Never Have I Ever
Audit Overview
Your store's untapped revenue potential — and how to unlock it
Why We Created This Audit
We analyzed neverhaveiever.shop the same way we've audited 350+ e-commerce stores — looking for the specific gaps between your current experience and what top-performing Beauty stores deliver. Every finding in this report is a revenue opportunity backed by industry data and competitive benchmarks.
What We Analyzed
- UX & Conversion Design14 findings
- Technology & App StackPlatform + 6 apps
- Industry BenchmarksBeauty
Pages Analyzed
- Homepage4 findings
- Collection Pages3 findings
- Product Pages (PDP)4 findings
- Cart & Checkout3 findings
This audit was prepared by Growisto — a CRO-led Website development team behind 167% conversion growth for Atomberg, 46% CR lift for TyresNmore, and 350+ e-commerce projects.
UX & Conversion Findings
Page-by-page analysis with visual comparisons against top Beauty stores
- The homepage hero and first two scrolls contain no mention of the Shark Tank Season 17 appearance — one of the most powerful credibility signals available to a DTC brand
- Retail partnerships with Urban Outfitters, MoMA, and PacSun are not prominently displayed in the hero or trust strip — these are substantial social proof assets that remain invisible above the fold
- No 'As Seen On' press strip or media mention bar (Allure, Teen Vogue, Cosmopolitan etc.) is visible within the first two scrolls, despite the brand having significant press coverage
- Add an 'As Featured On Shark Tank' badge or banner — a prominent callout in the hero or immediately below it — to immediately establish mass-market credibility for first-time visitors
- Add a horizontal scrolling press/retail logo bar in the first two scrolls: Shark Tank, Urban Outfitters, MoMA, PacSun, and any editorial features (Allure, Teen Vogue)
- This single change can lift first-visit conversion by 10-20% for new visitors arriving from paid acquisition or viral social media
- The 15% first-order discount exists but is only visible in the footer email capture form — the majority of first-time visitors will never scroll to the footer
- No timed entry popup or exit-intent popup surfaces the discount offer during a visitor's first 15-30 seconds on site
- Top US Beauty DTC brands with active Klaviyo/Privy popups capture 5-12% of first-visit emails — NHIE's current footer-only approach likely captures under 1-2% of first-time traffic
- Implement a timed entry popup (trigger at 15-20 seconds or on second page view) offering '15% Off Your First Order' with an email + optional SMS capture field
- Add an exit-intent popup as a safety net — triggered when the cursor moves toward the browser bar on desktop or rapid scroll-up on mobile
- Use Klaviyo (recommended) or Privy — both integrate natively with Shopify and automate the welcome discount delivery via email flow
- The first two scrolls of the homepage show product carousels and hero imagery without any iconographic trust strip (vegan, cruelty-free, nail-safe, easy-apply, easy-remove)
- Brand differentiators — artist collaborations, licensed characters, nail-safe formula — are described in product copy but not visualized as scannable icons in the decision zone
- First-time visitors from paid social or search have no quick visual confirmation of brand values before they need to decide whether to continue browsing
- Add a horizontal 4-6 icon USP strip immediately below the hero: e.g., Vegan & Cruelty-Free | Easy 30-Sec Application | Nail-Safe Formula | 30-Day Wear | Artist Collaborations | Shark Tank Featured
- Use simple line-art icons with 3-5 word labels — scannable in under 3 seconds. This strip should appear within the first scroll on mobile
- No loyalty points, rewards, or referral program is visible anywhere on the site — no Smile.io widget, no LoyaltyLion, no Yotpo Loyalty
- Nail art is a high-frequency category with natural repurchase triggers (seasonal collections, artist drops, new nail shapes) — a points program would meaningfully accelerate repeat buying
- Direct competitor Glamnetic actively promotes its 'Insider Membership' program with exclusive benefits, early access, and rewards — creating a retention moat that NHIE currently lacks
- Implement a loyalty program (Smile.io is the Shopify standard — free tier available) offering points per dollar spent, bonus points for reviews, referral rewards, and birthday bonuses
- Prominently feature the loyalty program on the homepage hero or navigation — 'Earn Points on Every Order' — to drive program enrollment and repeat purchase frequency
- A referral program (refer-a-friend for 20% off) is especially powerful for a brand with strong word-of-mouth and Shark Tank visibility
- Product cards on the collection page show image, title, price, and star ratings — but no quick-add or add-to-cart button on the card itself
- Shoppers must navigate into each PDP, select any variant (nail size), then add to cart and use browser back to return to collection — 4+ taps per product for browsers building multi-set orders
