"Walk" into most furniture websites today and you’ll see it - a never-ending scroll of products. Page after page. SKU after SKU. Thousands of items from dozens if not hundreds of suppliers.
It’s a digital ocean of “choice.”
But here’s the question: when was the last time you went to page seven of search results? (never)
Exactly.
Back in 2000, psychologists Sheena Iyengar and Mark Lepper ran what’s now known as The Jam Study. They found that when shoppers were shown 24 flavors of jam, they were ten times less likely to buy than when offered just six.
More options drew more attention, but fewer sales.
The researchers called it choice overload - the paradox where more choice leads to less action. The abundance of options doesn’t make consumers feel empowered. It makes them second-guess, hesitate, and ultimately walk away.
And even when they do buy, they often feel worse about their decision - convinced they might’ve missed something better.
Sound familiar?
Furniture retailers have fallen into the same trap online. The thinking goes: if we show every possible product from every vendor, we’ll sell more.
But that’s not how shoppers actually behave. They’re not looking for an endless digital warehouse. They’re looking for your brand experience, what you believe in, what you curate, what you actually stand behind.
That’s what drives confidence. That’s what earns trust.
The power of a true omnichannel experience isn’t in showing everything, it’s in showing what matters.
Your site should reflect:
Then, and only then - fill the gaps strategically with extended assortments that make sense. Don’t drown your shopper in noise.
The best sites guide discovery, not overwhelm it.
Choice is good. But too much choice kills clarity, and conversion.
The retailers winning today are the ones who understand that focus beats volume, curation beats clutter, and experience beats endless aisle.
Because when you help a shopper make a confident decision, you don’t just earn a sale, you earn loyalty.
Your website shouldn’t be an online warehouse. It should be your best store. Your Digital Flagship.
Here is the Columbia University report
Retail on,