Your Customers Are Everywhere. Is Your Store?
Picture this: a potential customer spots one of your products in an Instagram Reel during their morning commute. They don’t buy — not yet. Later that evening, a TikTok video featuring the same item pops up in their feed. This time, they tap the product tag. They land on your Shopify store, browse a few minutes, add the product to cart, and close the tab. Two days later, a Pinterest ad brings them back. They click. They buy.
That customer didn’t follow a straight line to your checkout. No modern shopper does. Just 15 years ago, the average consumer needed only two touchpoints when buying a product. Today, that number can exceed 50, spanning online and offline channels. The brands winning the revenue game in 2025 aren’t the ones waiting for customers to find them on a single platform. They’re the ones showing up — consistently, contextually, and compellingly — everywhere their customers already are.
That’s the promise of omnichannel social commerce. And for Shopify store owners, the opportunity has never been more concrete or more actionable.
In this guide, you’ll learn exactly what omnichannel social commerce means in practice, how each major social platform plugs into your Shopify store, how to build a content strategy that works across channels without burning you out, and how to measure what’s actually driving revenue. By the end, you’ll have a clear blueprint for turning your social media presence from a marketing expense into a genuine sales engine.
What Omnichannel Social Commerce Actually Means
Beyond “Posting on Multiple Platforms”
The word “omnichannel” gets thrown around a lot. But most merchants who think they’re doing omnichannel are actually doing multichannel — and the difference matters enormously. Multichannel means you sell or post on several platforms. Omnichannel means those platforms are connected, sharing data, delivering a seamless experience that follows a customer wherever they go.
Multichannel retail says: “We’re on Instagram and TikTok and our website.” Omnichannel retail says: “A customer who browsed a hoodie on TikTok yesterday sees a targeted reminder ad on Instagram today, finds the same product in stock on our website tomorrow, and receives a consistent brand experience at every step.” The distinction is not cosmetic. Omnichannel customers spend 30% more than single-channel shoppers, and omnichannel strategies boost customer retention by 89%.
Social commerce is the specific arena where this plays out on social media. Social commerce is the use of social media platforms to promote and sell products or services — and the industry is booming. When you combine the connectivity of omnichannel with the scale of social commerce, you get something genuinely powerful: a system where every platform reinforces the others, and your Shopify store sits at the center as the hub of truth.
The Scale of the Opportunity
The numbers are hard to ignore. The global social commerce market is valued at $2 trillion in 2025 and is expected to grow rapidly, reaching $8.5 trillion by 2030 with a CAGR of 26.2%. In the United States specifically, social commerce retail earnings are predicted to reach nearly $80 billion in 2025, with US social shoppers growing from roughly 96 million in 2023 to around 104 million in 2025.
And who’s doing the shopping? While Gen Z leads adoption with 42% likely to buy holiday gifts through social media compared to the overall average of 20%, the behavior spans all age groups — Millennials at 26%, even 15% of Gen X and 6% of Baby Boomers planned to make holiday purchases through social platforms in 2024. The idea that social shopping is “just for young people” is outdated. Your customers — all of them — are browsing, discovering, and increasingly buying on social platforms.
The question isn’t whether social commerce matters. The question is how to connect it all to your Shopify store without losing your mind managing a dozen different dashboards.
Your Shopify Store as the Command Center
Why Shopify Is Built for This
One of Shopify’s most underappreciated strengths is its role as a unified commerce hub. Rather than treating your online store as one channel among many, Shopify lets you treat it as the backbone — the single source of truth for your products, inventory, orders, and customer data — while your social channels act as distribution points.
Shopify’s unified commerce platform integrates directly with TikTok, Pinterest, YouTube, Facebook, and Instagram, giving you one central business “brain” that syncs product details, orders, and customer data wherever you sell. This is not a minor convenience. It means that when you update a price, add a product photo, or adjust inventory, that change propagates across every connected platform automatically. No manual updates. No mismatched listings. No customer confusion.
Brendan Gorman, head of ecommerce at Venus et Fleur, captured it well: “Integrating all of our sales channels within a single platform allows us to deliver a personalized, cohesive experience at every touchpoint, reflecting the seamless luxury that our customers expect. With Shopify’s unified ecosystem, we can manage ecommerce, retail, and social commerce data in one place, giving us a holistic view of our customer journey.”