- For a brand that offers bundle discounts (15% off 3+ items), the absence of quick-add makes building a qualifying bundle unnecessarily friction-heavy
- Add a one-tap 'Add to Cart' or '+' quick-add button to each collection card — appearing on hover (desktop) or as a persistent element (mobile)
- For products with nail size variants, the quick-add can trigger a minimal size selection bottom sheet before adding to cart — keeping the shopper on the collection page
- This is standard on Shopify themes and directly reduces browse-to-cart friction for shoppers building multi-item orders
- The full catalog shows 261 products across 11 pages with 40 products per page — mobile shoppers must tap 'Next Page' to continue browsing after the first 40 results
- With artist collaborations and licensed characters (Peanuts, Miffy) as key discovery drivers, deep browsing is a core behavior — pagination interrupts this flow
- Filters are available and good, but visitors exploring the full range (e.g., all almond-shape designs) must paginate rather than continuously scroll
- Replace or supplement pagination with a 'Load More' button or infinite scroll — keeping mobile shoppers in a continuous browse state
- Consider increasing the initial products per page to 60-80 for filtered views to reduce the number of times users hit the pagination barrier
- The mobile navigation links to broad product category pages (Press-On Nails, Tooth Gems, Temporary Tattoos, Bundles, Accessories) but lacks a 'Best Sellers' or 'Most Popular' shortcut
- New visitors arriving from Shark Tank coverage, press features, or social ads with no prior brand awareness have no clear 'start here' collection — they must self-navigate a 261-product catalog
- Competing brands surface a 'Best Sellers' or 'Top Rated' collection as the primary nav shortcut, giving intent-driven new visitors an immediate high-confidence landing point
- Add a 'Best Sellers' collection to the top navigation, surfacing the 12-20 highest-rated and highest-converting nail sets — this is the single most impactful collection page for new visitor conversion
- Consider a 'New Arrivals' or 'Latest Drops' nav link to serve returning customers looking for new artist collaborations and limited editions
- When scrolling past the inline Add to Cart button on mobile, no sticky bottom bar appears to maintain purchase access throughout the PDP scroll experience
- PDPs for nail sets include application instructions, nail size guides, artist bio sections, and Judge.me reviews — shoppers who read through this content must scroll back to the top to purchase
- Each moment of friction between purchase intent and action increases cart abandonment — a sticky ATC bar removes this friction entirely
- Implement a sticky bottom ATC bar that appears after the visitor scrolls past the inline ATC zone — showing product thumbnail, name, price, and a prominent 'Add to Cart' button
- Include the nail size selector in the sticky bar or use a quick-size-select sheet that appears on tap, maintaining full purchase functionality without requiring a scroll-back
- No Afterpay, Klarna, or Shop Pay Installments messaging is visible on any PDP near the price or ATC button
- The $18–45 price range is in the sweet spot for BNPL — 'As low as $4.50/week with Afterpay' converts price-sensitive shoppers who might otherwise bounce
- NHIE's core demographic (18-35 women in the US) has high BNPL adoption — Afterpay's own data shows 30%+ of beauty purchases by this segment use BNPL when available
- Enable Afterpay or Shop Pay Installments on Shopify — both are native integrations that display automatically on PDPs once activated
- Display 'Or 4 interest-free payments of $X with Afterpay' directly beneath the price on every PDP — even for $18 products, the display alone increases purchase confidence
- The ATC button zone shows only the product title, price, nail size selector, and Add to Cart — no trust icons, brand promise badges, or guarantee callouts
- NHIE's key brand promises (vegan & cruelty-free, easy 30-second application, non-damaging removal) are mentioned in product descriptions but not iconographically placed near the purchase trigger
- First-time buyers evaluating press-on nails often have skepticism about nail safety and removal difficulty — trust badges directly at the ATC zone address these objections at the critical moment
- Add a 3-4 icon trust badge row directly below the ATC button: ✓ Vegan & Cruelty-Free | ✓ Nail-Safe Formula | ✓ Easy On, Easy Off | ✓ Artist-Designed
- Keep icons small (24px) with 2-3 word labels — visually scannable without adding scroll depth. Use line-art or flat icons matching the brand's aesthetic
- PDPs show no 'You May Also Like', 'Complete the Look', or 'Frequently Bought Together' section to suggest complementary nail sets, tooth gems, or accessories
- The brand offers a 15% bundle discount on 3+ items — but this offer requires shoppers to self-discover complementary sets, as no cross-sell section surfaces relevant pairings
