action is worth taking next.

Yes, that takes the form of charts and numbers, but don't be fooled into thinking you can slam a load of fancy data visualisations together and call it a dashboard. If it doesn’t immediately and easily help you make actual decisions about your website, then it has failed in its essential function and it’s not really a dashboard.

For a Shopify brand, that means your dashboard needs to answer five questions:

  1. Are more visitors buying?
  2. Are buyers spending more?
  3. Are customers coming back?
  4. Which part of the journey is slowing people down?
  5. Should the next action be research, testing, implementation or no action at all?

At Blend, we frame this through the Buy Trifecta®: Buy Now, Buy More and Buy Again.

Buy Now is about helping visitors become customers.

Buy More is about increasing order value without adding friction.

Buy Again is about creating customers who return, subscribe, replenish or buy from you more than once.

So no, a CRO dashboard should not obsess over conversion rate alone. Conversion rate matters, but it is only one lever. A better dashboard shows how conversion rate, revenue per session, average order value, margin, customer retention, purchase frequency and test learnings work together.

For the formula-level breakdown, start with our guide to key CRO metrics.

The First Rule: Every CRO KPI Needs a Job

A Shopify store can produce a ridiculous amount of data.

Sessions, users, orders, cart additions, checkout starts, product views, collection clicks, search terms, discounts, page speed, device split, revenue, refund rate, customer lifetime value, returning customer rate, subscription orders and plenty more.

Putting all of that into one report does not make the team more informed. It usually makes them slower.

Your dashboard needs a hierarchy.

Metric layer Job Example metrics
Commercial metrics Show whether the business is moving in the right direction Revenue per session, conversion rate, AOV, gross margin, customer lifetime value
Journey metrics Show where shoppers are moving or dropping Product page view rate, add-to-cart rate, checkout begin rate, checkout completion
Diagnostic metrics Help explain why behaviour changed Site search, no-result searches, review engagement, page speed, stock availability, survey themes
Segment metrics Show where the issue is concentrated Device, channel, campaign, landing page, new vs returning, product category
Experimentation metrics Connect insight to action Hypothesis, primary metric, guardrails, PECTI score, test result, learning, rollout decision

The first layer tells you what happened. The second tells you where it happened. The third helps you understand why. The fourth stops you making sitewide decisions from blended averages. The fifth makes sure the dashboard leads to action.

Without the action layer, your dashboard is just reporting with better formatting.

Start with the Metric on Fire

For the love of all that is sacred in CRO, do not start with "how do we increase conversion rate?"

It is too broad and too isolated. Instead ask:

Which metric is on fire?

For one brand, the fire might be poor product discovery. Visitors land on the site but never reach the right product.

For another, the fire might be weak add-to-cart intent. People reach product pages, read the content, check the reviews, then leave.

Your dashboard's first job is to expose that fire. Here’s the simple version:

Buy Trifecta® lever Question Dashboard metrics
Buy Now Are visitors becoming customers? Conversion rate, product page view rate, add-to-cart rate, checkout completion, revenue per session
Buy More Are buyers spending more? AOV, items per order, bundle uptake, upsell take rate, discount rate, free-shipping threshold progress
Buy Again Are customers coming back? Repeat purchase rate, purchase frequency, returning customer rate, subscription revenue, customer lifetime value

You don’t need a dashboard to tell you "Conversion rate is down” - you can see that from a glance at your analytics.

A stronger dashboard says: "Buy Now is under pressure. The issue is concentrated in mobile paid traffic. Product page view rate is stable, but add-to-cart rate is down. Start by checking mobile PDP clarity, delivery reassurance, reviews, variant selection, subscription choice and page speed."

The CRO KPIs That Matter Most

There is no universal metric set for every store.

