Your customer is standing in a REI parking lot, phone in hand, comparing your sleeping bag’s specs against a competitor’s. Another is at a trailhead with spotty cell service, trying to decide between backpacks before their weekend trip. A third is browsing your site at basecamp, gloves making every tap a challenge.
This is the reality of outdoor ecommerce. Your customers aren’t leisurely shopping from their desks—they’re researching gear in the field, often under challenging conditions. If your mobile experience isn’t optimized for these scenarios, you’re losing sales before the checkout even loads.
The numbers tell a compelling story. Mobile commerce accounts for 57% of all ecommerce sales, with mobile ecommerce reaching $2.07 trillion in 2024. But for outdoor brands, mobile isn’t just important—it’s critical.
Here’s why: 47% of Gen Z shoppers use their smartphones while shopping in brick-and-mortar stores, with 52% comparing prices at other retailers and 53% checking to see if there’s anything else they’d prefer to buy. Your outdoor customers are doing the same thing—but instead of standing in a store, they’re on a trail, at a crag, or in a campground.
The outdoor industry attracts mobile-first shoppers. 67% of young people consider themselves “outdoorsy,” and this demographic shops primarily on mobile devices. They’re researching gear between adventures, watching product videos on their phones, and making purchase decisions in the moment—often in locations with limited connectivity.
Before we dive into UX best practices, let’s address the elephant in the room: speed. No amount of beautiful design will save a slow mobile site.
The data is stark. Ecommerce sites that load within one second convert 2.5x more visitors than sites that load in five seconds. Even more concerning for outdoor brands: mobile pages load 70.9% slower than desktop pages, and more than half of mobile visits are abandoned if a page takes longer than three seconds to load.
When your customer is standing in a parking lot with 2 bars of LTE, every kilobyte matters. Here’s how to optimize:
Image Optimization
Technical Performance
Test Regularly
With speed dialed in, let’s focus on creating a mobile experience that works for outdoor customers in real-world conditions.
Your customer might be wearing gloves, dealing with cold fingers, or holding their phone with one hand while carrying gear. Design for the thumb zone—place primary CTAs and navigation elements in the bottom third of the screen where they’re easily reachable.
Thumb-Friendly Best Practices:
Outdoor customers face unique challenges that typical ecommerce UX doesn’t account for:
High Brightness/Sunlight Readability
Touch with Gloves
One-Handed Operation
75% of outdoor ecommerce sites fail to implement product filters as separate, easily accessible elements. Don’t make this mistake.
Navigation Best Practices:
Product pages are where outdoor customers make decisions. Your mobile layout needs to provide all the critical information without overwhelming the small screen.
Essential Elements:
Mobile-Specific Enhancements:
70% of shopping carts are abandoned, with mobile checkout presenting unique challenges. For outdoor brands, where customers might be buying gear right before a trip, a smooth mobile checkout is critical.
Keep your mobile checkout to 3-4 steps maximum. Every additional step increases abandonment risk.
Checkout Best Practices:
53% of users abandon mobile sites that take longer than three seconds to load. Express checkout options can dramatically reduce friction.
Implementation:
Security concerns are heightened on mobile devices. Build trust through:
This is where outdoor ecommerce differs from selling consumer electronics or fashion. Your customers are often in areas with limited or intermittent connectivity.
PWAs enable offline functionality through service workers, allowing customers to browse products, add items to carts, and even complete purchases when offline.
Offline Functionality Benefits:
Implementation Strategies:
Even when connected, rural areas and mountain regions often have slow speeds.
Optimization Techniques:
Emulators can’t replicate real-world outdoor shopping conditions. You need to test on actual devices in challenging environments.
53% of online shopping traffic comes from mobile phones, but which phones? Focus on devices your customers actually use.
Testing Priorities:
Get out of the office and test where your customers actually shop:
Field Testing Checklist:
Don’t just click around randomly. Test the paths your customers actually take:
Product Discovery Flow
Checkout Flow
Account Management
Product Research
Test each flow on multiple devices, in various conditions, with different connection speeds.
Use this checklist to evaluate your outdoor ecommerce mobile experience:
Avoid these critical errors that outdoor ecommerce sites frequently make:
Building for desktop and then “adapting” for mobile results in compromised experiences. Start with mobile constraints and scale up. Your mobile experience shouldn’t be a simplified version of desktop—it should be purpose-built for mobile contexts.
Beautiful design means nothing if it never loads. Every second improvement in load time increases mobile conversions by 17%. Prioritize performance over aesthetics when necessary.
Buttons and links that are too small cause frustration and mis-taps. Touch targets should be at least 44x44 pixels, larger for outdoor contexts where gloves are common.
Forcing users to create accounts before checkout is a conversion killer. Offer guest checkout prominently. You can always encourage account creation after the purchase.
Every field you add increases abandonment. Ask for only what’s essential. Use smart defaults, autofill, and validation to minimize user input.
Assuming your customers have strong WiFi is naive for outdoor brands. Optimize for slow, intermittent connections. Test on actual 3G networks, not just throttled WiFi.
Email signup popups, cookie notices, promotional banners—they’re even more intrusive on mobile. Minimize popups or time them strategically (after user engagement, not on immediate load).
Unoptimized images that don’t load, can’t be zoomed, or aren’t visible in sunlight hurt conversions. Images are critical for outdoor gear purchases—get them right.
Chrome DevTools mobile emulation is useful for development, but it can’t replicate real device performance, touch interactions, or outdoor conditions. Test on actual devices in real scenarios.
Your customers are in mountains, on trails, at remote campsites. Build for intermittent connectivity with PWA features, local caching, and graceful degradation.
While we can’t showcase full case studies, here are characteristics of outdoor ecommerce sites that get mobile right:
REI does an excellent job with mobile product pages. Their image galleries are smooth and intuitive, specifications are well-organized in expandable sections, and size charts are optimized for mobile viewing. Their mobile checkout is streamlined with clear progress indicators.
Patagonia excels at mobile storytelling. Their product pages balance beautiful imagery with functional information, all optimized for mobile viewing. Navigation is intuitive, and their mobile site maintains brand consistency while being purpose-built for small screens.
Backcountry implements solid filtering systems that work well on mobile. Their category navigation is clear, search is prominent, and product comparisons are accessible without overwhelming the mobile interface.
Common threads among excellent mobile outdoor experiences:
Mobile optimization isn’t a one-time project—it’s an ongoing commitment to meeting your customers where they are: in the field, on the trail, at the crag, preparing for their next adventure.
Start with speed. A one-second improvement in load time can boost mobile conversions by up to 27%. Use the checklist above to audit your current mobile experience, prioritizing the issues that most directly impact conversions.
Test relentlessly in real conditions. Get outside with your phone and actually try to shop on your site. Can you read it in bright sun? Does it work with gloves? How does it perform with one bar of LTE?
Remember: your customers aren’t browsing casually from their couch. They’re comparing gear before making a purchase decision, often with limited time and challenging conditions. Your mobile experience needs to respect that context.
The outdoor brands that win mobile aren’t the ones with the most features—they’re the ones that make it easiest for a customer standing in a trailhead parking lot to confidently click “buy” before their adventure begins.
Start optimizing today. Your next customer is already on their phone, researching your products from the field.