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blog|Enterprise ecommerce

Product Data Enrichment for Ecommerce: A Practical Guide

Learn what product data enrichment is, which fields matter most for ecommerce performance, and how to approach, from catalog audits to PIM integrations.

by Holly Stanley
online shopping window with pair of sunglasses and four pop up windows surrounding it
On this page
On this page
  • What is product data enrichment in ecommerce?
  • Why product data enrichment matters for ecommerce performance
  • What enriched product data includes
  • How to enrich product data on Shopify
  • Product data enrichment tactics that improve conversion
  • Product data enrichment tactics that improve SEO and discoverability
  • Put product data enrichment into practice
  • Product data enrichment FAQ

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Ecommerce product catalogs often start with supplier spreadsheets, model numbers, and a handful of fields built more for inventory management than a user-friendly storefront. Product data enrichment for ecommerce improves the specificity and quality of that data so that customers can find and purchase those products.

According to Syndigo’s "2025 State of Product Experience Report", 44% of consumers have abandoned a purchase due to insufficient product information. Ecommerce product data enrichment is designed to reduce that percentage for your business. 

This guide covers what product data enrichment for ecommerce involves, which fields matter most, and how to approach the process.

What is product data enrichment in ecommerce?

Product data enrichment in ecommerce is the process of turning weak or incomplete product information into detailed, structured customer-facing content that helps shoppers find, understand, and ultimately buy the products in your online store.

Catalogs start as a supplier feed and include:

  • SKUs
  • Basic dimensions
  • A model number

That raw product data supports basic inventory management but lacks the detail needed for storefront presentation.

Enrichment is the work that happens between the raw feed and a product detail page.

It covers five areas:

  • Technical attributes: Dimensions, materials, compatibility, specifications
  • Merchandising copy: Titles, descriptions, and feature callouts written for buyers, not warehouses
  • Logistical details: Shipping weight, return eligibility, availability by location
  • Rich media: Lifestyle photography, video, 3D models, size guides
  • Structured data: Schema markup and feed-ready fields that help Google surface products in richer search results

Product data can move through three stages before it's storefront-ready:

  1. Raw data: What arrives from a supplier. It’s usually incomplete, inconsistently formatted, and written for logistics purposes.
  2. Cleaned data: The data-cleansing stage involves normalizing it into consistent formats, with aligned units, assigned categories, and no duplicates. At this level, the information is sufficient for purposes like inventory management.
  3. Enriched data: Expanded with customer-facing content, including copy, attributes, media, and structured fields. On Shopify, the product details page covers the core fields and metafields handle the rest.

One way to begin product data enrichment is by identifying what exists and what’s missing.

Before and after: Enriching data for one product

Field Raw data Enriched data
Title BLK-CHAIR-01 Milo Upholstered Dining Chair, Charcoal Linen, Set of 2
Description Chair. Fabric seat. Metal legs. Modern dining chair with tight-woven linen seat and powder-coated steel legs. Seat height: 18 in. Weight capacity: 250 lb.
Material Fabric 85% linen, 15% polyester; powder-coated steel frame
Dimensions — W 19 in × D 22 in × H 33 in; seat height 18 in
Images 1 studio shot 4 studio angles + 2 lifestyle images + 1 room-scale photo
Structured data None Schema markup: price, availability, rating, shipping


A shopper on your site looking at the information in the raw data column would know very little about the product. The enriched version supports search visibility and onsite filtering, and answers the product detail questions shoppers need answered before buying.

Why product data enrichment matters for ecommerce performance

Ecommerce product data enrichment can support search visibility, conversion, returns reduction, and operational scale. Product data enrichment affects how easily shoppers find products and how smoothly catalog data flows across every channel.

Here’s how product data enrichment supports improvements in these key areas:

  • Search visibility: More specific titles, attribute-rich descriptions, and structured data makes products easier for customers to find and eligible for enhanced search appearances.
  • Conversion: Specific and practical details help customers identify what they’re looking for and reduce hesitation on product pages.
  • Returns: Accurate content that sets the right expectations before purchase, so that customers don’t have any unpleasant surprises when their package arrives.
  • Operational efficiency, through consistent, structured data that syndicates cleanly across channels

Here's how those influences show up in real business outcomes:

What the data says:

  • 77% of consumers say product information is important when making a purchase (GS1 US)
  • 62% are willing to spend more on a product that offers detailed product information (GS1 US)
  • 75% of consumers form negative opinions about a brand when product information is incomplete or inaccurate (Syndigo)

1. Search and discovery

Thin titles and generic descriptions affect search visibility. Products without specific attributes in their data don't appear for the queries that match them. You might have the exact product customers are searching for, but they’ll never find it.

