How to Increase Average Order Value Without Cutting Your Margins

Anandhi Moorthy

Senior Content Marketer
November 5, 2025

TLDR

  • Discounts hurt long-term value: They lower brand perception, shrink profit margins, and train customers to wait for sales.
  • Shift from price cuts to value creation: Focus on convenience, personalization, and perceived quality instead of lowering prices.
  • Four proven AOV-boosting strategies:
    • Upselling: Encourage upgrades or premium versions.
    • Cross-Selling: Recommend complementary products.
    • Bundling: Create curated product sets with clear value.
    • Threshold Incentives: Offer perks (e.g., free shipping) for hitting spending goals.
  • Use automation: Trigger personalized upsell, cross-sell, and incentive messages via email or WhatsApp.
  • Result: Higher AOV, better customer retention, and stronger brand loyalty, all without sacrificing your margins.

Discounting is the go-to marketing strategy for most e-commerce brands, especially during the holiday season. While it is the fastest path to increase sales, there’s a hidden cost that many businesses don’t calculate—your brand’s perceived value and recurring revenue.

Every time you run a discount, you’re reducing your brand’s perceived value. Over time, instead of viewing your brand as premium or desirable, they start to see it as one that’s always on sale. Ultimately, their loyalty is more to the discounts than the brand itself.

Discounts also affect your margins. For example, if your profit margin is 25% and you offer a 20% discount, you need to sell at least 80% more to make the same profit. That’s a huge gap to close, especially when ad costs are rising and customer acquisition is getting expensive every year.

And then comes the customer conditioning, a behavioral cost that’s even harder to reverse. Shoppers get used to waiting for deals, and even your best customers may stop buying at full price. Research shows that a third of shoppers now wait until a sale or discount period to make a purchase. 

How can you increase your Average Order Value (AOV) without discounts?

In this guide, we’ll explore four proven sustainable strategies that help you grow AOV and protect your margins:

Upselling: Encourage customers to upgrade to premium versions or add enhancements that improve their experience.

Cross-Selling: Introduce complementary products that make their original purchase more useful or enjoyable.

Bundling: Package products together to create perceived value and convenience, without cutting into your margins.

Threshold Incentives: Motivate shoppers to hit a spending target by offering perks like free shipping or bonuses.

The Discount Dilemma

Brands lean heavily on discounts because they’re straightforward and deliver quick, measurable spikes in sales. A flash sale or a percentage off feels like an easy win for marketing teams under pressure to hit short-term revenue goals. The results might make it look like the strategy is working, but that’s often an illusion. 

What you’re often seeing is future demand pulled forward. Customers who would have bought next week are simply buying today because of the sale. This “discount trap” is a dangerous cycle. 

You lower prices to boost sales → your margins shrink → you discount again to keep revenue flowing. 

What does this cost your business?

The Hidden Costs Go Beyond Margins

Margin erosion: Discounts shrink the gap between your selling price and cost, leaving less room for profit and reinvestment. For brands that are already operating on slim margins, even a small discount can make profitable scaling nearly impossible.

Customer conditioning: Frequent promotions teach shoppers to wait for deals. Once they know your pricing pattern, they’ll hesitate to buy at full price. This drives down overall revenue predictability.

Brand devaluation: A study of online apparel purchases revealed that when products were heavily discounted (10%–70% off), consumers directly perceived those items as lower quality. So, when discounts become a part of your identity, it’s hard to position your brand as premium.

The Alternative Mindset: Value Creation vs. Price Reduction

According to a PwC report, 43% of consumers are willing to pay more for greater convenience, and 42% would pay more for a friendly, welcoming experience. In other words, people don’t always want cheaper; they want better.

Instead of asking, “How much should we discount?” start asking, “How can we make customers see more value in spending more?”

When brands focus on value creation, they tap into what actually drives purchasing decisions. This could be convenience, personalization, quality, or emotional connection. 

Here’s how that value creation mindset looks in practice:

Price reduction mindset: “Let’s offer 15% off our skincare set this weekend.”

Value creation mindset: “Let’s launch a ‘Glow Routine Kit’ with a free skincare guide and early access to our next launch.”

The second approach still boosts perceived value, but it does so without cutting into profit margins.

Let’s look at more strategies that help you increase average order value without eating into your profits. 

Strategies to Increase Average Order Value

Strategy 1: Upselling

A study by Forrester found that cross-sells and upsells drive over 10–30% of e-commerce revenue. Upselling encourages customers to upgrade to a higher-value version of a product they already own or recently purchased. In post-purchase campaigns, the goal is to increase lifetime value.

