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blog|Enterprise ecommerce

The Ecommerce Guide to Product Experience Management (2026)

A shopper might find your product on ChatGPT, Google, or your store. Product experience management keeps details consistent everywhere

by Brinda Gulati
lipstick tube with shade options and price listing
On this page
On this page
  • What is product experience management (PXM)?
  • Why is PXM more important than ever in ecommerce?
  • What’s the difference between PXM and PIM?
  • What makes a great product experience?
  • How to improve product experience management on Shopify
  • Product experience management FAQ

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A product experience encompasses all of a customer’s interactions with your product, from viewing it in your online store to unboxing it at home. Prepurchase, that typically includes images, descriptions, specifications, and reviews. For some products, that alone isn't enough.

Gunner Kennels, for example, sells heavy-duty dog crates, and their customers couldn't judge from the photos whether a crate would fit their dog. After adding 3D models and augmented reality (AR) on Shopify—letting a shopper place a virtual crate beside their dog from a phone—order conversion rose 40%, and the return rate dropped 5%.

Today, a shopper can come across your product in search results, on marketplaces, inside AI answers, and other channels before they ever reach your site. A product experience management (PXM) strategy makes sure shoppers get the product details they need to find, evaluate, and buy with confidence across those surfaces. This guide covers how to improve PXM in your organization on Shopify. 

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What is product experience management?

Product experience management (PXM) is the discipline of delivering accurate, complete, and contextually relevant product information everywhere a shopper encounters a product. It’s the customer-facing layer of product information: the descriptions, images, attributes, reviews, search results, and localized details that help shoppers understand what they’re buying. That includes your website, a marketplace, a retail partner’s storefront, and social media.

For example, Rare Beauty's Soft Pinch Liquid Blush is a $25 liquid blush wherever you find it. On Sephora’s website, the product appears with 12,500 reviews on Sephora's template, the description trimmed to a "highly rated for satisfaction, pigment, color" tag.

Sephora product page for Rare Beauty Soft Pinch Liquid Blush in shade Bliss, showing the bottle beside its open applicator.
Source: Rare Beauty on Sephora

And on its own website, the same blush shows 4,916 reviews and the full brand copy:

Rare Beauty website product page for Soft Pinch Liquid Blush in shade Bliss, showing a matte nude pink bottle on a minimal background.
Source: Rare Beauty

On the brand's own site, customers get the styling and the story behind the product. Shoppers can expect richer product storytelling and imagery when buying directly from a brand.

On Sephora’s site, shoppers may be comparing the product against other blushes in the same format. And since Sephora features so many brands, they may not have the capacity to include as much of each brand’s marketing copy.

The role of PXM is making sure the shade, the finish, and the $25 price are consistent across both listings. When you have one blush across two sites, it’s easy to keep straight by hand. But a brand like Rare Beauty sells in its own store, Sephora, Ulta, and Shopify's Shop app, and the Soft Pinch blush alone has two finishes, two sizes, and more than 20 shades.

Multiply that across a full catalog and four storefronts, and it becomes exceedingly difficult to keep track of whether every shade and finish appears correctly on every page. That’s where PXM comes in: not just to manage product information, but to help shoppers understand products wherever they encounter them..

Why is PXM more important than ever in ecommerce?

Nearly every purchase runs through a product page; Baymard Institute finds shoppers go through one before almost any purchase. But across the 326 leading retailers they benchmarked, 51% have “mediocre-or-worse” product page user experience (UX).

Further, in their testing, shoppers hit more than 1,300 usability problems and abandoned products they'd intended to buy on multimillion-dollar sites. When product pages leave basic questions unanswered, even eager shoppers can lose confidence before checkout.

That's only half of the problem. As often as not, the product information itself fails shoppers.

In Salsify's 2026 Consumer Research, 45% of shoppers said they returned an online purchase because the online information was wrong or misleading. Plenty don't even get that far. Among younger buyers, 45% of Gen Z and 43% of millennials said they abandon a purchase when the details don't match from one site to the next. 