According to a Salsify 2025 consumer research report, 65% of shoppers use search engines to research products and brands, and 54% use online marketplaces. 

Those shoppers run specific queries that include:

  • Fabric type
  • Dimensions
  • Compatibility
  • Use case

Products without those attributes described online simply won’t show up in those queries.

Google's product structured data documentation confirms that richer product information makes pages eligible for enhanced search appearances, including: 

  • Pricing
  • Availability
  • Ratings
  • Shipping details
  • Google Images
  • Google Lens

Combining structured data with a Merchant Center feed helps Google verify product information and improve eligibility for the shopping tab.

The same principle can apply onsite. Consistent categories, complete attributes, and structured metafields determine whether a shopper finds what they're looking for through filtering and search, or gives up and leaves your store.

2. Conversion

GS1 US consumer research found 77% of consumers say product information is important when making a purchase. 

To help customers decide if your product is the one they want to purchase, your product detail page should include information like: 

  • Accurate dimensions
  • Material callouts
  • Fit guidance
  • Compatibility notes
  • Shipping timelines
  • Return conditions

When boxing apparel brand Everlast moved from a legacy platform to Shopify, the team restructured their product data, integrated their enterprise resource planning (ERP). They also added AI-powered search—a key detail, since enterprise AI tools can only be as effective as the data they have access to. Within 30 days, the brand achieved: 

  • A 152% lift in conversion 
  • A 23% increase in total web sales

3. Returns reduction

In 2025, the NRF predicted 19.3% of the year’s online sales would be returned. Not all returns stem from product content issues, but the Syndigo 2025 report found 21% of shoppers returned a product when it didn't meet the expectations set by online product content.

Accurate dimensions, honest material descriptions, fit notes, and true-to-life photography can help align product pages with what shoppers receive.

This applies particularly to apparel, furniture, and other categories where fit, size, and appearance are primary purchase considerations.

4. Operational scale

Consistent, structured product data syndicates cleanly to marketplaces, feeds, and retail partners. For businesses managing thousands of SKUs across multiple channels, that consistency reduces the manual fixes and channel-by-channel corrections that consume catalog team time.

DHL’s “E-Commerce Trends Report 2025”, which surveyed 24,000 shoppers across 24 global markets, found 81% abandon their carts when preferred delivery options are missing. Shipping timelines, return policies, and availability information are part of the product data shoppers look for before buying.

The same report found seven in 10 shoppers want AI-driven shopping tools, from virtual try-ons to voice search. Those tools depend on structured, attribute-rich catalog data to perform well.

On Shopify, this scale layer starts with the platform's core product structure and metafields. Product information management (PIM) system integrations and enrichment apps can be added when catalog complexity or ecommerce growth demand it.

What enriched product data includes

Core catalog fields

Before adding high-quality, detailed information to each product record, product data enrichment for ecommerce starts with core catalog fields.

Shopify provides a clear structure to work from:

  • Title
  • Description
  • Media
  • Price
  • Variants
  • Inventory
  • Shipping details
  • Category
  • Tags
  • Collections

You’ll use these fields as a foundation on which to build your high-quality data infrastructure.

A key first step is to ensure that records are complete and correctly formatted. Incomplete or inconsistent fields can affect search, filtering, recommendations, and paid ads.

Here are some common gaps to fill as you get started with product data enrichment:

  • Titles that use internal SKU codes or manufacturer model numbers instead of descriptive, searchable names
  • Descriptions copied from supplier sheets, written for a warehouse rather than a shopper
  • Variants with inconsistent logic, including sizes that don't match the size guide, same colors named differently across products
  • Single-angle studio shots with no lifestyle context, or low-resolution images that don't hold up on high-DPI screens
  • Categories and tags applied inconsistently, making filtering and collection logic unreliable
  • Shipping and returns information missing at the product level, leaving shoppers to hunt for it elsewhere

Custom attributes that improve buying confidence

Once you’ve established that the core fields are filled in with properly formatted, usable data, attributes can add more useful information to help answer practical buying questions.