Setting Up Your Product Catalog as the Foundation
Before you connect a single social platform, your Shopify product catalog needs to be in excellent shape. This is the data that feeds every channel, and garbage in means garbage out — on Instagram, on TikTok, everywhere.
Strong product titles matter more than you might think. They need to be clear and descriptive enough for both human browsers and the search algorithms that power social commerce discovery. Your product photography needs to work across contexts: a square format for Instagram, landscape for Pinterest boards, a clean background for Facebook Shops. And your product descriptions need enough detail to convert a curious scroller into a confident buyer — someone who discovered you thirty seconds ago and needs to make a fast decision.
Here’s a practical checklist before you start connecting channels:
- Product titles: Clear, keyword-rich, free of internal codes or jargon
- Descriptions: Benefit-led, scannable, with key specs included
- Photography: Multiple angles, lifestyle shots, and at least one clean white-background image
- Inventory: Accurate and up to date — nothing damages trust faster than an “out of stock” message on a product you just promoted
- Variants: Clearly labeled and consistently organized across colors, sizes, or configurations
- Pricing: Consistent across channels (customers will notice if your Instagram shop shows a different price than your website)
Once your catalog is solid, connecting platforms is straightforward. The native integrations in Shopify’s sales channel settings handle the technical heavy lifting — syncing happens automatically, and you manage everything from your Shopify admin.
Platform by Platform: Connecting the Big Five
Instagram: The Visual Powerhouse
Instagram remains the dominant platform for fashion, beauty, home décor, and lifestyle brands. Some 48.8% of Shopify stores use Instagram Shopping — and for good reason. The platform’s visual-first nature makes it ideal for showcasing products in aspirational contexts, and its shopping infrastructure is mature and merchant-friendly.
Here’s how to get the most from the Shopify-Instagram integration:
Set up an Instagram Shop. Connect your Facebook Business account (Instagram Shops are managed through Meta), sync your Shopify product catalog, and submit for review. Once approved, you have a native storefront that Instagram users can browse without leaving the app. Shopify provides streamlined integration for Instagram and Facebook stores, allowing you to sync inventory and customer and sales data between platforms.
Tag products everywhere. Add product tags to grid posts, Stories, and Reels. A customer who sees your new summer dress in a Reel can tap the tag, see the price and description, and proceed to checkout — all within a few taps. This frictionless flow is the difference between a “nice photo” and an actual sale.
Important update to know: As of September 2025, Meta eliminated in-app checkouts through Facebook and Instagram. Users can still browse product pages in the Shops, but when ready to purchase, they’re served the checkout page of the brand’s actual website, acting as a browser to access the site still in-app. This actually works in your favor — it drives traffic to your Shopify store, where you have full control over the customer experience and can leverage your existing conversion tools.
Use Reels aggressively. Instagram’s algorithm heavily favors Reels, and 89% of people say they’ve been convinced to buy a product or service by watching a brand’s video. Short-form video is not optional anymore. It’s the primary discovery mechanism on Instagram.
TikTok: The Fastest-Growing Sales Channel
If Instagram is where people browse for inspiration, TikTok is where products go viral overnight. One Shopify merchant — Danielle Peplinski of Glow Fashion Boutique — described TikTok’s impact directly: “With one viral video related to our business concept in April 2021, we had our first-ever $20,000 month.” That kind of growth isn’t common, but it’s real — and it reflects TikTok’s unique ability to turn unknown products into must-haves within hours.
Some 43% of Gen Z audiences start their online product searches on TikTok — beating traditional product-discovery methods like Google or Amazon. For any brand targeting younger consumers, this is a staggering shift in behavior. TikTok isn’t supplementary; for many products, it is the discovery engine.
Here’s how to connect and maximize TikTok through Shopify:
Install the TikTok Sales Channel. From your Shopify admin, install the TikTok app from the Shopify App Store. Link your TikTok Business account, sync your product catalog, and install the TikTok Pixel for tracking. Once connected, you can sync your Shopify product listings with TikTok, tag products in videos, run dynamic ads, and manage inventory in real time.
Set up TikTok Shop. Between 2023 and 2025, TikTok Shop in the U.S. grew from a few thousand sellers to hundreds of thousands, with U.S. TikTok Shop sales more than doubling year-over-year in early 2025. Early adoption still provides an edge. Apply for TikTok Shop through the Seller Center, and use Shopify’s direct product syncing to keep inventory current.
