Critical Issues
3 findingsThese directly affect how the store appears in Google results or create customer-facing conflicts. Each takes under 15 minutes to fix.
Homepage title tag is a literal URL — and it points to the wrong domain
The homepage title tag — the single most important on-page SEO element for the entire store — currently reads as a raw URL instead of a descriptive title. Worse, it references thegreenhousebar.com/shop, which isn't even this site's domain. This is what shows as the blue headline in Google results, in browser tabs, and in shared links.
How to fix: Shopify Admin → Online Store → Preferences → Homepage title. Update the meta description at the same time (see the meta description finding below).
Free shipping threshold conflicts: homepage says $75, shipping page says $50
The homepage promotes "Free Shipping on all orders over $75" while the Shipping & Returns page states "All orders over $50 qualify for free shipping." One of these is wrong. Beyond confusing shoppers at the moment they decide whether to add another item, a published offer that isn't honored at checkout is a customer-service and chargeback risk.
How to fix: Confirm the real threshold configured in Shopify (Settings → Shipping and delivery), then update whichever page is wrong so both match exactly.
Spelling error in a headline promo: "recieve"
This sits in one of the three promotional banners at the top of the homepage — the highest-visibility copy on the site. A misspelling here undermines trust before a shopper sees a single product.
SEO Findings
5 high · 6 mediumOpportunities to help the shop rank for "indoor plants Jacksonville," plant names, and branded searches — and to connect this new domain to the café's existing local authority.
Product title tags are too long and get cut off in Google
Plant page titles combine the common name, botanical name, size, and store name — pushing well past Google's ~60-character display limit. The result is titles that truncate mid-word in search results.
How to fix: On each product in Shopify Admin, scroll to "Search engine listing" → Edit → set a shorter Page title. The full descriptive name stays on the page itself.
Plant listings appear to use supplier-fed content — duplicate content risk
The plant catalog uses generically-named supplier images (e.g. product_oe_image_7185235.png) and description copy formatted like a vendor feed. If the same photos and descriptions appear on other retailers' sites, Google has little reason to rank this store's version — the pages compete against identical content on more established domains.
Rewrite descriptions in The Greenhouse Bar's voice, starting with the 10–15 best-selling plants. Add what only this shop can say: that these are the same plants customers know from the Riverside café, staff care tips, and Jacksonville/Florida-specific notes (humidity, light in Florida homes). Where possible, replace or supplement supplier photos with in-store photography — the merch pages already prove the team can shoot beautiful product photos.
No local identity on the shop: no address, phone, or LocalBusiness connection
The store's biggest advantage over faceless online plant sellers is that it's a beloved real place — yet nothing on thegreenhousebar.shop says where that place is. The footer has no address or phone, and the Contact page is a bare form. This wastes local SEO equity and weakens the connection between this domain, thegreenhousebar.com, and the Google Business Profile.
Also add Organization schema (JSON-LD) with sameAs links to thegreenhousebar.com, Instagram, TikTok, and Pinterest so Google understands both domains belong to one brand. NAP details must exactly match the Google Business Profile.
Image SEO: empty alt text and non-descriptive filenames
Several homepage promo images have no alt text at all, and filenames across the site carry zero keyword value — some are also unprofessional if a customer or journalist ever inspects or saves them:
How to fix: Going forward, rename files before upload (e.g. alocasia-bambino-6in-greenhouse-bar.jpg). Add descriptive alt text to the homepage banner images and vary alt text across product gallery images (currently every gallery image repeats the identical product title). Alt text also matters for accessibility compliance.
Collection pages have thin, all-lowercase descriptions
Collection pages are the pages most likely to rank for valuable category terms ("buy indoor plants online," "pet safe houseplants"), but the current descriptions are ~20 words. Example:
Recommendation: Expand each collection description to 80–150 words that naturally work in category keywords, shipping reassurance ("shipped from our Jacksonville greenhouse"), and internal links to sub-collections (Beginner Friendly, Pet Safe, Low Light). Use standard sentence capitalization here even if lowercase styling is kept for decorative headings — Google shows this text in snippets.
Body copy placed inside heading tags
The After Hours Candle's entire 50-word description paragraph is wrapped in an <h3> heading tag. Headings should label sections, not carry paragraphs — misuse dilutes the heading hierarchy that search engines use to understand page structure, and it forces styling quirks. Move the paragraph into normal body text and reserve headings for labels like "Scent Notes" and "Details."
FAQ page is a missed rich-result opportunity (no FAQ schema)
The FAQ page already contains well-organized question-and-answer content about plant shipping, damage claims, and returns — exactly the format Google can surface. Adding FAQPage JSON-LD structured data makes these Q&As eligible for expanded search listings and helps answer engines cite the store. This can be added once in the page template.
Gift card FAQ answer says "online here" — but nothing is linked
The word "here" carries no hyperlink, so a customer ready to buy a gift card hits a dead end. Link it to the gift card product page. (Descriptive anchor text like "purchase a digital gift card" is also better for SEO than "here.")