The attributes that matter most are the ones that answer these questions: 

  • What's it made of? 
  • Will it fit? 
  • Does it work with what I already own?

The right attributes to add vary by product category.

Product category High-impact attributes
Apparel and accessories Fabric composition, fit type (slim/relaxed/oversized), stretch, rise, inseam length, model size worn, care instructions, country of origin
Beauty and personal care Full ingredient list, skin-type suitability, usage instructions, allergens, fragrance-free/vegan/cruelty-free flags
Furniture and home Exact dimensions (W × D × H), seat height, material and finish, assembly required, weight capacity, care instructions
Electronics Device compatibility, ports and connectivity, battery life, warranty terms, certifications (FCC, CE), what's in the box (components, cords, batteries)
Food and beverage Full ingredient list, allergens, nutritional information, serving size, origin, certifications (organic, kosher, gluten-free), diet fit (keto, vegetarian)
Cross-category Size guide, shipping dimensions and weight, return conditions, sustainability credentials, bundled accessories, country of origin


On Shopify, metafields are how businesses store and display specialized information like attributes. Standard product fields cover the essentials. 

Care instructions, material breakdowns, compatibility details, ingredient lists, and dimensional specs live more naturally in metafields and can be surfaced directly on product detail pages using Shopify's theme editor or custom storefronts.

According to the GS1 "US Consumer Pulse Survey", 62% of consumers are willing to spend more on a product that offers detailed product information.

Rich media and contextual content

Enrichment covers more than text fields. The visual layer of a product page is part of the data, too. And without the opportunity to see your product up close in a brick-and-mortar storefront, the images you add to your PDPs may be all customers have to go on making a visual connection with your product.

Baymard Institute’s “Product Page UX 2026” benchmark study found that product pages are central to purchase decisions, drawing on more than 30,000 manually rated product-page UX scores. 

The study’s product imagery guidance shows that additional visuals are useful when shoppers need to assess scale, fit, texture, or real-world use. Enriched media can include:

  • Multiple studio angles: Front, back, side, detail close-up
  • Lifestyle imagery: The product in context, in use, in a room, on a person
  • Comparison charts: Side-by-side specs for product families or variant options
  • 360°, 3D, and AR: For categories where fit, scale, and spatial context matter
  • Explainer videos: Assembly, usage, and features for considered purchases
  • Reviews and user-generated content (UGC): Proof elements that reduce uncertainty for new shoppers

The couture high-fashion brand Rebecca Minkoff realized online shoppers needed more confidence about product look, feel, and detail. The team added 3D models and augmented reality (AR) to their product pages on Shopify. 

They found customers who interacted with 3D were 44% more likely to add to cart and 27% more likely to complete an order. Those who viewed a product in AR were 65% more likely to purchase.

How to enrich product data on Shopify

Here’s a step-by-step guide to product data enrichment for ecommerce on Shopify:

  1. Audit your current catalog.
  2. Standardize your product structure.
  3. Use metafields to add any missing fields.
  4. Improve content for search and storefront clarity.
  5. Add structured data and feed-ready fields.
  6. Use apps or a PIM when scale demands it

1. Audit your current catalog

Start by reviewing the current catalog.

Work through these checks:

  • Missing attributes: Which SKUs are missing dimensions, materials, compatibility, or care information?
  • Thin descriptions: Which product pages rely on one-sentence copy or unedited supplier text?
  • Variant inconsistencies: Are sizes, colors, and materials named consistently across the catalog, or do variations use different conventions depending on the category or vendor?
  • Taxonomy gaps: Are products correctly categorized? Are collections and tags applied consistently enough to support filtering?
  • Weak media: Which SKUs have only one image, no lifestyle photography, or images that don't meet current resolution standards?
  • Return rate by SKU: Which products are coming back most? Give those PDPs a closer look to see if customer expectations might be misled by the information.

Shopify's built-in product management tools and bulk editing capabilities are designed to give catalog teams a practical way to review and update product data at scale.

