BLACK369
Free public-store first look · no call required

For established ecommerce stores buying traffic

You paid for the click. Don’t make the shopper decode the page.

See three public-store observations, the evidence behind them, and the first five-minute checks—before anyone recommends rebuilding.

Free · instant · Public HTML only · saved result · no call

Free · useful before any sales conversation

See what a first-time shopper has to figure out.

Enter the public store and a work email. Your result appears here immediately; extra fit questions come only after it.

See a complete fictional example first ↓

Public storefront only—no login or private URL. By submitting, you permit one response about this requested review. See the privacy note.

01

First-screen merchandisingCan a new shopper name the product, use case, and useful difference?

02

Buying pathDoes the first action lead somewhere specific enough to continue?

03

Purchase confidenceIs risk answered beside the first buying decision?

Illustrative questions · your result cites only public evidence it can actually observe.
Forbes Communications Council — 2026 official member

Built and reviewed by Gabriel Lumagui. Ecommerce strategy, conversion copy, design, build, launch, and measurement stay with one senior operator.

Forbes membership verifies identity; it is not an endorsement. No client-result claim is implied.

Fictional example · not a client result

See the decision brief before you give us anything.

Public HTML onlyNo analyticsNeeds visual verification
01Observed in public HTML

Opening message

“Premium daily moisturizer.”

The product is named, but the first useful fit—who it is for and why this formula—is left for the shopper to infer.

Why it may matter + five-minute check

Open the ad and landing page side by side. Ask someone unfamiliar with the brand to name the intended skin concern and useful difference in seven seconds.

02Observed in public HTML

Buying path

Primary action: “Shop all”

The first action sends a cold shopper from one decision into a catalog of decisions.

Why it may matter + five-minute check

Follow the ad on a phone. Count the choices between the click and the product promised in the creative. Compare a direct product path before rebuilding anything.

03Inferred from missing public HTML

Purchase confidence

No delivery or return cue found near the first action.

The signal is not proof of a problem; the rendered page may still show it. This is where visual verification starts.

Why it may matter + five-minute check

On mobile, look beside the first buying action for delivery timing, returns, and believable proof. Then compare hesitation or support questions in data you control.

Example verdictSelf-fix first

Test a specific opening promise, send the ad to the promised product, and place risk answers beside the action. A Sprint is not earned unless those checks expose a broader path problem.

Run this on my store

A seven-second decision test

A polished store can still ask the shopper to do the strategy.

Cold traffic has to connect the ad, product, proof, price, delivery, and risk. Every unanswered translation makes the next click feel more expensive.

The page says“Premium daily moisturizer.”The shopper translates: for which skin, why this one, and why now?
A clearer decision says“Barrier support for dry, reactive skin.”Fit, proof, price, delivery, and returns stay beside the buying action.

Only if the evidence says rebuild

The next step is fixed—not a disguised retainer.

Store Conversion Sprint · $9,500

A focused three-week rebuild of one agreed buying path, with responsive implementation, two agreed commerce events, launch QA, handoff, 30-day bug support, and a 30-day measurement review.

The Snapshot can also say self-fix or wait. No Sprint recommendation is useful unless the evidence earns it.

See exact scope and boundaries →

Before you send the store

Honest boundaries.

Is this an analytics audit?

No. The instant reader sees downloaded public HTML only. It cannot see shoppers, sessions, conversion rate, heatmaps, checkout behavior, or lost revenue.

Why ask for email?

It gates automated abuse, connects the saved result to one requested response, and gives Gabriel a way to deliver the human review if you qualify. It does not subscribe you to marketing.

Do I have to share revenue?

No. You receive the instant result first. Revenue and platform are requested only if you choose to check fit for the limited human-review queue.

Run the free Snapshot2 fields · instant result