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When Your Storefront Pages Don't Do Enough, the Entire Buying Process Gets Jeopardized

Faceted search is missing, so buyers can't narrow down complex catalogs

A search bar alone isn't enough when buyers need to filter by product specification, category, or option type. Without faceted filtering on catalog pages, potential customers spend more time searching and less time purchasing, and your conversion rates suffer.

Product listings don't give buyers enough info to decide without calling sales

When a product details page surfaces only a name and a price, technical buyers, especially those identifying spare parts or evaluating product variants, can't make a confident purchasing decision. Every gap in your product offerings is a reason to pick up the phone instead of completing the order, costing you more conversions.

There's no structured way to compare similar products before adding to cart

B2B buyers frequently evaluate multiple SKUs or product variants before committing. Without a dedicated compare page, buyers resort to opening multiple tabs or contacting a sales rep, slowing down the purchase process and increasing drop-off at a critical moment in the customer experience.

Order managers have no consolidated view of in-progress or completed orders

When incomplete orders and placed orders are scattered across disconnected views — or invisible entirely — order managers lose track of what's pending and what's fulfilled. That gap drives unnecessary support contacts and erodes customer engagement over time.

Returns require leaving the storefront entirely

If customers have to initiate returns through a separate system or support ticket, post-sale service costs climb and the storefront loses its relevance after the first purchase. A disconnected returns process is one of the most common ways businesses undermine lasting relationships with B2B buyers.

User and role management requires IT involvement for routine changes

Without a dedicated account management page inside the storefront, inviting a new buyer or changing a user's role requires internal support — adding overhead that slows onboarding and shouldn't even reach IT in the first place.

Modernize the Complete Buying Experience

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Buyer Discovery

Help Buyers Find and Evaluate the Right Products Faster

B2B product discovery is rarely simple. Buyers are navigating deep catalogs, evaluating technical specifications, and comparing similar options before they ever add something to cart. When the storefront doesn't support that process with user-friendly interfaces, relevant search results, and rich product detail, buyers stall or give up. The right digital storefront software makes this stage of the journey as fast as possible and keeps buyers confident they’re making the right decisions.

Catalog Page: Make product discovery work for complex buying journeys

The catalog page is the primary way buyers browse, search, and select products across your online store. It combines a search bar with faceted filtering across product options, specifications, and categories so buyers can navigate even the most complex product catalog. Buyers who can filter by the attributes that matter to them reach the right product faster, improving the overall shopping experience and reducing bounce rates significantly. For growing businesses managing large or technically deep product ranges, this is a game changer for self-service adoption and business growth.

Product Details Page: Give buyers the information they need to purchase with confidence

The product details page surfaces descriptions, full specifications, product images, and links to related products in one place. For B2B buyers evaluating technical products or spare parts, rich product listings that go beyond a name and price — surfacing complete customer data, personalized recommendations, and browsing history context — reduce the friction between product discovery and purchase. Product details pages can also be built using display page templates, giving teams greater control over storefront design and layout without performance issues or compromising performance of the overall experience.

Compare Page: Help buyers make faster, better-informed decisions

The compare page lets buyers view two or more products side by side using the Product Comparison Table widget. When buyers are evaluating similar SKUs or product variants, direct side-by-side comparison creates significant improvements to decision confidence — shortening the path to purchase products and driving more conversions. Unlike most popular website builders or simple e-commerce tools, Liferay's compare functionality is built for catalogs with real technical depth.

Search Page: Surface the right content across the entire storefront

The search page goes beyond product lookup. Buyers can search across web content, knowledge base articles, documents, images, and products from a single search bar, with facets to refine search results. For B2B online storefronts where buyers need technical documentation and support content alongside product listings, unified search is a meaningful improvement to the user experience — enabling customers to find what they need faster, increasing sales opportunities at the point of discovery, and reducing time-to-purchase.

Order Conversion

Turn Browsing into Orders Without Friction at Checkout

Getting a buyer to the right product is only half the job. The cart and checkout experience determines whether that intent converts into a completed order. For B2B buyers with complex purchasing requirements, a checkout experience built for simple consumer transactions — or one that can't adapt to their customer needs — is often where sales are lost and customer behavior turns negative.