2. Standardize your product structure

A consistent structure makes enrichment easier to manage across the catalog. Before adding attributes, establish the rules that govern how product data is recorded across the catalog.

That means defining:

  • Naming conventions: Usea consistent structure that follows this sequence: Brand, Product Name, Key Variant Detail. This is a logical convention that improves search relevance and simplifies catalog management.
  • Taxonomy and categories: Shopify supports a standard product taxonomy built around consistent category trees. Standardized categories improve onsite filtering, feed eligibility, and compatibility with Google's product taxonomy.
  • Attribute definitions: Consider which attributes apply to each category. What are the accepted values, grams or ounces, inches or centimeters, full color names or hex codes?
  • Units and formatting: Inconsistent units create problems in feeds, comparison tools, and search filters.
  • Category-level rules: Apparel needs fit and fabric rules. Furniture needs dimensions and assembly rules. Electronics need compatibility and certification rules.

A standardized structure can make syndication easier across channels, feeds, and retail partners.

3. Use metafields to add any missing fields

Standard product fields cover the essentials. For everything beyond that, metafields fill the gap between a generic listing and a fully detailed product page.

On Shopify, metafields let retailers store and display specialized product information that default fields don't support, including: 

  • Care instructions
  • Ingredient lists
  • Material breakdowns
  • Compatibility notes
  • Fit details
  • Dimensional specs 

Shopify's theme editor or a custom storefront can then surface that data directly on product pages.

Examples by category:

  • Apparel: Fabric composition, fit type, care instructions, model size worn
  • Furniture: Assembled dimensions, seat height, weight capacity, assembly required
  • Electronics: Compatible devices, battery life, in-box contents, warranty length
  • Beauty: Key ingredients, skin type, allergen info, usage instructions
  • Food: Allergens, nutritional info, country of origin, certifications

Where a standard metafield definition exists for the attribute needed, use it. Shopify's standard metafield definitions are designed to be compatible across apps, themes, and other parts of the store, which makes them more reliable than fully custom fields when working with third-party tools.

For larger catalogs, metafield management at scale can be done using bulk editing tools or dedicated apps. For example, contemporary Indian womenswear and lifestyle brand, Mulmul, manages over 7,000 products this way, using the Matrixify app to manage metafields across their full catalog.

4. Improve content for search and storefront clarity

There’s a few key tweaks you can use to help your content stand out:

Rewrite titles for specificity

"Blue Dress" tells a search engine very little. "Midi Wrap Dress, Cobalt Blue, Stretch Jersey" is specific enough to match purchase-intent queries and useful enough to help a shopper make a decision.

Write for the shopper's language, not internal language

Try to think like a shopper, not a retailer. Shoppers search for "waterproof hiking boots for wide feet," not "outdoor footwear, waterproof, wide last." Product descriptions, titles, and attribute values should reflect the language buyers actually use. Shopify's product page SEO and product listing optimization guidance covers this in detail.

Improve detailed descriptions for usefulness, not length

Lead with what the product is or who it's for. Follow with the details that answer buying questions: materials, dimensions, use cases, and compatibility. Salsify found 68% of shoppers spend an hour or less on product research, and scannable content can help shoppers find key details faster.

Add use cases and compatibility context

A description written for one use case misses shoppers buying for another. Covering who a product is for, what it pairs with, and where it works expands search relevance across a broader range of queries.

5. Add structured data and feed-ready fields

Google's product structured data documentation confirms that structured data makes product pages eligible for enhanced search engine results appearances, including: 

  • Price
  • Availability
  • Ratings
  • Shipping details
  • Google Images
  • Google Lens

Google also recommends combining structured data on product pages with a Merchant Center feed. Using both helps Google verify product information, improves eligibility for the shopping tab, and gives retailers more control over how data is updated.

The fields that matter most for structured data eligibility:

  • Price and currency
  • Availability status (in stock, out of stock, pre-order)
  • Shipping information (cost, estimated delivery)
  • Return policy
  • Ratings and reviews
  • Product identifiers (GTIN, MPN, brand)

Shopify’s developer documentation shows that product data can be output as schema.org structured data through Liquid. Shopify’s ecosystem also includes apps for both JSON-LD schema generation and product feed management, including tools that sync Shopify product data with Google, Facebook, and TikTok.

