I spent the last three weeks on the phone with Shopify and WooCommerce store owners doing $50k to $150k a month. Most of them are frustrated. They see 70% of their traffic coming from mobile. They also see their conversion rate on desktop is double or triple what it is on a phone. My initial assumption was wrong. I thought store owners cared about fancy features. I thought they wanted complex loyalty programs or AI recommendations. They don’t. They just want the leak to stop. one conversation with a fashion brand owner stood out. She was spending $8,000 a month on Meta ads. Her mobile site looked clean. It was responsive. It checked every box on a SEO checklist. But the data told a different story. Customers would click an ad, add an item to the cart, and then just… vanish. It wasn’t the price. It wasn’t the product. It was the friction. Safari tabs timing out. Re-entering credit card details for the tenth time. The tiny ‘X’ on a popup that’s impossible to hit with a thumb. We looked at the numbers together. If she could just close the gap between her desktop and mobile conversion rates, she’d be making an extra $12,000 a month without spending a single cent more on ads. That was a ‘lightbulb’ moment for me as a builder. Mobile web isn’t built for buying. It’s built for browsing. Amazon and Nike figured this out a decade ago. They don’t want you on their mobile site. They want you in an environment where your face or fingerprint handles the payment and the experience is instant. Building this startup has taught me that most store owners are unknowingly paying a ‘mobile tax’ every single day. They work hard to get the traffic, but the browser kills the sale. I’m curious—when you look at your Shopify or Woo analytics, what is the actual percentage gap between your desktop and mobile conversion rates?