Cart: Reduce friction before the checkout experience begins

The cart page is where buyers review their selections before committing to an order. A clean, functional cart experience that clearly surfaces product offerings, quantities, and pricing reduces the hesitation that leads to abandonment, particularly for complex orders with multiple line items. For businesses focused on smooth operations and higher conversion rates, the cart is where good storefront design and seamless integration of pricing and product data pays off most directly.

Checkout: Configure the purchase process around your buyers' actual needs

The checkout page activates once a buyer submits an order and supports custom checkout steps through extension points. Teams can implement approval steps, split shipping logic, or compliance checks, adapting the checkout experience to the way different B2B accounts actually buy, rather than forcing buyers through a one-size-fits-all flow that creates friction and slows down sales. This depth of customization options — including integration capabilities with payment gateways, payment processing systems, and third-party services — sets Liferay apart from most popular website builders and out-of-the-box e-commerce platforms that can't accommodate real B2B purchasing behavior.

Lists: Enable buyers to manage and reuse product selections

The lists page gives authenticated users access to wish list and wish list contents widgets, allowing them to create and manage custom product lists. For B2B buyers planning recurring purchases or managing procurement across multiple cost centers, saved lists reduce the time spent rebuilding orders — making repeat purchasing faster and improving operational efficiency on both sides of the transaction. As business grows, this kind of self-service capability directly supports increased online sales without adding sales or support headcount. Allowing businesses to create unique reorder flows for different buyer types makes lists a powerful tool for customer retention and engagement.

Services financiers

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Order Management

Track Orders Across Every Account

For B2B organizations where multiple users operate within a single account, order visibility is a requirement for smooth operations. When order managers lack a clear, consolidated view of what's in progress and what's been fulfilled, customer engagement suffers, operational efficiency drops, and support costs rise. Modern storefronts give order managers full control without requiring them to leave the digital environment to get answers.

Pending Orders: Give order managers full visibility before checkout

The pending orders page displays all incomplete orders associated with an account; i.e., those containing items in the cart that haven't yet completed the checkout process. Order managers get full visibility across all in-progress orders for their account and can create new orders directly from this page. This is especially valuable for organizations where multiple buyers contribute to a single account order, or where orders require internal review before submission so teams get real-time data on purchasing activity without relying on external reporting or third-party tools.

Placed Orders: Track every completed order in one place

The placed orders page displays all orders that have completed the checkout process for an account, regardless of order status. Using the Orders widget, buyers and account managers get a single, unified view of their full order history, enabling customers to self-serve order status checks instead of contacting support, and giving businesses the real-time data they need to manage customer relationships proactively and increase sales through faster reordering.

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Aftersales Management

Extend the Storefront into Post-Sale Self-Service and Account Control

The buying relationship doesn't end at checkout. For major brands and enterprise buyers operating at scale, returns, account changes, and user management are all routine tasks that belong inside the digital storefront and not in a separate system, support queue, or IT ticket. Keeping the entire system connected post-sale is what separates high-performance digital storefront software from tools that stop being useful the moment an order is placed.

Returns Page: Bring post-sale self-service inside the storefront

The returns page extends the storefront's usefulness beyond the initial purchase, allowing customers to initiate and manage returns without leaving the digital environment. Keeping post-sale tasks inside the storefront — rather than routing them through third-party services or disconnected support systems — reduces service workload, supports smooth operations, and makes the digital storefront a more complete tool across the entire customer lifecycle. For businesses focused on customer satisfaction and lasting relationships, an in-storefront returns experience is a meaningful driver of repeat engagement.

Account Management Page: Put account and user control in the right hands

The account management page is where store administrators and account managers invite users, assign account-specific roles — Buyer, Sales Manager, Account Manager, Sales Agent — and create and manage accounts directly in the storefront. Enabling customers and account teams to manage their own purchasing structure gives them greater control over their buying environment — reducing IT overhead, speeding up onboarding, and delivering the seamless experience that major brands and enterprise buyers expect.

Digital Storefront Features

Account Eligibility & Contextual Pricing

Show the right products, assortments, and negotiated prices to the right customer accounts.