6. Use apps or a PIM when scale demands it

Manual enrichment becomes difficult to scale as catalog size increases. For larger catalogs, teams use bulk-edit tools, feed-management platforms, or PIM integrations to manage enrichment at scale.

  • Bulk-edit apps: These allow you to apply enrichment changes across large numbers of SKUs like updating attributes, fixing titles, and standardizing categories at once without opening every product record manually.
  • Feed and syndication apps: Use these to push enriched product data to Google Shopping, Meta, marketplaces, and retail partners in the correct format for each channel.
  • PIM for ecommerce: A product information management system becomes useful when product data needs to be managed centrally across multiple channels, locales, or teams, and when catalog volume or pace of change makes native tools insufficient.
  • ERP integrations: For businesses whose product data originates in an ERP or supplier system, integrating that source directly with Shopify keeps inventory, pricing, and product specs in sync.

For enterprise operators evaluating a more robust data stack, Shopify and Salsify is one established combination for managing product information at scale.

If you’re not sure which approach makes the most sense for your scale of business, the table below breaks down the basics.

Shopify alone Shopify + apps Shopify + PIM
When to use Catalogs with less than a few hundred SKUs with straightforward product data Growing catalogs needing bulk editing, feed management, or syndication at scale Large or complex catalogs managed across multiple channels, locales, or teams
Product data management Native product admin and metafields Native tools plus bulk-edit and enrichment apps Central product data managed in the PIM, synced to Shopify
Structured data and feeds Built-in schema support in most themes Feed and syndication apps for Google Shopping, Meta, and marketplaces PIM handles feed generation and channel-specific data formatting
Enrichment workflow Manual, record by record Bulk edits and app-assisted workflows Central enrichment with workflow and approval tools
Technical requirements Minimal Low to moderate Moderate to high
Example tools Shopify admin, metafields, theme editor Matrixify, feed management apps Salsify, Akeneo, inriver


Product data enrichment tactics that improve conversion

The Syndigo 2025 report found 44% of consumers abandoned a purchase due to insufficient product information. Here are some product data enrichment tactics that address that directly.

Checklist: Seven enrichment tactics that directly improve conversion

  • Add fit and size guidance: Size chart, model measurements, fit descriptor, category-specific notes
  • Add compatibility and use-case details: Device compatibility, system requirements, use-case context by category
  • Add shipping and returns clarity: Shipping cost, delivery window, return conditions, variant-specific differences
  • Surface trust-building details high on the page: Certifications, materials provenance, sustainability credentials, warranty, allergens
  • Use comparison-friendly specs: Consistent attribute formatting, comparison tables for product families
  • Connect accessories and complementary products: "Works with," "complete the look," "frequently bought together"
  • Add merchandising blocks: "Best for," "pairs with," "how to style," "as seen in"

1. Add fit and size guidance

A 2025 peer-reviewed study on fashion ecommerce sizing tools analyzed 496,365 ordered items from 75,707 customers and found that size-finder usage was associated with higher customer lifetime value (CLV).

Here are some useful size and fit details to include on the product page:

  • Size chart with body measurements
  • The size the model is wearing, plus their height and build
  • Fit descriptor (slim, relaxed, oversized)
  • Category-specific notes (runs small, true to size, stretch fabric)

On Shopify, this information can live in a metafield and render directly in a product page section.

2. Add compatibility and use-case details

For electronics, tools, software, accessories, and B2B products, compatibility details and use case context help shoppers confirm whether a product fits their needs before buying. 

Relevant details to include are:

  • Device models or system requirements
  • Connector types or technical specifications
  • What's included and what's required separately (e.g., cords, batteries, ink for printers)

Use-case context applies across categories, too. Furniture described as suitable for indoor and outdoor use reaches a different buyer than furniture that isn't. 

A skincare product specifying "formulated for dry and sensitive skin" gives shoppers more to act on than one that doesn't.

3. Add shipping and returns clarity at the product level

The DHL 2025 E-Commerce Trends Report found 81% of shoppers abandon their carts when preferred delivery options are missing. The NRF found 82% of consumers say free returns are an important consideration when shopping online.