A subscription coffee brand, a premium furniture brand and a fast-moving fashion brand will use their dashboards differently because their buying journeys, margins and businesses are different. But most Shopify CRO dashboards should include the following metrics:

1. Revenue per Session or Revenue per Visitor

Revenue per session or visitor is the best commercial anchor because it blends traffic quality, conversion efficiency, and order value. It shows whether the site is turning visits into meaningful revenue, not just more orders, bigger baskets, or nicer-looking conversion rates in isolation.

I’ve written about this in a newsletter piece on revenue per session. One practical idea from that article is worth building into the dashboard: split revenue per session by traffic source and compare the latest full month with a trailing baseline.

Whichever you use, make sure you don’t mix sessions and visitors interchangeably - the two are measured differently in GA4 and you could quickly get into a mess. If in doubt, pick session.

2. Conversion Rate

Conversion rate shows how effectively sessions become orders. It belongs in every CRO dashboard, obviously. But read it along with revenue per session, AOV, margin, device, traffic source, and customer type.

You can use our ecommerce conversion rate benchmarks for a bit of nuance and context.

3. Average Order Value

Average order value is the dashboard’s “buy more” metric. It shows whether shoppers are spending more when they buy, often through bundles, upsells, cross-sells, subscriptions, or free-shipping thresholds. Track it with conversion rate and margin so higher basket value doesn’t hide falling profit. For more context on why AOV and customer value need to be read together, see Blend's guide to CLV and AOV.

4. Gross Margin or Profit per Visitor

Gross margin or profit per visitor keeps the dashboard honest. Revenue can rise because of heavy discounts, expensive shipping incentives, or low-margin product mix. A profit lens shows whether CRO changes are creating sustainable growth, not just more transactions.

5. Product Page View Rate

Product page view rate shows whether visitors are reaching products they might buy. If this metric is weak, you probab have a discovery problem - navigation, search, filters, collection pages, product cards, merchandising, or content links. It tells you whether shoppers can actually find the buying decision.

6. Add-to-Cart Rate

Add-to-cart rate shows whether product pages create purchase intent. When product page traffic is healthy but cart additions are weak, shoppers may not have enough clarity, confidence, or motivation. The issue could be value proposition, imagery, reviews, delivery, returns, variants, sizing, compatibility, price, or CTA visibility.

7. Checkout Begin Rate and Checkout Completion Rate

Checkout begin and completion rates show whether cart intent becomes revenue. If add-to-cart looks strong but orders lag, the friction is likely lower in the funnel. These metrics surface problems with shipping costs, delivery promises, payment options, discount codes, account creation, forms, errors, or final-stage trust.

8. Search and Product Discovery Metrics

Search and discovery metrics show whether motivated shoppers can find the right products quickly. Site search is especially valuable because it signals intent. Track searches, no-result terms, result clicks, exits, and search conversion to expose gaps in navigation, naming, synonyms, filters, and collection structure.

For a deeper supporting angle on product comparison and discovery, check out our newsletter issue on product comparison pages.

9. Repeat Purchase Rate, Purchase Frequency, and Customer Lifetime Value

Buy again. Repeat purchase rate, purchase frequency, and customer lifetime value show whether CRO gains last beyond the first order. They protect the dashboard from shallow wins, like discount-led conversion lifts that attract low-quality customers.

Further reading: see Blend's articles on purchase frequency and RFM segmentation.

10. Technical and Quality Metrics

Technical and quality metrics stop you misdiagnosing problems. Slow pages, app errors, payment failures, stockouts, broken forms, discount issues, tracking gaps, and refund spikes can all suppress conversion. A small health section helps separate CRO opportunities from operational or technical blockers. Check out Blend's guide to Shopify site speed.

How to Build a CRO Dashboard in the Real World

Good new: you don’t need a huge tech stack to build a CRO dashboard. You need accurate tracking, clear definitions, agreed source-of-truth rules and a dashboard design your team trusts enough to use every week.

Step 1: Audit Your Tracking Before Building Anything

Before you think about building anything, you need to really scrutinise the data you’re reporting on to be 100% certain it’s reliable. Purely anecdotally, around half of all GA4 setups have some kind of issue.

