{"site":{"name":"Koji","description":"AI-native customer research platform that helps teams conduct, analyze, and synthesize customer interviews at scale.","url":"https://www.koji.so","contentTypes":["blog","documentation"],"lastUpdated":"2026-06-11T07:33:04.834Z"},"content":[{"type":"documentation","id":"7c4561df-a685-452b-be31-51f79d662f2d","slug":"ecommerce-customer-research-guide","title":"Ecommerce Customer Research: Methods, Questions, and Tools","url":"https://www.koji.so/docs/ecommerce-customer-research-guide","summary":"Ecommerce customer research systematically uncovers why online shoppers browse, buy, hesitate, abandon, and return so you can fix the friction costing you sales. With average cart abandonment at 70.22% (85.65% on mobile, per Baymard), understanding the why behind the funnel is worth more than most acquisition spend. This guide maps research methods to each funnel stage (discovery, consideration, checkout, post-purchase, churn), gives stage-by-stage questions mapped to Koji''s six structured question types, explains why static surveys capture the what but not the why, and shows how Koji''s AI interviews probe vague reasons, run in parallel, and rank fixes automatically.","content":"# Ecommerce Customer Research: Methods, Questions, and Tools\n\n**Ecommerce customer research is the practice of systematically learning why online shoppers browse, buy, hesitate, abandon, and return — so you can fix the specific friction costing you sales.** In a channel where you cannot read a customer''s face or ask a clerk what went wrong, research is the only way to recover the intent behind the analytics. Your funnel tells you *that* shoppers drop at checkout; only customer research tells you *why*.\n\nAnd the stakes are large. According to the Baymard Institute — which aggregates roughly 50 separate studies — the average online shopping cart abandonment rate is **70.22%**, and on mobile it climbs to **85.65%**. Roughly seven of every ten ready-to-buy shoppers leave. Closing even a sliver of that gap is worth more than most acquisition spend, and the only way to close it deliberately is to understand the reasons.\n\nThis guide maps the core ecommerce research methods to each stage of the shopper journey, gives you the questions to ask, and shows how AI-native platforms like Koji turn scattered shopper feedback into ranked, actionable fixes.\n\n## The ecommerce research journey\n\nEffective ecommerce research follows the funnel. Each stage has its own question and its own method:\n\n- **Discovery / awareness** — How do shoppers find you, and what do they think your brand stands for? Methods: brand perception studies, message testing.\n- **Consideration** — Why do shoppers choose you or a competitor? What information do they need that your product pages don''t give them? Methods: concept and product-page testing, competitive comparison interviews.\n- **Checkout** — Why do carts get abandoned? Methods: abandoned-cart surveys, exit-intent interviews.\n- **Post-purchase** — Did the product and delivery meet expectations? Methods: post-purchase surveys, CSAT/NPS.\n- **Retention / churn** — Why do customers stop buying? Methods: churn and win-back interviews, repeat-purchase research.\n\nMapping research to the journey keeps your studies focused — each one answers a specific business question rather than producing a vague \"voice of customer\" dump.\n\n## What to ask at each stage\n\n**Consideration / product pages**\n- What were you trying to find out before deciding to buy?\n- Was there anything you wanted to know that the page didn''t tell you?\n- What almost stopped you from buying?\n\n**Checkout / abandonment**\n- What made you leave without completing your order?\n- Was there a cost or step that surprised you?\n- What would have made you finish the purchase?\n\n**Post-purchase**\n- How well did the product match what you expected from the site?\n- How was delivery and unboxing?\n- How likely are you to buy from us again, and why?\n\n**Churn / win-back**\n- What made you stop buying from us?\n- Where do you shop for this now, and what''s better there?\n- What would bring you back?\n\n## Map ecommerce questions to structured question types\n\nStrong ecommerce research blends quantitative signal you can trend with qualitative reasons you can act on. Koji supports **six structured question types** — `open_ended`, `scale`, `single_choice`, `multiple_choice`, `ranking`, and `yes_no`:\n\n- **single_choice** for the primary abandonment reason (unexpected cost, forced account, payment concern, just browsing).\n- **open_ended** for the *why* behind that reason, with AI follow-up probing.\n- **scale** for satisfaction, delivery experience, and repurchase likelihood (NPS-style 0–10).\n- **multiple_choice** for which information shoppers wanted on the product page.\n- **ranking** to order what would most improve their experience.\n- **yes_no** for quick gates (\"Did shipping cost more than you expected?\").\n\nSee the [structured questions guide](/docs/structured-questions-guide) for how each type rolls up into charts.\n\n## Why surveys alone fall short in ecommerce\n\nThe dominant tools — SurveyMonkey, Typeform, Qualtrics, and built-in post-purchase forms — capture the *what* but stop at the *why*. A shopper picks \"too expensive\" from a list and the survey ends. Was it the product price, the shipping, the taxes revealed at checkout, or a competitor''s coupon? You can''t tell, so you can''t fix it. Static surveys also suffer from low response rates and shopper fatigue, and they leave you with a spreadsheet of open-text answers no one has time to read.