Post-purchase upsells are most effective 2 days after purchase, when customers feel good about their decision and are still engaged with your brand. Since their satisfaction levels are high, they might be more receptive to your upsell campaign.

The Psychology Behind Upselling‍

After a successful purchase, customers experience a dopamine boost, a sense of achievement, and ownership. This is when they’re more likely to say yes to an upgrade that promises more satisfaction or convenience. 

Real-World Example: Google Store’s Pixel 6a Upgrade Email
Source: Really Good Emails

Google effectively uses upselling to move existing customers to newer, higher-value devices, in this case, from an older Pixel model to the Pixel 6a.

Instead of offering a discount, the email focuses on value-based messaging. It highlights that Pixel 6a is faster and affordable. The call to action encourages comparison (“Which Pixel is right for you?”) and subtly nudges customers to choose the premium option.

Best Practices for Upselling:
  • Send upsell campaigns 2 days post-purchase.
  • Use value-focused language (“upgrade your experience”) instead of sending a sales pitch.
  • Keep the upgrade relevant to the original purchase; avoid suggesting something entirely new.
  • Create urgency through limited-time access or exclusivity (“available to repeat customers only”).
Expected Outcomes for Upselling:
  • Higher AOV and revenue per customer
  • Increased customer retention due to perceived personalization
  • Increased revenue per customer
  • Stronger brand affinity, since customers feel understood rather than sold to
Strategy 2: Cross-Selling
Source: WhatsApp website

While upselling is about encouraging customers to move to a higher-end version of a product, cross-selling is about introducing complementary products that enhance the original purchase.

You’re essentially helping your customer get more value out of what they already bought.

For example, if someone buys a DSLR camera, cross-selling might suggest a memory card, tripod, or lens cleaning kit.

The Psychology behind Cross-Selling

Cross-selling taps into the completion principle, i.e., the human desire to finish what they’ve started. Once a buyer commits to a product, they’re more open to related items that help them get the most out of their purchase.

It also leverages post-purchase momentum. Immediately after buying, customers are still in a positive emotional state, so they are more receptive to relevant suggestions that feel helpful.

Real-World Example: Apple Accessories

When a customer buys an iPhone from Apple, the website and follow-up emails suggest related accessories like AirPods, a MagSafe charger, or a protective case.

These items enhance the main product’s functionality while subtly building a broader Apple ecosystem.

Best Practices for Effective Cross-Selling

Timing: The ideal moment is 1–2 days after delivery, when customer satisfaction is high and they’re already using the product.

Relevance: Pair items that naturally complement the first purchase. Use behavioral data, not assumptions.

Subtlety: Keep it conversational and helpful; phrases like “Enhance your experience with…” work better than “Add this now!”

Automation: Use email or WhatsApp automation to trigger cross-sell flows based on past purchases.

Expected Outcomes
  • Higher revenue per customer (RPR): Each purchase session generates more value.
  • Increased product adoption: Customers engage deeper with your product ecosystem.
  • Improved retention: Buyers who own multiple complementary products are less likely to switch brands.
Strategy 3: Bundling

If upselling is about “buying better,” and cross-selling is about “buying smarter,” bundling is about making the purchase feel like a win-win. It’s a pricing and positioning tactic where you group related products together—often at a slightly better value than buying them separately—without resorting to steep discounts.

The Psychology Behind Bundling

Bundling taps into two key psychological triggers:

Perceived value: Customers feel they’re getting “more for less,” even if the overall discount is minimal.

Convenience: It reduces decision fatigue. A ready-made combo saves them the effort of figuring out what goes with what.

In behavioral economics, this ties to the effort justification bias. When shoppers feel they’re saving time and mental effort, they’re more likely to complete the purchase.

A study published by the National Bureau of Economic Research found that bundled offers can increase sales volume by up to 30%, especially when products are complementary and relevant to each other.

Real-World Example: Reggie’s “Combo Alert” Bundle Campaign
Source: Really Good Emails

Reggie, a dog wellness brand, demonstrates how bundling can be done right with its “New Combo Alert” email. Instead of offering steep discounts, the brand combines two related products, a Feeder Mat and Freeze-Dried Training Treats, into a bundle priced at $49.99 (vs. $60 if bought separately), along with free shipping.

Best Practices for Bundling:

Set smart thresholds: Design bundles that are 20–30% above your current AOV to nudge customers toward higher spending without sticker shock.

Stack multiple benefits: Combine various perks, like free shipping or a small bonus item, instead of cutting prices deeply.