Product information now has to work before, during, and after the click. It has to help products surface in search, help shoppers evaluate products, and set accurate expectations before purchase.

Our own data shows that shoppers referred from AI search behave differently from those who arrive through organic search:

  • More than half of AI-referred sessions land straight on a product page, compared to about 20% coming from organic search.
  • They convert at nearly 50% higher rates.
  • They spend 14% more per order when they do.

“AI search collapses the discovery and consideration phases of the shopping journey into a single conversation, delivering pre-qualified buyers directly to your product pages,” says Kyle Risley, senior SEO lead at Shopify.

What’s the difference between PXM and PIM?

PXM often gets confused with product information management (PIM), and they are used for similar purposes. PIM is used to manage the product record, and PXM is used to turn that record into a better buying experience.

PIM lives in the back office: one source of truth for product data. Say you drop the price on a winter coat. In a PIM solution, you change it once, and it updates everywhere you sell. The job is to keep the data accurate and identical, however many channels it surfaces on.

PXM covers what a customer sees live on the page. The same coat lands on a product page or in a German-language storefront, and PXM does the work of turning the record into something that sells in each context.

For instance, Gunner's 3D models were PXM; the kennel's dimensions are there in the PIM, but figures alone don’t tell you if your dog fits.

The two systems depend on each other. 

PXM runs on top of PIM, and a solid product page is still only selling whatever the data underneath it says, right or wrong. Akeneo's 2025 “Consumer Returns Report” found 43% of shoppers returned something in the previous year because the pre-purchase information was wrong, and on average they send back two products a year for that reason alone.

What makes a great product experience?

A strong product experience includes media that shows the product, structured data that describes it, search that surfaces it, and localization that fits it to each market you’re selling in. Together, those elements help shoppers answer the questions that determine whether they keep browsing, compare other products, or buy.

Rich content and media

High-quality media is an important layer of PXM because it helps shoppers understand details that simple images and descriptions can't convey.

Video marketing is helpful for a product that has to be seen in motion or in use, like a blender working through ice or a serum absorbing into skin. In Wyzowl's 2026 survey, 85% of people said they'd been convinced to buy something after watching a video.

3D and AR are enhanced ways of engaging with a product for which size, form, or fit are difficult to judge from a straight-on shot. 

Furniture is a strong use case for AR and 3D. In a survey of 9,000 US consumers by HomeByMe, 50% said they'd buy a sofa from a brand that offered an online configurator, and 27% said personalization through 3D tools had directly triggered a purchase. 

Rebecca Minkoff put that to the test across more than 50 handbag styles. The brand hypothesized that while 3D and AR were common for clothing, bags were exactly the kind of product a shopper wants to turn over in their hands before buying. 

After adding 3D models and AR to those product pages with Shopify’s native commerce functionality, shoppers who interacted with a model were 44% more likely to add the item to their cart and 27% more likely to order. Those who viewed a product in AR were 65% more likely to buy.

“At a time when the savvy fashion shopper wants to be able to connect with a brand's persona, understand the texture and structure of every bag…we're excited to host video and 3D within our Shopify ecommerce site to bring shoppers that much closer to Rebecca Minkoff designs,” says Uri Minkoff, cofounder and CEO.

Shopify AR lets you add 3D models to product pages directly or through metafields, which map each model to its product and keep it discoverable on your site, across marketplaces, and in search. In the Shopify App Store, you'll also find AR apps, including 3D model viewers and virtual stores. They're integrated directly into your ecommerce store, so your customers can shop with AR online.

Structured attributes and custom product data

Structured data is product information stored in named fields instead of written into a description. That structure makes product details easier for shoppers (and search engines) to find, compare, filter, and trust.

Per Google's documentation, adding structured data to a product page lets details like price, availability, and review ratings appear directly in search results; the rich results that stand out against plain blue links. 

On Shopify, metafields extend the standard product record with custom fields for the specifics a category needs, like a furniture store adding width, height, and depth; each shown in its own section of the page rather than crammed into the description. 

