There's a pattern that shows up in eCommerce businesses at a fairly predictable point in their growth. The early years are strong. Revenue climbs, the product finds its audience, and the business starts to feel like it has real momentum. Then, somewhere between £500k and £5m in annual revenue, everything levels off.
The ad spend goes up. The revenue doesn't. A new channel gets tested. It works for a few weeks, then flatlines. An agency gets switched. There's a burst of activity and optimism, then the numbers settle back to where they were. The business isn't in trouble exactly, but it's stuck. And the longer it stays stuck, the harder it becomes to work out why.
What makes this particularly frustrating is that the business has usually done everything it was supposed to do. The product is good. The brand looks the part. The team is capable. By every reasonable measure, growth should be continuing. The fact that it isn't tends to generate a lot of debate about which channel to try next, which agency to blame, or how much more to spend. Very rarely does it generate a conversation about the actual cause.
The reason most eCommerce businesses struggle to break out of a revenue plateau is that they misread what's causing it. The default assumption is that it's a traffic problem. Revenue has stalled, so the logic goes that more visitors will fix it. More budget into Meta. A push on Google. Maybe TikTok this time.
The problem with that logic is that it ignores what's happening to the traffic once it arrives. In the majority of cases, the traffic isn't the issue. The funnel is leaking. Somewhere between a visitor landing on the site and a customer completing a purchase, revenue is being lost. And the uncomfortable truth is that sending more traffic into a leaky funnel doesn't fix the leak. It just means more people fall through the same hole, at greater cost.
The businesses that break through plateaus don't do it by spending more. They do it by identifying which specific part of their commercial model is underperforming and fixing that first. In almost every case, the answer comes down to one of three things, or some combination of all three.
Conversion rate is the most underleveraged number in most eCommerce businesses. It gets checked, noted, and then largely ignored in favour of metrics that feel more actionable, like click-through rate or cost per click. That's a mistake, because the compounding effect of even a modest improvement in conversion rate is significant.
A business turning over £2m at a 1.5% conversion rate, that moves to 2%, doesn't just grow by a third. That improvement flows through every other part of the business. The same ad spend produces more revenue. The cost of acquiring each customer falls. The return on every marketing pound spent goes up. Conversion rate is the lever that makes everything else work harder, and most businesses haven't pulled it anywhere near as far as it can go.
The reasons conversion rates stall are usually straightforward once you look for them:
None of these are particularly complicated to fix. The issue is that most businesses aren't looking at them systematically. They're optimising their ad creative while the product page it points to hasn't been meaningfully updated in two years.
Most eCommerce businesses are far better at acquiring customers than they are at keeping them. That's understandable. Acquisition is visible and measurable in a way that retention often isn't. You can see exactly what you spent to get someone to buy for the first time. The value of getting them to buy again tends to sit in a spreadsheet that nobody looks at as often as they should.
The commercial logic for fixing this is hard to argue with. Retaining an existing customer costs a fraction of what it costs to acquire a new one. A customer who buys twice is worth dramatically more than one who buys once. And a small improvement in repeat purchase rate, across a customer base of any meaningful size, has a significant effect on overall revenue without requiring any additional ad spend.
The businesses that are good at retention tend to share a few characteristics:
The businesses that plateau often have a customer base sitting dormant, full of people who bought once, had a perfectly good experience, and simply haven't been given a compelling reason to return.
This lever is commonly misread. When acquisition cost is the problem, the instinct is to spend more and hope that scale brings the cost per acquisition down. It rarely does. More often, the real issue is that the existing budget isn't working as hard as it should be, and the reason for that is almost never the budget itself.
The specific points where acquisition cost tends to inflate unnecessarily are usually these:
Getting acquisition cost under control is not about spending less. It's about getting more from what's already being spent, which is a creative and strategic problem, not a budget one.
These three levers are related, and the order in which you pull them matters more than most businesses realise.
Fixing acquisition cost before fixing conversion rate means paying to send more people into a funnel that's still leaking. Every pound saved on cost per acquisition gets partially offset by the revenue lost further down the funnel. The maths never fully works in your favour until conversion is in decent shape.
Similarly, investing heavily in acquisition before building any retention infrastructure means the customer base stays shallow. You're filling a bucket with a hole in it. New customers come in, revenue doesn't grow proportionally, and the cost of sustaining that revenue keeps climbing because you're dependent on continuously replacing customers who don't come back.
The order that tends to produce the best results is conversion first, then retention, then acquisition. Fix the funnel so it converts. Build the infrastructure to keep customers coming back. Then scale the acquisition knowing that every customer you bring in is worth more and costs less to retain than before.
It's a less exciting sequence than launching a new channel or doubling the ad budget. It's also the one that actually works.
If the business has plateaued, the question worth sitting with isn't which channel to try next. It's which of these three levers is furthest from where it should be, and what it would take to move it.