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Templates

How to choose your first online store template

Pick a template that matches the way you sell, not just the way it looks.

Templates Setup
6 min read Updated 0001-01-01

Picking a template is one of the first concrete decisions a new seller makes. The mistake to avoid is picking a template by looks alone.

A template should fit how you sell first, then how it looks.

Match the template to your sales path

Different stores sell different things in different ways. Templates are designed around those flows.

Ask yourself:

  • Will the customer click a product and buy?
  • Will they book a service or pick a time slot?
  • Will they download a file?
  • Will they request a custom quote?
  • Will they place a local pickup order?

The right template starts you closer to your actual sales path.

Common template patterns

  • Basic product store. Homepage to catalog to product page to checkout. Best for physical products with a small to medium catalog.
  • Service or booking store. Homepage to service list to service page to book or buy. Best for consultants, freelancers, and local services.
  • Maker / Etsy-style store. Homepage to category browse to individual items to checkout. Best for handmade or one-of-a-kind sellers.
  • Local pickup store. Homepage to menu or product list to pickup slot to checkout. Best for bakeries, food, florists, and local retail.
  • Digital download store. Homepage to product page to checkout to instant download. Best for files, templates, and digital goods.
  • Creator store. Homepage to drop or merch to product page to checkout. Best for influencers and audiences who already know the brand.

What matters more than the design

Function first:

  • Mobile checkout works.
  • Product page shows price, photo, options, and add-to-cart in one screen.
  • Search works if you have more than 10 products.
  • Policies are easy to find.

Templates that look beautiful but bury the buying flow do not sell.

Customization at launch

You do not need to customize a template heavily for launch. Customizing usually means:

  • Changing the logo.
  • Updating colors to match brand.
  • Replacing stock photos.
  • Writing the homepage headline.

That is enough for day one. Bigger redesigns can wait until you know what your customers want.

When to switch templates

You may want to switch if:

  • The current template makes mobile checkout hard.
  • Customers tell you the homepage is confusing.
  • Your product mix changed significantly.
  • The platform updated to a better baseline.

Switching templates is a real project, so do it once with intention, not every quarter.

Common template mistakes

  • Picking based on the homepage screenshot only.
  • Skipping a mobile preview.
  • Choosing a template that hides price by default.
  • Customizing extensively before launch.
  • Switching templates while customers are mid-checkout.

Bottom line

Pick a template that fits how you sell. Get the mobile checkout working. Update logo, colors, and headline. Launch. The rest of the customization can wait until you have real data.

Frequently asked questions

How much customization is needed before launch?

Logo, colors, headline, and replacing stock photos is usually enough. Bigger redesigns can wait.

Can I switch templates after launching?

Yes, but treat it as a real project. Plan it once with intention rather than swapping templates every quarter.

Does the template affect SEO?

Indirectly. A template that hides products, slows page load, or breaks mobile checkout hurts SEO. A clean template helps it.

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