Further, category metafields assign a product to a category like Clothing > Tops > Shirts, and Shopify surfaces the fields that category expects, so the right attributes get filled in consistently and the product stays discoverable across every channel you sell.

This is also what determines whether a product shows up when someone shops through an AI assistant. 

OpenAI says ChatGPT pulls product details like price and availability from a structured feed, and Shopify stores are already connected to it through Shopify Catalog.

Take David's Bridal. The 75-year-old retailer rebuilt their commerce stack on Shopify in nine months to get what their CIO calls "agentic ready," i.e., making their product data easier for AI systems and shoppers to interpret.

ChatGPT interface showing a bridal shopping grid titled "Romantic lace + classic bridal," with David's Bridal dresses.
ChatGPT draws on David’s structured feed of product data to return dress cards rich with structured attributes, as a shopper would search for them.

The brand audited and enriched their product attributes so language models could read them cleanly; as their president of technology, Liz Saeger told Glossy, "Differentiation is won at the data layer."

Search, filtering, and discoverability

A shopper can't buy a product they can't find. If they’re looking for a product, they may not know the exact name or brand. But they do know the constraints. 

According to Search Engine Land, shoppers increasingly aren't searching for "the best laptop bag"; they're searching for a bag that fits under an airplane seat and survives a wet commute.

When Audio Advice, a high-end audio retailer, moved from Magento to Shopify, the team added Boost AI-powered filters to their website. These filters let shoppers narrow by brand, product type, or curated series, and the team reworked search to return categories, curated collections, and expert setup guides rather than a flat list of results.

The reworked search drove an 8% rise in organic search sessions and a 3% rise in active users. Together, stronger search, redesigned product pages, and new filters contributed to a 47% year-over-year jump in conversion rate.

Localization and market relevance

Our own data shows an average of 30% of visitors to an online store come from an international market. The same dataset also found a 13% relative lift in conversion when shoppers saw a store translated into their language versus the same store in its default language.

EcoFlow, the portable-power brand, wrote localized product specs by geography, leading with disaster preparedness in Japan and home backup power in North America, presenting the same batteries through the lens of what each market valued most. 

They then launched seven market-specific stores within a month. And across their full international build of 12 stores, global orders rose 188%. 

Simon Wang, head of global DTC, says: “The sub-operation mode means that when a single site can translate into multiple different languages and currencies, we can treat each site variation as a site of its own.”

K-Way runs the same play through licensees. The French raincoat brand creates mirror versions of their main site for new markets, like tailored UK and Hong Kong storefronts their local licensees could administer themselves. The localization is handled through Shopify's Translate & Adapt app.

“Shopify, without a doubt, is the best ecommerce solution out there for someone in our position,” says Nicolò Ammendola, head of ecommerce.

While localizing the storefront is one half of international selling, shoppers also need a clear understanding of the final purchase cost. Shopify’s Managed Markets calculates and collects duties and taxes at checkout so shoppers see the full cost up front.

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How to improve product experience management on Shopify

The five steps below guide you from auditing your product data to extending with apps only when your catalog needs it, so shoppers can evaluate and buy products with more confidence.

Step 1: Audit product data quality

Start by finding what's incomplete or unclear to shoppers. In the Shopify admin, work through three areas:

  1. Product records and metafields: Look for blank attributes a shopper or AI filter needs, like a dress listed with no fabric, or a monitor with no screen size.
  2. Product media: Note products that appear with one image when the category needs several, like in apparel, or no 3D or video for products that are hard to judge flat. Shopify supports up to 250 media items per product, and the 3D scanner in the mobile app builds a model from a physical product on iOS. 
  3. Variants, reviews, and policies: Check that size, color, and material sit in separate options, and that variant names are clean enough to filter. Shopify now also supports 2,048 variants per product.

