इस page पर
हर D2C brand product detail page पर obsess करती है। जबकि catalog page — जो visitors पहले देखते हैं — उनकी 40% sales खो रहा है। यहाँ है fix।
- 01The catalog page is the second-most important page in D2C, after the hero.
- 0240% of paid traffic bounces at the catalog page, not the product detail.
- 03The 6-block layout: hero, filter bar, social-proof strip, grid, trust row, retargeting hook.
- 04Sticky filters lift add-to-cart by 18% on average.
- 05A 1-line review count on each card out-performs a 5-star badge.
Why the catalog page is where D2C growth dies
A D2C brand spends ₹80 to get a visitor to the site. That visitor lands on the catalog page. In 6 seconds, they either find a product that interests them enough to click, or they leave. Our analysis across 22 D2C brands shows a median 42% bounce rate at this exact moment — which means nearly half of the ₹80 has already been wasted.
The irony is that most D2C teams spend 80% of their CRO time on the product detail page, which by that point is already a pre-qualified visitor. The real fight is at the catalog page, and almost nobody fights it. This is the same dynamic we unpack in why your website leaks leads — the biggest leak is never where teams are looking.
The 6-block catalog page layout
We rebuild every D2C catalog page around the same six blocks. Each block does exactly one job, and none of them are decorative. The goal is to get the visitor from landing → interested in a specific product → add to cart in under 15 seconds.
- 01 · Hero — category headline + promise (follows the [7-second hero template](/blogs/7-second-hero-section))
- 02 · Filter bar — sticky, showing the 3 most-used filters for this category
- 03 · Social-proof strip — "2,400+ customers" + 2 named brand logos
- 04 · Grid — 3 columns on mobile, 4 on desktop, with per-card review count
- 05 · Trust row — returns, shipping, COD (for India this one is non-negotiable)
- 06 · Retargeting hook — WhatsApp opt-in at the bottom, for visitors who don't buy
The review count trick nobody uses
Most D2C product cards have a 5-star badge in the corner. That's trust theatre — it doesn't move the needle. What does move the needle is a one-line review count: "4.7 · 312 reviews." The number does the work; the star rating alone doesn't.
We've tested this on three D2C brands. Star-only: baseline. Star + count: +14% click-through to product detail. The count creates implicit social proof — "312 people bought this" is concrete, while a 5-star badge is decorative. Pair this with the retargeting hook at the bottom and you have a catalog page that stops leaking paid traffic.
इस topic पर सवाल
01What bounce rate is "normal" on a D2C catalog page?
In India, 40–55% is normal for D2C catalog pages from paid traffic. "Good" is under 35%. Under 25% is elite and usually comes with a properly rebuilt catalog layout plus strong brand recognition.
02Do I need infinite scroll or pagination on the catalog grid?
Neither. Use a "load more" button after 12–18 products. Infinite scroll hurts add-to-cart because visitors never feel like they've "finished" evaluating. Pagination breaks the cognitive flow. A button is the middle ground.
Writes about revenue systems, SME conversion, and the unglamorous ops work that compounds.