Session Replay Without Sampling: Why Every Session Matters in Ecommerce

Sampled session replay records only a subset of visitors. That is fine for spotting broad trends, but it is the wrong tool for finding the one failed checkout or the single broken session behind a complaint. Full-capture session replay records 100% of sessions, so the exact session you need is already there the moment a problem or a conversion dip appears.
When ecommerce teams evaluate session replay, the question they usually ask is “does it record sessions?” Almost every tool says yes. The question that actually matters is narrower: which sessions does it record, and is the one you need to see going to be there when you look for it?
That distinction is the difference between sampled and unsampled session replay, and for online stores it is the difference between catching a revenue leak in an afternoon and never finding it at all.
What session replay sampling actually is
Sampling means a tool records a percentage of visitor sessions rather than all of them. Some platforms sample to control storage costs. Others throttle capture automatically when traffic spikes. Either way, a decision gets made on your behalf about which sessions are worth keeping, and that decision is invisible. You do not see the sessions that were dropped, because by definition they were never recorded.
For high-level behaviour analysis, a representative sample is usually good enough. If you want to know roughly how far shoppers scroll on a category page, a slice of traffic answers the question. The problem starts when the session you need is not representative. It is the exception. And in ecommerce, the exceptions are exactly where revenue leaks.
Fewer than 1% of customers who hit a problem will tell you about it. The rest abandon and move on.
The three moments sampling fails ecommerce teams
Sampling does not announce itself. It fails quietly, at the exact moments you most need the record. Three of those moments show up again and again.
1. The complaint you cannot reproduce
A customer reports that they could not check out. Support escalates it. Engineering tries to recreate the issue on their own machine and cannot, because the bug only fires on a specific browser, a specific payment method, or a specific cart state. Without the customer's actual session, the investigation stalls and the ticket gets closed as “cannot reproduce.” If that session was sampled out, it never existed for you to watch.
“Before Noibu, we were shining a flashlight, hoping to spot issues in the dark. Noibu turned the lights on. We can see the entire room, not just the corners we happened to point at. That's the difference.”
— Yoav Shargil, CDO at David's Bridal
2. The conversion dip with no session to open
Conversion on a key template drops two points overnight. Your analytics confirm the drop but cannot explain it. The natural next step is to watch sessions from the affected segment and see what shoppers actually hit. If your tool only kept a sample, the specific sessions from that segment, on that device, in that window may simply not be there. You are left inferring a cause instead of watching it.
3. Peak season, when throttling quietly kicks in
Black Friday and Cyber Monday are when capture matters most and when sampled tools are most likely to throttle. Traffic surges, the platform protects itself by recording less, and the sessions you lose are the ones from your highest-revenue hours of the year. The phrase ecommerce teams use is blunt: sampling isn't good enough for checkout, and it is least good enough exactly when checkout volume peaks.
How to evaluate session replay for full capture
“Unsampled” is a useful filter, but it is only the first of four criteria worth checking. A complete evaluation looks at capture, findability, revenue, and cause together.
Where Noibu fits
Noibu is an ecommerce analytics and monitoring platform, and its session replay is built around full capture by design. Every session is recorded, with no sampling, so the session behind a complaint or a conversion dip is already waiting when you go looking. AI-assisted search surfaces the relevant sessions instead of asking you to scrub through them, which is the answer to the buyer who says “I don't want to watch every session, just tell me what to look at.”
The part that closes the loop is the cause link. Within a replay, Noibu shows the technical signals firing inside the session, the script errors, failed requests, and rage clicks, and ties them to an estimate of the revenue at risk. You move from “a shopper struggled here” to “this issue is costing this much, and here is the line where it breaks,” in one view.
The average documented online cart abandonment rate is roughly 70%. A meaningful share of that is friction and failure you can watch, not changed minds.
The team that watches the right sessions is the one that catches the failed payment field before it becomes a quarter's worth of lost orders. That only works if the session was captured in the first place.
Related topics
- What are the best session replay tools for ecommerce?
- How do you find what is killing your ecommerce conversion rate?
- How do you identify checkout friction points in ecommerce?
See the sessions you have been missing
If your replay tool samples, the session behind your next unexplained conversion dip may already be gone. Noibu captures 100% of sessions, surfaces the ones that matter, and ties each one to the revenue at stake and the technical cause.
Get a free website audit and see exactly what is happening on your site, or request a demo to watch full-capture session replay in action.



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