All Collections
Rich Returns
Exchanges
Exchange Orders & Shopify Sales Statistics / Analytics
Exchange Orders & Shopify Sales Statistics / Analytics
Andrej Janev avatar
Written by Andrej Janev
Updated over a week ago

At the moment Shopify does not allow making changes to the original order once it has been paid and fulfilled.

Generally there are two approaches we see merchants engage in to process exchange orders:

Longer Process

  1. Refund the customer for the item(s) on the original order

  2. Then create a Draft Exchange-Order from the Rich Returns' dashboard with the full item-price and send the invoice to the customer

Shorter Process

  1. Create an Exchange-Order from the Rich-Returns dashboard with item prices set to $0 in the settings

What some merchants are trying to forcefully achieve is to make changes to the original order so that their Sales Statistics stay the same: 1 order, same order value. This sugarcoats what is really happening in terms of cost and attribution:

  • Suppose you have an order of 2 items with each item at $50 ($100 total)

  • The customer then wants to exchange one item in the order

  • The first instinct is to make changes to the original order so it stays 1 order and AOV is $100 looking at only this order

  • The reality is that you needed to fulfill 2 orders, so 2x the cost associated with an order to really make the sale

  • If you take a look at the "Longer Process" above or at return process of large eCommerce merchants like Zalando they only have two product-flows: IN and OUT

  • In these cases the customer needs to

    • return 1 item

    • then place a new order for a different size

    • Result is the same: 2 orders, $50 AOV

Especially if employees are compensated purely on these "acquisition metrics" it is important to set up compensation with customer returns in mind.

Did this answer your question?