Advanced Product Discovery

Help buyers navigate complex catalogs and identify the right products for technical or parts-heavy purchasing journeys.

Product Relationships & Recommendations

Support bundles, cross-sell, upsell, and related-product discovery within the buying flow.

Customizable Checkout & Workflows

Adapt checkout and approval paths to match how different B2B customers actually purchase.

Frictionless Quick Order Entry

Make repeat and bulk ordering faster through tools such as quick order forms and CSV upload.

Questions fréquemment posées

Un CMS traditionnel (comme WordPress ou Drupal) est « monolithique », c’est-à-dire que la gestion et la diffusion du contenu sont étroitement liées. Il est principalement conçu pour publier sur un site web unique en utilisant des thèmes et modèles prédéfinis.

 

Un CMS headless, en revanche, sépare la gestion du contenu de sa présentation. Le CMS se concentre uniquement sur la gestion du contenu, tandis que le front-end peut être développé avec n’importe quel framework. Cela permet de gérer le contenu en un seul endroit et de le publier sur plusieurs Sites Web, applications et autres canaux.

  •  Diffusion omnicanale : créez le contenu une seule fois et publiez-le partout : sites web, applications mobiles, objets connectés, et plus encore.
  • Liberté pour les développeurs : utilisez n’importe quel framework ou outil, accélérant les cycles de développement et rendant les workflows plus agiles.
  • Architecture prête pour l’avenir : à mesure que de nouvelles technologies et canaux apparaissent, le contenu structuré est immédiatement prêt à être diffusé.
  • Sécurité renforcée : le back-end étant séparé du front-end, l’exposition aux attaques est réduite.
  • Performance améliorée : découpler le contenu de la couche de présentation permet des temps de chargement plus rapides et une meilleure expérience utilisateur

Liferay combine la diffusion headless avec une expérience de création riche. Les marketeurs et créateurs peuvent :

 

  • Utiliser des structures de contenu prédéfinies.
  • Collaborer efficacement entre équipes et régions.
  • Exploiter l’IA pour la création et la traduction de contenu.
  • Appliquer des outils de gouvernance pour garantir cohérence et conformité.


 

Liferay est particulièrement adapté si votre organisation a besoin de : 

 

  • Publier du contenu sur plusieurs canaux et régions.
  • Offrir plus de flexibilité et d’agilité à vos développeurs.
  • Simplifier les fworkflows de contenu et améliorer la collaboration entre équipes.
  • Maintenir une gouvernance solide, la cohérence et la conformité.
Oui. Même avec une configuration headless, Liferay vous permet de voir à quoi ressemblera votre contenu sur différents canaux avant sa mise en ligne. Le module Sites offre des prévisualisations visuelles, et les APIs permettent aux développeurs de tester le contenu sur différents appareils et canaux.
En général, oui. En découplant le front-end du Back-end, une architecture headless réduit la surface d’attaque. La base de données du CMS n’est pas directement exposée au site public, ce qui contribue à se protéger contre les menaces de sécurité telles que les attaques DDoS ou les injections de malware.
Yes. The Returns page allows customers to initiate and manage returns without leaving the storefront. Combined with the Placed Orders page — which displays all completed orders per account regardless of status — buyers have direct access to their full post-purchase activity in one place. Keeping these tasks inside the digital environment reduces service workload, supports customer satisfaction, and keeps the storefront relevant beyond the initial transaction.

Autres ressources

Diffusez votre contenu partout et plus rapidement, avec Liferay CMS

Liferay Commerce's storefront pages are available out of the box through accelerators like Minium and Speedwell, or can be built and configured from the ground up, so your team isn't assembling an online store page by page from third-party tools or working around the limitations of simple websites and generic e-commerce platforms.

Choosing the right digital storefront software means choosing a platform where all of these pages work together as an entire system with seamless integration across product data, customer data, order management, and account structure — not a collection of disconnected components. For teams managing multiple online storefronts across brands, regions, or buyer segments, that shared foundation means each new channel launches faster and with less duplication. For buyers, it means user-friendly interfaces where every page they need is already there, already connected, and built to meet modern customer expectations at every stage of the journey.