Your Analytics Checklist

Before you create any charts, check:

  • Shopify revenue matches your commercial reporting source
  • GA4 ecommerce events are firing correctly
  • Purchase events are not duplicated
  • Event names and parameters are consistent
  • Internal traffic is excluded
  • UTM rules are documented
  • Time zone and currency settings match
  • Refunds, discounts, taxes and shipping are defined consistently
  • Consent settings are understood
  • Testing tools are not polluting analytics (look for odd URLs with parameters or unexpected spikes)
  • Theme or app changes have not removed tracking scripts

For GA4, use Google's recommended ecommerce events as a baseline: view_item, add_to_cart, view_cart, begin_checkout, add_shipping_info, add_payment_info and purchase.

Shopify Analytics should usually remain the commercial source for orders, revenue and product sales because it sits closest to the transaction. GA4 is better for behavioural analysis, funnels, event paths, landing pages and acquisition context.

Step 2: Choose Your Source-of-Truth Rules

Shopify, GA4, testing tools, ad platforms and email platforms often report different numbers.

Don’t worry about that - it’s inevitable. Just don’t spend too much time sweating over which is ‘right’. Just set rules and stick.

Data need Recommended source
Orders and revenue Shopify Analytics
Product sales and refunds Shopify Analytics
Funnel events and behaviour GA4
Landing page and channel diagnosis GA4
Organic query intent Google Search Console
Paid spend and platform ROAS Ad platforms
Email and SMS performance Email/SMS platform
Heatmaps and recordings Microsoft Clarity or equivalent
A/B test decisions Testing platform
Roadmap and prioritisation Google Sheets, Notion, Airtable or project tool

Step 3: Create a Metric Dictionary

Every important metric needs a definition.

Your metric dictionary should include:

  • Metric name
  • Formula
  • Source
  • Date logic
  • Filters
  • Segment rules
  • Owner
  • What it means when it moves
  • What action to take when it moves

Example:

Metric Formula Source What to check when it moves
Revenue per session Revenue / sessions Shopify or GA4, depending on agreed setup Conversion rate, AOV, traffic mix, channel shift
Add-to-cart rate Sessions with cart additions / sessions Shopify or GA4 PDP clarity, reviews, CTA, variants, delivery clarity
Checkout completion Orders / checkout starts Shopify or GA4 Shipping, payment options, errors, discount friction
Repeat purchase rate Repeat customers / customers Shopify or retention platform Product fit, post-purchase journey, replenishment, subscription

This sounds really basic, but it prevents a surprising amount of dashboard nonsense. No more confusion where one person says “sessions” and another hears “visitors”.

Step 4: Choose Your Dashboard Stack

We suggest there are three sensible setups.

Starter Setup

Best for smaller teams or stores building a CRO process for the first time.

Use:

  • Shopify Analytics
  • GA4
  • Microsoft Clarity
  • Google Search Console
  • Google Sheets

This is enough to build a weekly dashboard with commercial performance, funnel movement, landing page data, organic query intent, behavioural observations and a simple action log.

It will involve manual work. That is acceptable at the start. The point is to learn which questions matter before investing in a polished BI setup.

Practical Shopify Setup

Best for growing Shopify brands running regular CRO work.

Use:

  • Shopify Analytics as the commercial source of truth
  • GA4 for journey and event tracking
  • Microsoft Clarity for behavioural insight
  • Google Search Console for SEO intent
  • Intelligems or another Shopify testing platform for experiments
  • Data Studio (formerly Looker Studio) for visual dashboards
  • Google Sheets for planning and learning logs (shortcut this with Blend’s A/B Testing Kit)
  • A connector or scheduled export where needed

This is usually the best balance between usefulness and complexity.

Blend's CRO tools and resources are built around this kind of stack: Shopify Analytics, GA4, Microsoft Clarity, Intelligems and practical templates.

Advanced Setup

Best for Shopify Plus brands, multi-market stores or teams running frequent experiments.