Brand authority is split across three domains
The brand now spans the Squarespace site (.com), this Shopify store (.shop), and the Square Online ordering domain. Each domain builds authority separately. Full consolidation isn't required, but the domains should reinforce each other: prominent reciprocal links (the .com site should link to the shop from its main navigation, not just vice versa), matching Organization schema on both, and consistent brand NAP everywhere. Consider whether shop.thegreenhousebar.com as a subdomain is worth evaluating long-term, since subdomains inherit more brand signal than a separate TLD.
Collection grids link to variant-parameter URLs
Product tiles link to URLs like /products/monstera-deliciosa-8-inch-indoor-houseplant?variant=45742599405612. Shopify's canonical tags normally consolidate these, but with a theme customization in play it's worth verifying in Google Search Console (URL Inspection) that the parameterized URLs canonicalize to the clean product URL, so crawl budget and link equity aren't split across duplicates.
Merchandise descriptions are thin
The tote bag page has excellent photography (8 images) but only ~25 words of copy and two spec bullets. Missing: dimensions, strap drop, closure, care instructions, and the story behind the artwork. Expanding each merch description to 75–120 words improves both conversion and long-tail rankings — and the "designed by our in-house artists in Jacksonville" angle is a genuine differentiator worth writing down.
Grammar & Spelling
14 correctionsEvery error below includes the exact current text and a copy-ready correction. Note: some headings on the site use intentional lowercase as a brand style — those are flagged separately at the end, not counted as errors.
"Proccessing Times" → "Processing Times"
"Merchandise REturns" → "Merchandise Returns"
Missing word: "as well home goods" → "as well as home goods"
Missing word: "from one our in-house artists" → "from one of our in-house artists"
Lowercase "i" in three FAQ questions
The pronoun "I" is always capitalized, even within a lowercase brand style.
Inconsistent question capitalization in FAQ
One question starts lowercase while every neighboring question is capitalized. The section heading "ORDERS" is also all-caps while sibling headings ("Plants", "Gift Cards") use title case.
Sentences starting lowercase on Shipping & Returns page
Sentence starting lowercase on Contact page
Sentence fragment in plant description
Because these descriptions appear to come from a supplier feed, spot-check other plant listings for the same fragment pattern.
Missing closing quote in product title: "'Congo Rojo)"
Note: fixing the product title may change the URL handle if Shopify is set to update it — keep the existing handle or add a redirect.
Em dash spacing: "of Greenhouse— not"
"Tiktok" → "TikTok"
Repetitive phrasing: "arrives to you" used twice in one FAQ answer
Style decision needed: lowercase headings are inconsistent, not systematic
Some headings use a lowercase aesthetic ("now shipping live plants!", "find your perfect plant", "we think you might like...") while others use title case ("Free Shipping", "Now Shipping Live Plants!" — the same phrase appears both ways on the homepage). Lowercase-as-brand-voice is a legitimate choice, but right now it reads as accidental because it's applied unevenly. Pick one rule (e.g., lowercase for decorative section headings, sentence case for policy/informational pages) and apply it everywhere.
What's Working
Keep doing theseThe audit isn't all fixes — the store launched with several strong fundamentals worth protecting.
Clean, descriptive URL structure
Product and collection URLs are readable and keyword-rich (/products/monstera-deliciosa-8-inch-indoor-houseplant, /collections/pet-safe-plants). No mis-slugged URLs like the ones we had to redirect on the main site. This is exactly right — don't change existing handles without 301 redirects.
Smart sub-collection architecture for plant shoppers
Beginner Friendly, Pet Safe, Low Light, Bright Light, and Mystery Packs mirror exactly how people search for plants. These pages just need the content depth to match the structure.
Excellent merch photography
Eight styled photos on the tote bag page is genuinely strong e-commerce practice. Extending this in-house photography to the top-selling plants would be the single best differentiator from other online plant sellers.
Thorough plant care details on product pages
Light, water, humidity, temperature range, and pet-safety flags on every plant listing answer real pre-purchase questions and reduce returns. This structure is also a great foundation for future Product schema enrichment.
Cross-navigation to the café site
Menu, Events, Wine Club, About, and "Visit the Cafe" all link back to thegreenhousebar.com — the shop already sends brand signals in one direction. The fix in this report is simply to make that relationship reciprocal and machine-readable.
Growth Opportunities
6 initiativesBeyond fixing what's broken — these are the highest-leverage moves to build traffic, capture the café's existing audience, and grow order value. Ranked by opportunity.
1. Launch a plant care content hub on the shop blog
The FAQ already points customers to "our social media and blog" for care tips — but no blog exists on the shop. Meanwhile, every plant product page already contains structured care data (light, water, humidity, pet safety) that can seed the content.
Searches like "alocasia bambino care," "why are my monstera leaves yellowing," and "pet safe low light plants" carry real volume with low competition, and every guide links directly back to a product page. This also solves the duplicate-content problem from another angle: the care guides become the unique, brand-owned content Google rewards, even while the catalog descriptions are being rewritten.