Keep it curated: Suggest specific, well-paired bundles instead of letting customers choose from everything. 

Show clear value: Use phrases like “Worth $45, yours for $39” to visually anchor the savings and make the offer more compelling.

Expected Outcomes
  • Higher AOV: Shoppers spend more per order when the added value is clear.
  • Better cart completion: Pre-built bundles simplify choices, reducing cart abandonment.
  • Improved customer satisfaction: Buyers feel like they’ve made a smarter purchase, not just a cheaper one.
Strategy 4: Threshold Incentives

Threshold incentives are rewards or perks that customers unlock once they reach a certain spending limit. It could be free shipping if their average order value is $50 or a bonus gift if it is $75. When you do this, you encourage customers to increase their cart size to gain added value.

The Psychology Behind Threshold Incentives

Psychologically, threshold incentives tap into goal-oriented behavior and the human desire to “unlock” achievements. 

When shoppers see that they’re just a few dollars away from a reward, it triggers completion bias and pushes them to add one more item to reach the goal.

Real-World Example: King Arthur Baking Company

King Arthur Baking Company used a simple yet effective threshold incentive campaign:

“Free Shipping on Orders Over $100”

Their email featured warm, inviting visuals of baked goods and an “Ends Soon” message to add urgency. This clean, minimal approach made the incentive feel like an earned bonus rather than a marketing ploy, increasing both AOV and cart completion rates.

Best Practices for Threshold Incentives

Set achievable thresholds: Place your first incentive about 10–20% above your current AOV so customers feel the target is within easy reach.

Highlight exact progress: Use dynamic cart messages (“You’re $8 away from your bonus gift”) to reinforce a sense of progress and urgency.

Create tiered rewards: Offer multiple thresholds like free shipping at $50, a bonus gift at $75, and 10% off at $100 to encourage even higher spending.

Make rewards feel valuable: Choose perks customers actually care about (e.g., free shipping, exclusive samples, or store credits).

Expected Outcomes

Brands implementing threshold incentives typically see:

  • Higher Average Order Value (AOV) as shoppers add small items to hit targets
  • Improved cart completion rates due to goal-driven motivation
  • Better perceived brand generosity without resorting to deep discounts
Putting It All Together

Increasing your Average Order Value (AOV) without discounts is all about orchestrating multiple strategies that complement each other across the customer journey. 

Upselling, cross-selling, bundling, and threshold incentives work best when used together, strategically and sequentially.

Say you’re a skincare brand like Lumineux Botanicals. After a customer purchases a vitamin C serum, you can send a post-purchase upsell email two days later, suggesting the premium “Pro Glow” version with a higher concentration and better absorption. 

A few days after delivery, a cross-sell campaign can recommend complementary products like a hydrating moisturizer and SPF, helping the customer build a complete skincare routine.

At the same time, bundling makes it easier for new shoppers to choose curated sets such as the “Radiance Trio” (cleanser, serum, and moisturizer), with a small built-in value advantage and the promise of convenience. 

Finally, at checkout, threshold incentives like “Get free shipping on orders over $75” encourage customers to add that one extra product to boost the cart value organically.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Overwhelming customers with too many offers: Bombarding users with multiple prompts (“Upgrade now,” “Add this,” “Bundle and save”) can cause decision fatigue. Keep one clear next step per campaign.

‍Poor timing: Sending upsells too early, before customers experience the product, can feel transactional. Align messaging with customer sentiment and journey stage.

Generic recommendations: Irrelevant product suggestions weaken trust. Use behavioral data and past purchases to personalize every touchpoint.

The Importance of Testing and Optimization

No two audiences respond the same way; what drives higher AOV for one brand may fall flat for another. Experiment with different upsell intervals (e.g., immediately post-purchase vs. 2 days later), bundle combinations, and incentive thresholds to see what resonates best.

Track metrics like conversion rate, average order value uplift, and repeat purchase frequency to evaluate performance. 

Use A/B testing to compare creative variations, copy styles, and call-to-action phrasing. Over time, these insights will help refine your strategy, ensuring you’re not just increasing AOV but doing so efficiently and profitably.

Scaling with Automation

Automation makes it easy to execute these strategies at scale. Using behavioral triggers and segmentation, you can automatically send upsell emails post-purchase, recommend cross-sells after delivery, and display dynamic threshold banners at checkout,  all without manual effort.

With ZEPIC, brands can take this a step further. ZEPIC’s platform allows you to build personalized customer journeys across channels like email and WhatsApp, all powered by real-time data.

