Replatforming Won't Fix Your Conversion Bugs (Here's Why)

Replatforming does not fix conversion bugs. Migrating to a new ecommerce platform replaces one set of front-end issues with another, and the migration itself is one of the highest-risk moments for conversion — page behaviour changes, sessions that used to convert stop converting, and without a monitoring baseline there is no way to know what the switch broke. The teams that come through a replatform cleanly are the ones with visibility into conversion before, during, and after go-live.
It’s an easy assumption to make: the old site had bugs, the new platform is modern and managed, so the bugs go away. They don’t. They change shape.
Does replatforming fix conversion problems?
No. A migration moves your catalog, content, and checkout onto a new foundation — new templates, new theme code, new third-party integrations, new checkout flow. Every one of those is a fresh surface for errors that block conversion. You’re not carrying your old bugs forward. You’re generating a new set, on a stack your team has never run in production.
And here’s the part that catches teams off guard: the new platform’s native reporting won’t tell you when those bugs appear. It will show you that conversion dipped. It won’t show you that a JavaScript error on the new product page is silently breaking add-to-cart for everyone on Safari.
Why migration is the riskiest moment for conversion
When you go live on a new platform, every benchmark you had resets. Your conversion rate, your funnel drop-off points, your page performance — all of it starts from a blank slate. If conversion drops in week one, you have nothing to compare against. Was it the new checkout? A slow-loading PDP? A broken promo code field? Or just normal post-launch noise? Without a baseline, you’re guessing.
Your old monitoring setup won’t come with you
Teams moving off an open platform like Magento, Salesforce Commerce Cloud, or a custom build are usually moving to a more managed one. The tags, scripts, and custom instrumentation that gave you visibility on the old stack often don’t translate — and on a managed platform, friction surfaces differently. The visibility gap shifts from purely technical errors toward conversion behaviour, and the tooling you trusted may simply not run where it used to.
The experience migrates — the friction migrates with it
Most teams move the experience without optimizing it first. The hesitation points, the confusing checkout step, the PDP that quietly underperforms — if you couldn’t see them on the old site, you rebuild them faithfully on the new one. A migration is the rare chance to fix that friction on the way out. You can only do that if you can see it before you leave.
The Shopify checkout blind spot
Around 80% of the replatforms we see are moves to Shopify, so this one matters. Shopify’s checkout is a locked-down, managed environment that restricts most third-party scripts and tags. That’s good for security and speed — and a real problem for visibility. The analytics and monitoring you bolt on elsewhere on the site often can’t see into checkout, which is exactly where conversion is won or lost.
Shopify Analytics, GA4, and lightweight session tools will show you the storefront and then go quiet at the most important step. A purpose-built ecommerce monitoring platform, installed as a sanctioned Shopify app, is built to maintain an unbroken session from the storefront through every checkout step — so a payment field that fails or a shipping option that errors doesn’t disappear into a reporting black hole.
What native analytics shows you vs. what monitoring shows you
The gap isn’t about having data. After a migration you’ll have plenty of data. The gap is between knowing a number moved and knowing why it moved — and what it’s costing you.
What to monitor before, during, and after a replatform
Before you switch: establish a real conversion baseline on your current site — where sessions drop off, which pages underperform, what your funnel actually does. That baseline is what makes your migration QA meaningful and tells you, on day one, what changed.
At go-live: watch for conversion drops, performance regressions, and checkout friction in real time. The first 72 hours decide whether a regression costs you a morning or a quarter.
After launch: connect every release on the new platform to its effect on stability, performance, and conversion, so the inevitable post-launch fixes don’t introduce the next regression.
How Noibu gives you visibility through a replatform
Noibu is an ecommerce analytics and monitoring platform — purpose-built for retail, platform-agnostic, and installed without engineering lift. It runs on your current stack and your future one, so a migration doesn’t reset your visibility along with everything else.
Before you move, Noibu captures a full picture of your current conversion health. The moment your new site goes live, Issues & Alerts catches conversion-impacting errors and ranks them by revenue impact, and Session Replay gives you the exact session — through checkout — to reproduce and fix what broke. You go into your migration informed, and you come out of it without flying blind at your most vulnerable moment.
Frequently asked questions
Don’t go into your migration blind
A replatform is the moment you most need to see what’s happening on your site — and the moment most teams have the least visibility. The fix isn’t to wait until you’re live and hope nothing broke. It’s to know your conversion baseline before you move and watch it in real time as you switch.
Planning or mid-migration right now? Run a free Noibu website audit to see exactly what your current site is — and isn’t — capturing before you make the move.