Shopify's blog is built in — no new tooling. Publish 2 guides per month, starting with the 6 best-selling plants. Each guide: 600–900 words, in-store photos, a "Shop this plant" link, and the Jacksonville/Florida humidity angle no national competitor can write.
2. Get the catalog into Google Shopping — free
A brand-new domain won't rank organically for months — but Google's free product listings don't care about domain age. Shopify's native Google & YouTube channel syncs the full catalog into the Google Shopping tab at zero ad spend, putting plants and merch in front of buyers with images and prices immediately.
Install the Google & YouTube channel in Shopify Admin, connect Merchant Center, and resolve any product data warnings (this pairs naturally with the title and description work in the 90-day plan). Once running, the same feed powers paid Shopping campaigns later if the owner ever wants them.
3. Add product reviews to earn star ratings in search
The café has hundreds of glowing Google reviews; the shop has none, and no mechanism to collect them. A review app (Judge.me has a solid free tier) adds automatic post-purchase review request emails and review schema — which puts star ratings on the store's search listings, one of the strongest click-through boosters available to a small store.
Install the app, set the review request email to send 10–14 days after delivery (plants need time to settle in), and feature photo reviews on product pages. Kick-start it by inviting recent buyers personally.
4. Bridge the café and the shop — including local pickup
Hundreds of people physically stand in the space every week — the exact audience most likely to buy — yet nothing in the crawl connects the two experiences. Two moves:
In-store to online: QR codes on tables, cups, receipts, and plant shelves ("Can't carry it home? We ship." / "Sold out in store? It's on the shop."). Cost: nearly nothing.
Local pickup: No pickup option was visible anywhere on the site. Shipping a live plant is the scariest part of buying one online — pickup at 200 Riverside removes that fear entirely for Jacksonville customers and drives foot traffic (and a coffee sale) with every collection. If it isn't enabled yet, turn it on in Shopify (Settings → Shipping and delivery → Local pickup) and promote it in the announcement bar and on every plant page.
5. Build bundles that make the free-shipping threshold reachable
Most plants run $30–45 against a $75 free-shipping bar — close enough to tease, far enough to frustrate. Curated bundles close the gap while raising average order value:
• Plant Parent Starter Kit — plant + pot + care essentials
• Gift bundles — plant + My Grass is Green tote or candle
• Extend the Mystery Pack concept — the existing Mystery Packs already prove customers will buy curated; add themed versions (Pet Safe Mystery, Low Light Mystery)
Add a free-shipping progress bar in the cart ("You're $18 away from free shipping") — a small theme addition with consistently strong AOV results.
6. Unify email — and put the Wine Club list to work
The Wine Club already runs on Mailchimp — the highest-loyalty customers the brand has. If the shop's signups flow into Shopify's own email tool instead, the lists diverge: promos conflict (the 20% offer, drop announcements), and Wine Club members may never hear the shop exists.
Connect Shopify to the existing Mailchimp audience with tags (shop-buyer, wine-club, both). Announce the shop to the Wine Club list first — a members-only early-access offer makes them feel like insiders. Then replicate the in-store monthly plant drops as online drops with a "notify me" list: scarcity plus email is a reliable repeat-visit engine.
Housekeeping: confirm GA4 is installed on the .shop property with cross-domain tracking to thegreenhousebar.com — otherwise sales that start on the café site show up as unattributable referral traffic and there's no clean growth story to report to the owner.
90-Day Action Plan
Sequenced by impact-to-effort. Week 1 items are all under an hour combined.
| Phase | Actions | Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Week 1 | Fix homepage title tag & meta description · reconcile the $50/$75 free-shipping conflict · correct "recieve," "Proccessing," "REturns," and the two missing-word errors · link the gift card FAQ answer | Fixes the store's search appearance and removes every trust-damaging error from high-traffic pages. |
| Weeks 2–4 | Shorten product SEO titles (start with best sellers) · add address/NAP to footer · complete remaining capitalization fixes · write 80–150 word descriptions for all 7 collection pages · add alt text to homepage banners | Positions collection pages to rank for category terms and connects the shop to the café's local authority. |
| Month 2 | Rewrite descriptions for top 15 plants in brand voice · shoot in-house photos for top sellers · add Organization + FAQPage schema · verify variant-URL canonicals in Search Console · enable local pickup + install review app · connect Google Merchant Center free listings · sync Shopify to the Wine Club Mailchimp audience · verify GA4 cross-domain tracking | Separates the catalog from supplier-fed listings, opens a free product-visibility channel, and activates the café's existing audience. |
| Month 3 | Finish remaining plant description rewrites · establish image naming convention · add reciprocal shop links on thegreenhousebar.com navigation · apply site-wide heading capitalization rule · publish first 2 plant care guides · launch first bundle + cart free-shipping progress bar · place QR codes in the café · announce shop to Wine Club list with early-access offer | Starts the compounding growth engines: content, reviews, bundles, and the café-to-shop pipeline. |