Conclusion

The four strategies we explored focus on one core principle: helping customers see more value in spending more. Whether it’s upgrading to a better product, completing their routine with complementary items, choosing a convenient bundle, or unlocking free perks, each tactic improves engagement and strengthens brand perception.

When executed with the right timing, personalization, and automation, these strategies turn one-time buyers into loyal, higher-value customers.

Ready to launch winning campaigns to boost average order value? Learn how ZEPIC can help.

Desperate times call for desperate Google/Chat GPT searches, right? "Best Shopify apps for sales." "How to increase online sales fast." "AI tools for ecommerce growth."

Been there. Done that. Installed way too many apps.

‍
But here's what nobody tells you while you're doom-scrolling through Shopify app reviews at 2 AM—that magical online sales-boosting app you're searching for? It doesn't exist. Because if it did, Jeff Bezos would've bought (or built!) it yesterday, and we (fellow eCommerce store owners) would all be retired in Bali by now.

‍
Growing a Shopify store and increasing online sales isn’t easy—we get it. While everyone’s out chasing the next “revolutionary” tool/trend (looking at you, DeepSeek), the real revenue drivers are probably hiding in plain sight—right there inside your customer data.
After working with Shopify stores like yours (shoutout to Cybele, who recovered almost 25% of their abandoned carts with WhatsApp automation), we’ve cracked the code on what actually moves the needle.

‍
Ready to stop app-hopping and start actually growing your sales by using what you already have? Here are four fixes that will get you there!

Fix #1: Convert abandoned carts instantly (Like, actually instantly)

The Painful Truth: You're probably losing about 70% of your potential sales to cart abandonment. That's not just a statistic—it's real money walking out of your digital door. And looking for yet another Shopify app for abandoned cart recovery isn't going to fix it if you're not getting the fundamentals right.

The Quick Fix: Everyone knows you need multi-channel recovery that hits the sweet spot between "Hey, did you forget something?" and "PLEASE COME BACK!" But here's the reality—most recovery apps are a one-trick pony. They either do email OR WhatsApp, not both. And don't even get us started on personalizing offers based on cart value—that usually means toggling between three different dashboards while praying your apps talk to each other.

Enter ZEPIC: This is where we come in. With ZEPIC's automated Flows, you can:
Launch WhatsApp recovery messages (with 95% open rates!)
Set up perfectly timed email sequences (or vice versa)
Create personalized recovery offers not just on cart value but based on your customer’s behavior/preferences
Track and optimize everything from one dashboard

Fix #2: Reactivate past customers today

The Painful Truth: You're probably losing about 70% of your potential sales to cart abandonment. That's not just a statistic—it's real money walking out of your digital door. And looking for yet another Shopify app for abandoned cart recovery isn't going to fix it if you're not getting the fundamentals right.

The Quick Fix: Everyone knows you need multi-channel recovery that hits the sweet spot between "Hey, did you forget something?" and "PLEASE COME BACK!" But here's the reality—most recovery apps are a one-trick pony. They either do email OR WhatsApp, not both. And don't even get us started on personalizing offers based on cart value—that usually means toggling between three different dashboards while praying your apps talk to each other.

Enter ZEPIC: This is where we come in. With ZEPIC's automated Flows, you can:
Launch WhatsApp recovery messages (with 95% open rates!)
Set up perfectly timed email sequences (or vice versa)
Create personalized recovery offers not just on cart value but based on your customer’s behavior/preferences
Track and optimize everything from one dashboard

Offering light at the end of the tunnel is Google’s Privacy Sandbox which seeks to ‘create a thriving web ecosystem that is respectful of users and private by default’. Like the name suggests, your Chrome browser will take the role of a ‘privacy sandbox’ that holds all your data (visits, interests, actions etc) disclosing these to other websites and platforms only with your explicit permission. If not yet, we recommend testing your websites, audience relevance and advertising attribution with Chrome’s trial of the Privacy Sandbox.

Top 3 impacts of the third-party cookie phase-out

Who’s impacted

How

What next

Digital advertising and
acquisition teams
Lack of cookie data results in drastic fall in website traffic and conversion rate
Review all cookie-based audience acquisition. Sign up for Chrome’s trial of the Privacy Sandbox
Digital Customer Experience
Customers are not served relevant, personalised experiences: on the web, over social channels and communication media
Multiply efforts to collect first-party customer data. Implement a Customer Data Platform
Security, Privacy and Compliance teams
Increased scrutiny from regulators and questions from customers about data storage and usage
Review current cookie and communication consent management, ensure to align with latest privacy regulations