- With 261 products across nail sets, accessories, and tooth gems, there is strong cross-sell opportunity between categories that is currently left entirely to chance
- Implement a 'You May Also Like' or 'Complete the Look' product recommendation section on each PDP, showing 4-6 complementary nail sets or accessories
- For nail sets, cross-sell tooth gems and sun tan stickers — these are natural impulse additions. For artist collaboration sets, cross-sell within the same artist's collection
- Rebuy Engine or AfterSell both integrate natively with Shopify and can power this with algorithm-driven recommendations. At minimum, manual curation of related products is better than nothing
- The cart page shows subtotal and checkout button but no free shipping progress bar indicating how much more to spend to reach the $70 free shipping threshold
- The $70 free shipping threshold is above-average for the category (Glamnetic is $65, Static Nails is lower) — without a progress bar, shoppers have no automatic prompt to add another item
- Industry data shows that a visible free shipping progress bar increases AOV by 15-25% for beauty DTC stores with thresholds in the $50-80 range
- Add a free shipping progress bar at the top of the cart drawer / cart page showing: 'Add $X more for FREE shipping!' with a visual progress indicator
- When the threshold is reached, change the message to '🎉 You've unlocked FREE shipping!' to provide a satisfying confirmation
- Consider lowering the threshold to $60 to increase the number of orders qualifying for free shipping while maintaining the AOV-boosting effect of the progress bar
- The cart checkout area shows the total and a Checkout button but no trust icons — no 'Secure Checkout' badge, no money-back guarantee callout, no payment method icons near the button
- Payment method logos (Shop Pay, PayPal, Apple Pay etc.) appear in the footer but not inline at the checkout trigger where they would most reassure hesitant first-time buyers
- For a brand gaining new visitors via Shark Tank and press coverage, a significant portion of buyers will be first-timers with no prior trust history — reassurance at checkout is critical
- Add a small trust row directly below the Checkout button: 🔒 Secure Checkout | 30-Day Returns | Trusted by 10K+ Customers
- Display accepted payment method logos (Shop Pay, PayPal, Apple Pay, Visa, Mastercard) inline with the checkout area — not just in the footer
- The cart shows items in bag and a checkout button — no product recommendation, cross-sell, or upsell is shown within the cart experience
- Tooth gems ($12-15) and temporary tattoos ($10-15) are natural impulse-add accessories for a shopper who already has nail sets in their cart — but they are never surfaced
- With a $70 free shipping threshold, a cart cross-sell showing 'Add tooth gems to reach FREE shipping — only $X more!' would simultaneously serve AOV growth and shipping threshold motivation
- Add a 'You Might Also Like' or 'Complete Your Look' section inside the cart showing 2-4 frequently-bought-together items (tooth gems, sun tan stickers, nail accessories)
- Combine with free shipping progress: 'Add tooth gems for just $X more and unlock FREE shipping' — a double motivation that typically lifts cart AOV by 10-15%
Performance & Technology
Core Web Vitals, page-speed signals, and the technology stack powering Never Have I Ever
Performance
Performance
Core Web Vitals
Technology Stack
Performance & Technology Assessment
Mobile performance is needs work (—/100); desktop is needs work (—/100) on Shopify. Page-speed and Core Web Vitals are increasingly load-bearing for SEO and conversion in this category — addressing the weakest vital first is the single highest-leverage technical improvement available.
Confidential — Prepared for Never Have I Ever by Growisto | May 2026
App Ecosystem
What's installed vs what's missing from best-in-class Beauty stores
Detected
Missing
Present (6)
Missing (7)
App Stack Assessment
Never Have I Ever has a lean app stack of 6 detected tools — well below the 12-16 apps typical of top-performing US Beauty DTC brands. The review and affiliate infrastructure is solid (Judge.me + Secomapp), and the Shopify payments stack is comprehensive. However, the most impactful revenue-driving tools are entirely absent: there is no email marketing automation (Klaviyo is the clear industry standard), no loyalty/rewards program despite strong repeat-purchase potential from nail art enthusiasts, and no BNPL option despite the $18–45 price range being ideal for Afterpay/Shop Pay Installments. Additionally, with a Shark Tank feature driving traffic surges and limited edition drops frequently going out of stock, the absence of back-in-stock notifications is leaving meaningful demand unrecovered. Closing these gaps — starting with Klaviyo + BNPL + loyalty — would substantially lift both conversion rate and long-term customer LTV.
Confidential — Prepared for Never Have I Ever by Growisto | May 2026