Relevant details to surface at the product level:

  • Shipping cost and estimated delivery window
  • Return eligibility and conditions
  • Any variant-specific shipping differences

On Shopify, shipping and return details can be structured at the product or variant level and displayed as part of the product page layout.

4. Surface trust-building details high on the page

Build customer trust with clear communication. The Syndigo 2025 report found 75% of consumers form negative opinions about a brand when product information is incomplete or inaccurate.

Details that shoppers look for, depending on category:

  • Certifications and safety ratings
  • Material sourcing and provenance
  • Sustainability credentials
  • Warranty terms
  • Allergen information

Place these details near relevant product information, such as pricing, variant selectors, or product descriptions.

5. Use comparison-friendly specs

Shoppers evaluating multiple products need specs in a consistent, comparable format. When dimensions, weights, and technical attributes are formatted differently across SKUs, direct comparison becomes difficult.

Consistent attribute formatting across a product category helps. Comparison tables work well for product families and variants at different price or feature tiers, and you can build them using metafields and custom page sections on Shopify.

6. Connect accessories and complementary products

Merchandising blocks like "works with," "complete the look," and "frequently bought together" serve two purposes: 

  • They can support cross-sell and product discovery.
  • They give shoppers a clearer picture of what they're buying.

This is particularly relevant for categories with natural accessories or system dependencies, including:

  • Cameras
  • Furniture sets
  • Apparel
  • Home improvement tools

On Shopify, these relationships can be structured through metafields referencing related products, or through merchandising apps.

7. Add merchandising blocks 

Merchandising blocks like "best for," "pairs with," "how to style," and "as seen in" extend product data into contextual content that helps shoppers understand how a product fits their needs.

Faherty, a surf-inspired apparel brand, moved to Shopify after their previous platform limited how they could tell product stories, group collections, and merchandise without engineering support. With modular design and no-code merchandising tools in place, they saw a 28% increase in revenue and a 15% increase from search referrers.

Product data enrichment tactics that improve SEO and discoverability

Shoppers research products across search engines, marketplaces, and onsite search before buying. Product data can influence how products appear across search engines, marketplaces, and onsite search.

This section covers how enrichment affects organic search, onsite filtering, and AI-powered discovery across three layers.

Layer What it affects Key tactics
Search enrichment Google visibility, rich results, shopping tab Structured data, Merchant Center feeds, precise titles, attribute-rich descriptions
Storefront enrichment Onsite filtering, search relevance, navigation Taxonomy, metafield-driven filters, consistent tags and categories
AI enrichment AI search, recommendations, conversational discovery Structured attributes, complete metadata, consistent catalog architecture


Search enrichment: What Google can find and feature

Descriptive, specific titles match more precise queries. A title that includes material, variant detail, use case, or category descriptor can help the page match more specific searches that a generic title won't. Attribute-rich descriptions extend a product page's relevance beyond its title. 

Shoppers search for "waterproof canvas tote with zipper" and "modular sofa with chaise left-facing." Products without those attributes may be harder to match to those queries.

Google's product structured data documentation confirms that structured data makes product pages eligible for enhanced search appearances: price, availability, ratings, shipping details, Google Images, and Google Lens.

Google also recommends combining structured data with a Merchant Center feed. The fields that most affect eligibility: price, availability, GTIN, shipping, return policy, and review signals.

Shopify themes include built-in product schema support, but organizations can extend coverage further using ecommerce schema tooling and feed-management apps.

A practical guide to AI discovery

55% of consumers use AI for product research. Join our webinar to learn how to make your brand and products discoverable when high‑intent shoppers turn to AI. You’ll leave with a practical checklist to win on this new discovery channel.

Watch the webinar

Storefront enrichment: What shoppers can filter and find onsite

Onsite search and filtering tools depend on the data behind them. Inconsistent categories, missing attributes, and unstructured tags make filtering unreliable.

Shopify's standard product taxonomy provides a consistent category structure that improves filtering, collection logic, and feed compatibility. Tags applied inconsistently across a catalog produce unreliable collection membership and break automated rules.

When attributes like material, fit, compatibility, or dimensions live in structured metafields rather than description copy, they become filterable. 

A shopper looking for "linen" or "compatible with Series 6" can narrow results with a filter, rather than scanning every page.