Lean into authenticity. Polished, high-production content often underperforms on TikTok. Raw, authentic, educational, or entertaining videos consistently outperform brand-speak. Show your product being used. Answer a common question. Share a “behind the scenes” moment. The algorithm rewards engagement over production value.
Use the Creator Marketplace. Partner with TikTok creators through TikTok’s affiliate program. Creators earn commissions on sales they drive through TikTok Shop — making it a performance-based influencer arrangement with measurable ROI directly tied to your Shopify sales data.
Facebook: Broad Reach, Strong for Older Demographics
Facebook may not generate the buzz of TikTok, but its sheer scale remains formidable. Facebook Shop remains strong, especially among older demographics, with 39% of social shoppers naming it their go-to platform. For brands selling to customers 35 and older, Facebook is still essential.
The Shopify-Facebook integration works through Meta’s unified Business ecosystem:
Connect via the Meta Sales Channel. Installing the Meta Sales Channel from your Shopify admin connects both Facebook and Instagram simultaneously. Your product catalog syncs automatically, and you can manage ads for both platforms through Meta Ads Manager. Using the Shopify integration, brands can automatically sync products to Facebook and create shoppable posts and ads.
Leverage Facebook Ads with Shopify Audiences. Shopify Audiences is a powerful tool that uses aggregated Shopify merchant data to build high-intent customer segments for your Facebook and Instagram ads. Luxury apparel brand SIMKHAI used Shopify Audiences to lower its cost per acquisition by 54%, increase its conversion rate by 84%, and found that 89% of new customers came through Shopify Audiences.
Run retargeting campaigns. Install the Meta Pixel (done automatically through the Shopify integration) to retarget customers who visited your store, viewed specific products, or abandoned their cart. This closes the loop between your social content and your Shopify checkout.
Pinterest: The Search Engine of Shopping Inspiration
Pinterest operates differently from every other social platform. Users come to Pinterest with intent — they’re actively planning purchases, decorating rooms, building wardrobes, and searching for ideas. Pinterest is ideal for DIY, planning, and product discovery, with conversion-friendly Pins and strong searchability.
For home décor, fashion, beauty, food, and lifestyle brands, Pinterest can be a remarkably cost-effective acquisition channel. Here’s how to connect it:
Install the Pinterest Sales Channel. Available directly from your Shopify admin, this integration automatically syncs your product catalog to Pinterest, converting your products into Product Pins — rich pins that include real-time pricing, availability, and a direct link to your store.
Use shopping ads. Pinterest’s shopping ads target users based on their search behavior and board interests — meaning you’re reaching people who have already signaled buying intent through their saves and searches. Combined with your Shopify product data, these ads can be highly targeted and highly effective.
Create boards that inspire, not just sell. Pinterest users are in discovery mode. Brands that only post product shots miss the platform’s potential. Create boards that tell a lifestyle story: “Coastal Kitchen Ideas,” “Minimalist Home Office,” “Spring Capsule Wardrobe.” Include your products within a broader inspirational context, and shoppers will find their way to you.
YouTube: Long-Form Video Meets Commerce
YouTube is the world’s second-largest search engine, and its integration with Shopify opens up commerce opportunities that other platforms simply can’t replicate. Longer-form product reviews, tutorials, and unboxings build a depth of trust that a 15-second Reel cannot.
Shopify’s YouTube partnership lets merchants pin products next to videos so followers can like, subscribe, and buy. There’s also a live-shopping feature designed to help retailers livestream on the platform.
The strategy here is less about immediate conversions and more about building considered purchase intent. A detailed review video that answers every question a skeptical customer might have can convert viewers weeks after they first watched it. Tag your products in the video’s description, add shopping cards during the review, and funnel viewers directly to your Shopify product pages.
Building a Cross-Channel Content Strategy That Doesn’t Break You
Create Once, Distribute Smart
The most common mistake merchants make when going omnichannel is trying to create entirely original content for every platform. That’s a path to burnout. The smarter approach is to create hero content — typically a video — and adapt it intelligently for each platform’s format and culture.
A product demo video is a good example. Film it in portrait orientation for TikTok and Instagram Reels. Edit a longer version for YouTube. Extract a still frame for an Instagram grid post. Create a step-by-step graphic version for Pinterest. Write a blog post based on the same information for your Shopify store, which supports SEO. One shoot. Five pieces of content. Five channels reinforcing the same product story.
