I bought a picture frame online last Saturday
(bear with me, this gets interesting).
By Sunday evening I was already looking for another retailer...
I needed a real wood frame in a slightly unusual panoramic size. After quite a bit of searching I found a small UK retailer selling exactly what I wanted. The website didn’t inspire huge confidence though. It looked dated and a bit unloved – not the sort of site that immediately reassures you when you’re about to hand over your card details.
But there were phone numbers listed, they described themselves as a family business (I’m keen to support those), and a quick sense-check online suggested they were legit. So, I placed the order.
Then… nothing.
No confirmation page.
No email.
No pending transaction on my bank account.
For most of the weekend I assumed the order hadn’t worked and started looking for alternatives.
Monday morning an email arrives:
Your order has been packed and will ship today.
It arrived the next day and it’s perfect.
But I nearly bought elsewhere simply because I didn’t know my order had gone through.
This is something we see quite often at We Are Acuity. The product is great. The people behind the business care. But small gaps in the digital customer journey quietly create doubt.
And online, doubt is expensive. In our experience, the businesses that get this right tend to focus on a few simple things:
• automated order confirmations
• clear transaction feedback at checkout
• basic email automation
• a website that signals credibility in the first few seconds
These things don’t need huge budgets, but they do need a bit of time, guidance and prioritisation. Because sometimes the difference between winning and losing a customer isn’t price, product or service. It’s just a well-timed email that says:
“Thanks, we’ve got your order.”