
Reducing Customer Support Tickets by 60% with Shopify
Emma Clarke
Account Director
A growing Shopify brand was drowning in customer service tickets. We identified the root causes on the storefront and reduced ticket volume by 60% in six weeks.
Customer service tickets are expensive — but they're also signals. Every ticket is a customer who couldn't find an answer on your website. When this outdoor equipment brand came to us, they had a customer service team of six handling 800 tickets per week, 65% of which were asking questions that could and should have been answered on the product page.
Ticket Analysis
We analysed 1,000 consecutive support tickets and categorised them. The results were revealing: 28% asked about delivery times and costs, 21% asked about sizing and fit, 18% asked about returns policy, 14% asked about product compatibility, and 11% asked about order status. The remaining 8% were genuine issues. Over three-quarters of tickets were answerable with better on-site information.
Changes Made to the Storefront
- 1Added a dynamic delivery estimator to every product page using postcode lookup.
- 2Created comprehensive size guides for every product category, linked from the product page.
- 3Added a returns calculator showing the refund window for each specific product based on today's date.
- 4Built a product compatibility section on relevant product pages using metafields.
- 5Added a persistent order tracking widget in the account area, pulling live carrier data.
- 6Implemented a searchable FAQ system embedded on product pages for the top 50 products.
The Chatbot Consideration
The client had considered implementing a customer service chatbot. Our recommendation was different: fix the information architecture on the site first. Chatbots answer questions — better product pages prevent the question from arising. Preventing a ticket is always cheaper than answering it, even with automation.
Results After Six Weeks
- Weekly ticket volume fell from 800 to 320 — a 60% reduction.
- Average handle time for remaining tickets fell as they were more complex, genuine issues.
- Customer satisfaction (CSAT) improved from 3.7 to 4.4, as customers were no longer waiting for answers.
- Two customer service positions were redeployed to proactive customer success roles.
- Conversion rate improved by 0.3 percentage points as on-site information reduced purchase hesitation.
Emma Clarke
Account Director, Flex Commerce