The key is adaptation, not duplication. Don’t just copy-paste the same caption across platforms. TikTok favors casual, conversational language. Pinterest descriptions work best with keyword-rich, utility-focused copy. Instagram captions can be longer and more storytelling-focused. Each platform has a grammar, and matching it makes your content feel native rather than imported.
User-Generated Content: Your Most Valuable Asset
You don’t have to produce all the content yourself. In fact, the content that converts best is often the content you didn’t make. Customer reviews influence 62% of shoppers, making them the biggest factor behind social media-driven purchases. User-generated content also plays a role, with 31% of shoppers swayed by content shared by other users.
Build systems to encourage and collect UGC:
- Include a card in every package asking customers to tag you when they share their purchase
- Create a branded hashtag and actively monitor it
- Run periodic contests or giveaways that require a tag or share to enter
- Reach out personally to customers who post organically and ask permission to reshare
- Feature customer photos on your Shopify product pages using UGC apps — this brings the social proof directly into your conversion funnel
When a real customer posts an unboxing video or a “this product changed my routine” TikTok, it does something no brand-produced ad can: it proves your product delivers. That proof is worth more than any production budget.
Live Commerce: The Highest-Converting Format
Live shopping is the single most exciting format in social commerce right now. Livestream shopping is seen to have a 30% conversion rate — far exceeding the typical ecommerce average. When viewers can ask questions in real time, see a product demonstrated live, and buy with a single tap while the energy of the moment is high, the barriers to purchase collapse.
TikTok Live, Instagram Live, and Facebook Live all support product tagging that connects directly to your Shopify store. The playbook:
- Announce the live session 24–48 hours in advance to build audience
- Prepare 3–5 products to feature, with your Shopify products tagged and ready
- Offer a time-limited discount exclusive to live viewers — this creates the urgency that drives immediate purchases
- Engage with every comment and question during the session
- Repurpose the recording as regular video content afterward
You don’t need a studio or a professional presenter. Authenticity wins on live commerce. A founder showing their products with genuine enthusiasm regularly outperforms polished presentations.
Inventory Management and Operational Sync Across Channels
The Hidden Complexity — and How Shopify Solves It
Here’s the operational reality many merchants don’t think about until it’s too late: when you sell across multiple channels, your inventory needs to be a single, live number — not a separate count for each platform. Sell your last unit through TikTok Shop while someone has it in their Instagram Shopping cart, and you’ve created a customer service problem and a reputation risk.
Shopify’s native integrations solve this by treating your Shopify inventory as the master record. Every connected social channel pulls from the same inventory pool in real time. When a product sells through any channel, the count adjusts everywhere simultaneously. Managing everything from a centralized dashboard reduces manual work and mistakes, letting you focus on marketing and growing your business.
A few operational best practices for multi-channel merchants:
- Set conservative inventory thresholds. Consider setting a “safety stock” buffer — when a product hits a certain low quantity, remove it from social channels and reserve remaining units for your main website where you have the most control over the experience.
- Use SKUs consistently. Every product variant should have a unique, consistent SKU across all channels. This makes inventory reconciliation and reporting vastly simpler.
- Monitor channel-by-channel performance. Shopify’s analytics show you which channels are driving the most revenue, letting you allocate inventory — and marketing budget — intelligently.
- Prepare for virality. If you run a TikTok campaign, stock up on your featured products in advance. A viral moment can deplete inventory in hours.
Consistent Pricing Across All Touchpoints
Price inconsistency is one of the fastest ways to erode customer trust. If a shopper sees your product at $49 on TikTok Shop and $59 on your website, they won’t just notice — they’ll feel manipulated, even if the discrepancy has an innocent explanation.
Shopify’s catalog syncing ensures that your base prices stay consistent across channels. For promotional pricing — sales, discount codes, limited-time offers — plan your campaigns holistically. Decide which channels get access to which discounts, and ensure your Shopify discount infrastructure supports that strategy. Keep your promotions coordinated, and your customers will trust that you’re treating them fairly wherever they encounter your brand.
Using Data to Optimize Your Omnichannel Strategy
What to Measure and Where
Running multiple social channels without clear measurement is like driving blind. The data is there — from Shopify’s analytics, from each platform’s native insights, from your tracking pixels — but it only helps you if you’re looking at the right metrics and connecting the dots.