\n\nThis is where conversational, AI-native research changes the economics.\n\n## How Koji improves ecommerce customer research\n\nKoji runs **AI-moderated interviews by voice or text** at the moments that matter — exit-intent, post-purchase email, or recruited panels — and **automatically asks follow-up questions** when a shopper gives a vague reason. \"It was too expensive\" becomes \"Which charge surprised you, and what would have felt fair?\" That single behavior turns aggregate reasons into specific, prioritized fixes.\n\nBecause interviews run **in parallel with no moderator**, you can hear from hundreds of shoppers in the time a manual program would reach a handful. Koji then **analyzes every conversation automatically** — ranking abandonment reasons, clustering product-page gaps into themes, surfacing representative verbatim quotes, and aggregating your scale and choice questions into charts. The result is a shareable report that says, in priority order, exactly what is costing you sales and what to do about it — not a pile of raw responses. It runs in any language, so international storefronts get the same depth as your home market.\n\n## How many shoppers should you talk to?\n\nFor directional, qualitative ecommerce research — the *why* behind a behavior — patterns stabilize quickly: 15 to 25 conversations per segment usually surface the recurring reasons for abandonment or dissatisfaction. For quantitative tracking you want to trend over time — NPS, CSAT, abandonment reasons by percentage — you need larger, consistent samples (often a few hundred responses) so the numbers are stable enough to compare quarter over quarter. The practical move is to combine both: a structured question for the trendable number, and an open-ended follow-up for the reason, on the same study. Because Koji runs interviews in parallel and analyzes them automatically, you can hit the larger sample without trading away the qualitative depth that tells you what to fix.\n\n## Common ecommerce research mistakes\n\n- **Asking too late.** Memory of why someone abandoned fades within hours. Trigger checkout and post-purchase research as close to the moment as possible — an exit-intent prompt or a same-day email beats a survey a week later.\n- **Asking too much.** Abandoners have already shown they will not invest time. Keep checkout surveys to three to five questions; depth comes from AI follow-ups, not from a longer form.\n- **Stopping at the reason.** \"Too expensive\" is a category, not an answer. Always probe which cost and what would have felt fair.\n- **Ignoring mobile.** With mobile abandonment near 86%, research that only reaches desktop shoppers misses where most of the loss happens.\n- **Collecting without acting.** Close the loop — feed findings back into product pages, checkout, and shipping policy, and re-measure. Research that never reaches a decision is theater.\n\n## Related Resources\n\n- [Structured Questions Guide](/docs/structured-questions-guide) — the six question types and how each aggregates\n- [Abandoned Cart Survey: Questions to Recover Lost Sales](/docs/abandoned-cart-survey-guide) — recover the ~70% who leave at checkout\n- [Post-Purchase Survey Guide](/docs/post-purchase-survey-guide) — measure expectations, delivery, and repurchase intent\n- [Churn Survey Guide](/docs/churn-survey-guide) — understand why customers stop buying\n- [Brand Perception Survey Guide](/docs/brand-perception-survey-guide) — what shoppers think your brand stands for\n- [AI Interviews vs Surveys](/docs/ai-interviews-vs-surveys) — why conversational research beats static forms","category":"Use Cases","lastModified":"2026-06-11T03:18:40.832413+00:00","metaTitle":"Ecommerce Customer Research: Methods, Questions & Tools","metaDescription":"Ecommerce customer research uncovers why shoppers buy, hesitate, and leave across the funnel. Get the methods, stage-by-stage questions, and how AI interviews turn feedback into fixes.","keywords":["ecommerce customer research","ecommerce user research","online shopping research","shopper research","ecommerce research methods","online store customer feedback","ecommerce customer insights"],"aiSummary":"Ecommerce customer research systematically uncovers why online shoppers browse, buy, hesitate, abandon, and return so you can fix the friction costing you sales. With average cart abandonment at 70.22% (85.65% on mobile, per Baymard), understanding the why behind the funnel is worth more than most acquisition spend. This guide maps research methods to each funnel stage (discovery, consideration, checkout, post-purchase, churn), gives stage-by-stage questions mapped to Koji''s six structured question types, explains why static surveys capture the what but not the why, and shows how Koji''s AI interviews probe vague reasons, run in parallel, and rank fixes automatically.","aiPrerequisites":["An online store or ecommerce funnel to research","Access to shoppers via exit-intent, email, or a recruited panel"],"aiLearningOutcomes":["Map research methods to each stage of the shopper funnel","Ask the right question at consideration, checkout, post-purchase, and churn","Blend quantitative and qualitative signal with structured question types","Understand why static surveys underperform in ecommerce","Turn shopper feedback into ranked, actionable fixes with AI interviews"],"aiDifficulty":"beginner","aiEstimatedTime":"10 min read"}],"pagination":{"total":1,"returned":1,"offset":0}}