Stop selling one thing at a time. Pair your products into a bundle, set the price, and watch the average order climb — while a live margin check keeps the deal honest.
Most stores chase more visitors. Cheaper win: get the people already buying to spend a little more. A good bundle does exactly that — it turns a one-item checkout into a two- or three-item one, without a single new customer.
This builder shows you the two numbers that matter together: how much the bundle lifts a typical order, and whether the discount you're offering still leaves you a margin. Tweak the price and watch both move.
Add the products you'd pair together, mark which ones go in, then set your bundle price. The numbers on the right update as you type.
List each item's normal price. Add the unit cost too if you want a margin check — it's optional.
Tip: leave a little room. A bundle priced a touch under the combined total feels like a deal — and still beats a single-item sale.
A bundle only works if it feels like a deal to them and still pays you. Three ways to land both.
Build the bundle around the one item people already come for, then add things they'd likely grab anyway. The lift you see is measured against buying that hero alone.
You don't need 40% off. A 10–20% nudge usually feels generous, because the saving compares to buying everything separately — not to one item.
Bundling a best-seller with something that sits on the shelf moves the quiet item without a markdown, and protects the margin on the whole set.
This is Day 26 of 120 free drops inside the Sidekick Summer Slam. One marketing or operations tool to your inbox, every single day from May 8 → September 4.
Get me on the list →