Use:

  • Shopify data
  • GA4
  • Google Search Console
  • Ad platform data
  • Email/SMS data
  • Subscription data
  • Review or NPS data
  • Heatmap and session replay data
  • Testing platform data
  • BigQuery or another warehouse layer
  • Looker Studio, Power BI, Tableau or similar
  • Experiment tracking and roadmap data

At this level, the value comes from data modelling. Instead of joining messy data inside the dashboard, build clean reporting tables upstream.

The risk is complexity. More data does not mean better decisions. The dashboard still needs a clear decision structure.

Step 5: Build Views for Decisions

It’s tempting to jump straight into thinking about what jazzy charts and exotic data visualisations you can show. Don’t do that. Begin with the end, and first ask: "what decision should this thing help us make?"

Good dashboard views answer questions like:

  • Which growth lever should we focus on this month?
  • Which segment is dragging performance down?
  • Which journey step has the highest-value leak?
  • Which products or templates deserve CRO attention first?
  • Which acquisition source needs a better landing experience?
  • Which recommendations are ready to test or implement?

Then use whatever charts will help you make those decisions.

Step 6: Add Annotations

Numbers need context, so add notes for:

  • Promotions
  • Product launches
  • Stockouts
  • Email campaigns
  • Paid media spikes
  • Theme releases
  • App installs
  • Checkout changes
  • Test launches
  • Test end dates
  • Tracking incidents
  • Shipping delays
  • Major content updates

If conversion rate fell during a paid prospecting push, that’s a different story from conversion rate falling after a PDP release.

Use visualisations that speed up diagnosis. Avoid charts that only exist because the dashboard tool made them easy.

KPI Cards with Trend and Baseline

Use cards for revenue per session, conversion rate, AOV, gross margin, add-to-cart rate, checkout completion and repeat purchase rate.

Each card should show current value, previous period comparison, trailing baseline comparison, target or benchmark where useful, sparkline trend and a short note field.

Funnel Chart

Use a funnel chart for the buying journey:

Sessions → PDP views → add to cart → checkout → purchase

Segment it by device, channel and customer type.

Channel and Device Matrix

Create a matrix with channels as rows, devices as columns and revenue per session, conversion rate or add-to-cart rate as the value. This makes weak segments obvious.

Scatter Plot

Use scatter plots to find high-value opportunities.

Example setup:

  • X-axis: sessions
  • Y-axis: revenue per session or add-to-cart rate
  • Bubble size: revenue
  • Group: template, category or device

This helps surface high-traffic, underperforming pages. Those are usually more useful CRO targets than low-traffic pages with dramatic-looking numbers.

Roadmap Table

Use a table for recommendations, PECTI scoring and status.

Include recommendation, metric affected, segment affected, Proof, Ease, Cost, Time, Impact, priority, owner, status, result and learning. This keeps the dashboard connected to execution.

How to Analyse Your CRO Dashboard Each Week

Each week, start with revenue per session, then check whether changes come from traffic mix, conversion rate, AOV, or margin.

Use the funnel to find the leak: discovery if product page views fall, product decision-making if add-to-cart falls, checkout friction if completion falls. Segment before deciding, especially by device, channel, landing page, product category, and new versus returning visitors. Then cross-check with behaviour and feedback to understand why the metric moved.

Document the insight clearly, turn it into a specific recommendation, prioritise with PECTI, and annotate every test or change so future performance shifts are easier to explain.
A dashboard only earns its keep if it changes what you do.

Useful resources:

Example: What a Useful CRO Dashboard Insight Looks Like

Imagine your dashboard shows this:

  • Overall conversion rate is down 8% against the trailing 12-month baseline
  • Revenue per session is flat
  • AOV is up 9%
  • Mobile paid traffic grew 34%
  • Mobile add-to-cart rate is down 12% for paid visitors
  • Product page view rate is stable
  • Clarity recordings show mobile paid visitors opening shipping information and reviews, then abandoning before add-to-cart

A weak interpretation:

Conversion rate is down. We need to improve the PDP.