Start with these core metrics for each channel:
- Click-through rate (CTR) from product tags: How effectively does your content drive people to your store?
- Conversion rate from social traffic: Of people who arrive from each platform, what percentage buys?
- Average order value (AOV) by channel: Different channels attract different customers with different purchase behaviors.
- Cost per acquisition (CPA) for paid campaigns: What does it cost to generate a customer from each platform?
- Return on ad spend (ROAS): The ultimate efficiency metric for any paid social campaign.
- Revenue per channel: Which platforms actually move the needle on sales?
Shopify’s built-in analytics attribute sales to their originating channels, giving you a consolidated view. Supplement this with your UTM parameters on any links you share in bios or stories, so you can track exactly which piece of content drove which traffic and which conversions.
The Attribution Challenge — and How to Think About It
Multi-channel attribution is genuinely complex. A customer might discover you on TikTok, research you on Instagram, and buy on your website after clicking a Pinterest ad. Which channel gets “credit”? Standard last-click attribution would give it all to Pinterest, ignoring the role TikTok and Instagram played.
The practical solution isn’t to find a perfect attribution model — it’s to make intelligent decisions with imperfect data. Look at assisted conversions in your analytics. Pay attention to traffic trends: when you post more on TikTok, does website traffic increase? When you run a Facebook campaign, do Instagram followers grow? These correlations tell a story even when direct attribution is murky.
More importantly: 73% of shoppers use more than one channel during their buying journey. Accept that no single channel tells the whole story, and evaluate your social commerce investment as a system rather than a collection of independent experiments.
Running Platform-Level Experiments
Once you have baseline data, start experimenting deliberately. Test one variable at a time — a different posting time, a different caption style, a product demo versus a lifestyle image — and give each test enough time and traffic volume to produce meaningful results.
Some high-value experiments to run:
- Does product content or lifestyle content drive higher CTR on Instagram?
- What time of day generates the most engagement and traffic on TikTok?
- Do Pinterest ads outperform Facebook ads for your category?
- Does adding a countdown timer or “limited stock” message to a social promotion increase conversions?
- Do micro-influencer partnerships drive better ROAS than paid ads for your brand?
Document your experiments and their outcomes. Over time, you’ll build a playbook specific to your brand, your audience, and your products — far more valuable than generic advice.
Advanced Strategies: Taking Omnichannel Social Commerce to the Next Level
Influencer Marketing as a Channel, Not a One-Off
Influencer marketing works best when it’s treated as an ongoing channel rather than a series of isolated campaigns. The brands that consistently outperform on social commerce don’t just hire influencers for a product launch — they cultivate relationships with creators who genuinely love their products and communicate that authentically to engaged audiences.
If amplifying your social commerce strategy with influencers, opt for the most relevant creators with the most engaged followers — also known as micro-influencers. These creators have built a tight-knit community that trusts their recommendations. A micro-influencer with 15,000 highly engaged followers in your exact niche will regularly outperform a mega-influencer with millions of passive followers.
Build your influencer program with clear tracking:
- Give each influencer a unique UTM link or discount code, so you can attribute sales precisely
- Use Shopify’s affiliate or referral tracking to automate commission tracking
- Measure ROAS per creator, not just total influencer spend
- Prioritize creators who consistently drive purchases, not just impressions
Personalization Across the Customer Journey
The most advanced omnichannel strategies don’t just show the same experience to every customer — they adapt based on behavior. When given personalized choices, 80% of consumers are more likely to make a purchase. Personalization isn’t a luxury feature anymore; it’s table stakes for merchants competing for attention in crowded social feeds.
On Shopify, personalization across your omnichannel touchpoints can take several forms:
- Dynamic retargeting ads: Show people the exact products they viewed on your Shopify store when they’re scrolling Instagram or Facebook — not generic brand ads, but the specific item they almost bought
- Segmented email campaigns: Use data from your social channels and Shopify to segment customers by channel, purchase history, or browsing behavior, then send content and offers relevant to their specific interests
- Behavioral discount triggers: Tools that recognize hesitant visitors and offer time-limited incentives only when behavior signals they need a nudge — protecting your margins from blanket discounting while converting customers who would otherwise leave
Mobile-First Is Non-Negotiable
Every social commerce experience, without exception, is primarily a mobile experience. The share of mobile commerce in all ecommerce is expected to reach 62% in 2027. If your Shopify store isn’t optimized for mobile — fast loading, clean navigation, frictionless checkout — your social commerce investment will underperform regardless of how good your content is.