Step 2: Standardize product attributes

The earlier audit surfaces the inconsistencies, and this step sets the rules so they don't come back across product pages, search, and filters:

  • Define an attribute template per category. Category metafields do this on Shopify so every product in that category gets described the same way. 
  • Lock naming conventions into the fields themselves. A metafield definition sets validation rules and value types, so "navy" can't be entered three different ways and a number field can't take text.
  • Decide what each field is for. Some attributes belong on the page for shoppers; others are internal, like supplier codes or margin notes. Keep those in separate metafields with clear namespaces so internal data doesn't leak into storefront copy.
  • Align variant logic. AI agents read variant options like size and color as filtering attributes. If an option isn't in your data, the agent can't surface it. The same attributes also power storefront filters and search experiences, making consistency important across channels. According to Kate Ragotte, product lead at Shopify, option names need to be human-readable, without acronyms or short forms a model won't recognize. So size, color, and material should be consistent options across a category, and named the same way each time.

Step 3: Improve product discovery

Once the data is clean, make it findable for your customers. This is where standardized attributes become useful to customers: synonyms, filters, collections, and merchandising. The free Shopify Search & Discovery app handles most of this natively:

  • Set up synonyms for the words customers use that don't match your catalog. Synonym groups return the same results for “couch” and “sofa,” or “trainers” and “sneakers.” You don't need them for misspellings or plurals because Shopify's search handles those, and semantic search already expands queries using related concepts.
  • Build filters from your attributes. The app creates filters from category and product metafields so shoppers can narrow by size, color, fabric, or any attribute you've defined. 
  • Structure collections to match how people shop. Smart collections pull in products by condition: tag, type, price, or metafield.
  • Merchandise by market. The same filters and collections can surface different products by region, so the localized stores from earlier lead with what each market buys and how shoppers search locally rather than a single global default.

Shopify’s Knowledge Base app generates FAQs from your store settings, including information on shipping, returns, and account options as question-and-answer pairs. Then, you can edit or add your own. The query log shows which questions shoppers asked AI agents and whether the answer landed, so the FAQs you write next are the real ones buyers ask.

Step 4: Add social proof to the product page

Wharton Executive Education calls social proof “perhaps the most important trust signal for modern businesses,” noting that shoppers now treat reviews from independent sources as legitimate evidence a product is worth buying. In PXM, that evidence helps reduce uncertainty after shoppers have reviewed the product details. 

Shopify collects your customer reviews natively through Shop product reviews, and you can display reviews from a connected app alongside them.

For richer formats, the Shopify App Store is home to apps like Judge.me and Yotpo that collect photo and video reviews, automate review requests after delivery, and syndicate ratings to Google and social channels. 

Step 5: Extend with apps or integrations where needed

A few hundred SKUs can be manageable through the Shopify admin and bulk editor. Consider adding an integration when your catalog outgrows the native tools or when product data needs more governance.

For example, Mulmul, an Indian womenswear brand, scaled from a few hundred SKUs to over 7,000 products across five international markets. Now, they manage all of their product information in metafields using Matrixify, a bulk import-and-export app.

Matrixify handles the volume, but the data still lives in Shopify's structure. That keeps the product experience connected to the storefront, rather than separated in a system shoppers never see.

“Switching to Shopify was a strategic move that freed us from the limitations of our previous platform and allowed us to pursue strategic opportunities with confidence,” says Harsh Hari Modi, founder and CEO.

Want to learn more about how Shopify can supercharge your enterprise ecommerce experiences?

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Product experience management FAQ

What is a product experience?

A product experience is everything a shopper uses to evaluate a product before making a purchase, including product information, media, reviews, search results, and other details that help them make a buying decision.

What is CXM and how is it used?

Customer experience management (CXM) shapes every interaction a person has with a brand. Where product experience management (PXM) focuses on helping shoppers discover, evaluate, and purchase products, CXM focuses on the broader customer relationship across channels and touchpoints.

What's a good customer experience?

A good customer experience is one where a shopper gets what they need without friction, whether that’s accurate product information or a clear path to purchase.

When a buyer can quickly find and trust what they're looking at, that becomes a competitive advantage over a store that makes them work for the same answers.

by Brinda Gulati
Published on 23 Jun 2026
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by Brinda Gulati
Published on 23 Jun 2026
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