A better interpretation:

The conversion rate decline is concentrated in mobile paid traffic. Product discovery is stable, but add-to-cart intent is weaker. AOV is offsetting some revenue impact, so this is not yet a total commercial value problem. Paid mobile PDPs appear to be creating hesitation before add-to-cart. Behavioural evidence points to delivery, reviews and trust information being checked before abandonment.

A better recommendation:

On top paid landing PDPs for mobile visitors, test moving delivery promise, returns reassurance and review proof closer to the main CTA. Primary metric: mobile paid add-to-cart rate. Supporting metrics: revenue per session, checkout begin rate, conversion rate and AOV. Segment: mobile paid traffic. Evidence: dashboard trend plus session recordings. PECTI score: high Proof, medium Ease, low Cost, medium Time, high Impact.

Measuring Progress: How to Read Your CRO Dashboard

Progress does not always look like one nice neat line going up. Sometimes it can just be better diagnosis before it shows up in revenue.

Signal What it may mean
Revenue per session improves while sessions decline Traffic quality may be improving
Add-to-cart rate improves before conversion rate PDP intent is better, but cart or checkout may still need work
Product page view rate improves Discovery, navigation or merchandising may be improving
AOV rises while conversion rate stays stable Buy More work may be paying off
Returning customer revenue rises Retention or lifecycle improvements may be working
Test learnings become more specific The CRO programme is getting smarter

Warning signs matter too:

Signal What to investigate
Conversion rate rises but RPS falls Discounting or low-AOV orders may be masking weak revenue
AOV rises but conversion rate drops Bundle, upsell or threshold strategy may be adding friction
Add-to-cart rate is healthy but checkout completion is weak Shipping, payment, trust or unexpected cost issue
Paid traffic grows but RPS falls Traffic quality or message match issue
Mobile conversion lags desktop heavily Mobile UX, speed, payment or content hierarchy issue
Repeat purchase rate falls after acquisition push Poor-fit customers or weak post-purchase experience

CRO Dashboard Build Checklist

Before you build or rebuild your dashboard, answer these questions.

Business Goal

  • What does the business need most right now?
  • More orders?
  • Higher AOV?
  • Better margin?
  • Better retention?
  • Lower CAC?
  • More subscription revenue?
  • Better product discovery?

Core Metrics

  • What is the primary CRO KPI?
  • Which secondary metrics explain it?
  • Which guardrail metrics protect the business?
  • Which metric is currently on fire?

Data Sources

  • Which tool is the source of truth for revenue?
  • Which tool is the source of truth for journey data?
  • Which tool is used for test decisions?
  • Which tool is used for behavioural evidence?
  • Are definitions written down?

Segments

  • Do you segment by device?
  • Do you segment by channel?
  • Do you segment by landing page?
  • Do you segment by new vs returning customers?
  • Do you segment by product category?
  • Do you segment by subscription vs one-time purchase where relevant?

Action Process

  • Who reviews the dashboard?
  • How often?
  • Where are insights logged?
  • How are actions prioritised?
  • How are tests linked back to dashboard findings?
  • How are learnings stored?

Forget fancy designs and slick visuals. When you can answer those questions, your dashboard is ready. After that it’s all down to how you use it.

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About the author

Peter Gardner

CONTACT US

Get in touch with the Shopify CRO experts at Blend Commerce

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CONTACT US

Get in touch with the Shopify CRO experts at Blend Commerce

Here’s what to expect:

  1. After you get in touch, one of the Blend Directors will reach out within 1 business day.
  2. We'll ask for more detail about your business to assess whether Blend is the right fit, and if not, we'll recommend someone who is.
  3. If it looks like we can help, you’ll be invited to a call to dig into the challenges you’re facing and the numbers behind them.
  4. From there, we’ll outline clear steps to help get things on track.