Audit your mobile experience regularly. Use Shopify’s mobile preview tools, test the checkout flow on your own phone, and pay particular attention to how quickly product images load over a cellular connection. Every second of load time costs you conversions from the social audience you’ve worked hard to attract.
Bringing It All Together: Your Omnichannel Action Plan
The scope of omnichannel social commerce can feel overwhelming. But the merchants who succeed don’t launch everything at once — they build deliberately, one channel at a time, connecting each to their Shopify core and measuring results before expanding.
Here’s a sensible sequence:
- Weeks 1–2: Audit and optimize your Shopify product catalog — titles, descriptions, photos, inventory accuracy
- Week 3: Connect your highest-priority platform (typically Instagram or TikTok, depending on your target audience) and test the integration thoroughly before going live
- Weeks 4–6: Develop a content rhythm for your first channel — consistent posting, product tagging, and engagement with comments
- Week 7: Review your first month of data: which content drove clicks? Which products resonated? What was your conversion rate from social traffic?
- Weeks 8–10: Add your second channel, applying lessons from the first
- Ongoing: Test, measure, iterate. Add channels as you have the capacity to do them well — a mediocre presence on five platforms is far less effective than an excellent presence on two
The goal isn’t to be everywhere. The goal is to be present, consistent, and compelling wherever your specific customers are spending their time. When your Shopify store becomes the intelligent hub connecting all those touchpoints — syncing inventory, unifying data, powering a seamless customer experience — you’ve built something no competitor can easily replicate. You’ve built an omnichannel engine.
And that engine, once running, compounds. Every new customer who finds you on TikTok becomes a retargeting opportunity on Instagram. Every Pinterest browser becomes a Shopify visitor. Every Shopify visitor becomes data that makes your next campaign smarter. The channels feed each other, and your store grows in ways that no single-platform strategy ever could.
References
- Shopify. “What is Social Commerce? Trends and Key Insights for 2025.” Shopify Enterprise Blog. https://www.shopify.com/enterprise/blog/social-commerce-trends
- Shopify. “8 Omnichannel Trends for 2025 & Beyond.” Shopify Retail Blog. https://www.shopify.com/retail/omnichannel-trends
- Shopify. “15 Best Social Commerce Platforms and Apps in 2025.” Shopify Enterprise Blog. https://www.shopify.com/enterprise/blog/social-commerce-platforms
- Shopify. “Social Commerce Strategy: Improve Your Social Selling With These 11 Strategies.” Shopify Enterprise Blog. https://www.shopify.com/enterprise/blog/social-commerce-strategy
- SellersCommerce. “Social Commerce Statistics Of 2025 (Demographics And Trends).” SellersCommerce Blog. https://www.sellerscommerce.com/blog/social-commerce-statistics/
- Firework. “52+ Omnichannel Stats You Can’t Afford to Ignore in 2024.” Firework Blog. https://firework.com/blog/omnichannel-statistics
- Feedonomics. “Top Omnichannel Trends 2025 (With Updated Stats).” Feedonomics Blog. https://feedonomics.com/blog/omnichannel-trends/
Turn Every Social Click into a Smarter Conversion with Growth Suite
Driving traffic to your Shopify store from Instagram, TikTok, Facebook, and Pinterest is only half the equation. The other half is converting that traffic — especially the hesitant browsers who need just the right nudge at just the right moment.
That’s exactly what Growth Suite is built for. Growth Suite is a Shopify app that watches how each visitor behaves on your store, predicts their purchase intent in real time, and presents a personalized, time-limited discount offer only to visitors who are likely to leave without buying. Dedicated buyers who were already going to purchase? They never see an offer — so your margins stay protected. Hesitant visitors who just need a nudge? They get one genuine, time-bound offer with a countdown timer that disappears when time runs out.
No blanket discounting. No fake urgency. No margin erosion. Just precise, behavioral conversion optimization designed to maximize the revenue you get from every visitor your social channels deliver to your store.
Growth Suite is free to install with a single click from the Shopify App Store. A pre-configured campaign activates immediately upon installation — no technical setup required. If you’re investing in omnichannel social commerce and want to make sure every click counts, Growth Suite is the tool that turns your traffic into revenue.



