PNN
New Delhi [India], April 16: Customer acquisition costs for Indian D2C brands have tripled since 2021. Conversion rates, however, remain flat. The gap points to a familiar but overlooked problem: what happens after a customer clicks "Add to Cart."
For years, checkout was treated as a technical step. Today is the decisive moment when intent either becomes revenue or quietly disappears. Shiprocket, one of India's largest commerce enablement platforms, is positioning its checkout infrastructure as the answer. But the larger story is not about one company. It is about a sector-wide shift in how growth is defined.
The funnel has a leak
The standard e-commerce journey looks simple: visit, cart, checkout, payment. In practice, each stage introduces small points of hesitation. A final price that surprises. A delivery estimate that feels uncertain. A form that asks for information a mobile user does not have handy. A payment that fails after multiple attempts.
Research from the Baymard Institute puts global cart abandonment at around 70 per cent. In India, where payment reliability, device diversity, and trust gaps add friction, real-world drop-offs are often higher. Many brands invest heavily in acquiring traffic, then send those users into checkout experiences that load slowly, request too much information, or break under peak load. Revenue does not vanish at the ad. It leaks at the last click.
A better way to view the journey
Fixing this requires seeing checkout not as a single page but as a connected system. Industry observers are starting to break it into three layers.
First, the intent layer. This is where a buyer moves from interest to consideration. Unclear pricing, hidden fees, or vague return policies create doubt at the exact moment a decision is being made. A well-structured cart reinforces value, reduces uncertainty, and builds momentum.
Second, the friction layer. Once intent is set, any obstacle can derail the process. Multi-step flows, long forms, and slow load times disrupt the buying rhythm. Streamlining these into single-page experiences with pre-filled data and contextual logic removes reasons to abandon.
Third, the reliability layer. In India, this is especially complex. UPI has made payments faster, but not always dependable. Bank downtimes, OTP delays, and network issues can interrupt transactions at the final step. When a payment fails, buyers do not just face inconvenience. They question whether their money is safe, whether the order went through, and whether to try again. Many choose not to.
How infrastructure is adapting
This is where commerce platforms are evolving. The focus is shifting from simply processing transactions to optimising the entire conversion path. Address validation, smart discount handling, and unified payment orchestration that retries failed transactions or offers fallback methods are becoming standard.
Shiprocket Checkout, which supports checkout flows for more than 145,000 merchants across 19,000 pin codes, has introduced changes aligned with this shift. Its approach collapses multi-step checkouts, pre-validates addresses, and supports multiple payment methods, including UPI, cards, wallets, and cash on delivery. For repeat buyers, saved payment details reduce the need for repeated entry. Aggregated data from its merchant network suggests that brands using unified checkout infrastructure see reductions of up to 30 per cent in RTOs and conversion rates up to 60 per cent higher. The business impact is direct: fewer lost sales and better margin protection through reduced dependence on cash-on-delivery.
The growth equation is changing
As performance marketing costs rise, the logic of D2C growth is flipping. Acquiring more traffic is getting harder and more expensive. Converting more of the traffic already arriving is the higher-leverage move.
India's e-commerce market is projected to reach 325 billion dollars by 2030, according to IBEF. The brands that capture meaningful share will not necessarily be those with the largest ad budgets. They will be the ones that lose the fewest buyers at the moment; those buyers are ready to pay. Checkout is no longer a technical detail to delegate. It is a strategic priority that belongs in the same conversation as media planning, creative direction, and customer retention.
The last click decides
Customers are not lost at the start of the journey. They are lost when they are ready to buy. For D2C brands focused on sustainable growth, the solution is not more traffic. It is a faster, more reliable, and more intelligent path from intent to transaction.
Shiprocket's checkout push reflects a broader truth: brands that treat checkout as a system, not a step, will stop leaking revenue at the last click. That shift is no longer optional. It is the new baseline for Indian e-commerce.
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