AI enrichment: What language models and AI tools can understand

AI-powered search, recommendation engines, and shopping assistants use structured product data to interpret product information. Catalogs with thin descriptions, inconsistent attributes, and unstructured metadata may give these tools less product context to interpret.

POLYWOOD migrated to Shopify from Magento, where catalog complexity and engineering maintenance had become the primary constraints on growth. After implementing AI-assisted workflows and optimizing their catalog for large language model indexing and conversational product discovery, they now support more than 150,000 product variations. Now their engineering capacity is focused on innovation rather than upkeep.

Upgrade from Adobe Commerce

Find a streamlined migration path in our guide with Domaine, a Shopify Partner specializing in design and development.

Download the guide

Put product data enrichment into practice

Product data enrichment can start with one category before expanding across the catalog. Pick one category, work through the core fields, and build from there.

A few questions to work through before enriching product data:

  • Where are the gaps? Run a catalog audit against the core fields and flag SKUs with missing attributes, thin descriptions, or weak media.
  • What category rules do you need? Define the attributes that matter by category before enriching at scale.
  • What does your structured data look like? Check whether your Shopify theme includes product schema support and whether your Merchant Center feed reflects current pricing, availability, and shipping data.
  • When does tooling become necessary? If manual enrichment creates a bottleneck, bulk-edit apps, syndication tools, or a PIM integration may be the right next step.

Product data enrichment FAQ 

What is product data enrichment in ecommerce?

According to Inriver, product data enrichment is the process of improving product listings by adding structured, complete, customer-relevant information. That includes attributes, descriptions, media, compatibility details, shipping information, and any other fields that help a product get found and purchased.

On Shopify, the product details page handles the core listing fields. Metafields cover everything beyond that, including: 

  • Care instructions
  • Ingredient lists
  • Dimensional specs
  • Compatibility notes
  • Any category-specific attributes that standard fields don't support

How is product data enrichment different from a PIM?

Enrichment is the process of improving product data. A product information management system (PIM) is the software used to manage and distribute it.

Businesses start enrichment directly in Shopify. A PIM for ecommerce becomes relevant when catalog complexity grows, including more SKUs, channels, and locales.

Can Shopify merchants do product data enrichment without a developer?

Enrichment tasks, such as updating product fields and metafields, can be handled in Shopify’s admin. You can manage core fields, metafields, taxonomy updates, and app-based workflows in Shopify's admin. More complex integrations like ERP connections, custom storefronts, and feed management at scale require technical support.

Does product data enrichment help SEO?

Yes. Google documentation shows that structured product data and detailed attributes help search engines understand and display products.

Structured data extends that further. Google's product structured data documentation confirms that structured data makes product pages eligible for enhanced search appearances: price, availability, ratings, shipping details, Google Images, and Google Lens.

Shopify's product page SEO guidance and built-in schema support in most themes provide a practical starting point.

What product information matters most for conversion?

The most relevant fields vary by category. Common examples include:

  • Fit and sizing details
  • Dimensions and materials
  • Compatibility information
  • Shipping and return conditions
  • Care instructions
  • Media that helps shoppers visualize the product

GS1 US research found 77% of consumers say product information is important when making a purchase. A Syndigo 2025 report found 44% abandoned a purchase due to insufficient product information.

On Shopify, metafields and product media are the main tools for surfacing this kind of detail at the product level. Rebecca Minkoff added 3D models and AR to their product pages. Shoppers who viewed products in AR were 65% more likely to purchase.

How do you measure the impact of product data enrichment?

Useful metrics to track:

  • Catalog completeness, the percentage of SKUs with all required fields populated
  • Organic search visibility and click-through rate for enriched product pages
  • Internal search engagement, are shoppers finding what they search for onsite?
  • Conversion rate for enriched vs. unenriched products
  • Return rate by SKU, particularly for products with recent content updates

Inriver's enrichment guidance recommends comparing product performance before and after enrichment to isolate the impact of content changes.

Everlast restructured their product data after moving to Shopify. Within 30 days, the brand achieved: 

  • 152% lift in conversion
  • 23% increase in total web sales
  • 133,200 more organic visitors
by Holly Stanley
Published on May 29, 2026
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by Holly Stanley
Published on May 29, 2026

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