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Product: Product Page — "In X Carts" Social Proof Message

Hypothesis

If we test a similar change on our product pages as tested, then our conversion metric will likely improve based on their implementation decision.

Social ProofProduct PageE-commerceindustry_leaketsywinner

Test Results

Key Learning

Problem: Users on the product need validation from others before committing — without visible proof of success, they hesitate.

What worked: implemented this UI change (Mar 1, 2023). Implementation suggests positive internal results

Takeaway: Even small lifts compound — across thousands of sessions, this adds up. Now test the placement of this social proof — positioning near CTAs, in pricing sections, and in checkout flows often amplifies the effect.

How to Apply This to Your Site

This experiment demonstrated that product: product page — "in x carts" social proof message can improve conversions. The test was run on a product page page in the e-commerce industry.

Before you test: Consider that social proof tests typically require adequate traffic to reach statistical significance. Run your test for at least 2 full business cycles to account for weekly traffic patterns.

What Was Tested

has been a/b testing a simple and common social proof element on some of their product pages. They showed how many users have recently added an item in their shopping carts.

Methodology

Confidence Level
70%

Build On These Learnings

Save your own experiments, spot winning patterns across your test history, and stop repeating what's already been tried.

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