A good magazine does more than showcase products. It sets a scene, builds a mood, and pulls readers through a story page by page.
Now imagine that same experience, but with a simple twist.
When something catches the reader’s eye, they can click it and go straight to the product page without leaving the flow.
That’s what a shoppable magazine does. It combines an editorial layout with clickable products, so inspiration and action sit side by side instead of living in two separate places.
In this article, you will learn what makes a magazine truly shoppable, the formats that work best, and how to create one in Flipsnack. You will also see where to share it and what results to look for once it is live.
A magazine is shoppable when readers can click a product while they read and reach the right place to buy it. The key is clarity. People should see what they can click, understand what it is, and know what will happen next.
A shoppable magazine usually includes:
There are a few magazine types for which the shoppable feature should be non-negotiable. You can create all of them in Flipsnack, but more on this later.
These are visual pages that focus on styling. You show how items look together in outfits, sets, or full scenes, then link each product so the reader can shop the exact pieces. This format is best when the look matters as much as the item.
Why it works: it turns inspiration into action while the reader is still focused on the full look.
These are curated selections built around common buying questions, like who it is for, what the budget is, or what the occasion is. You can also add quick notes like “best for small spaces” or “great starter option” to help people choose faster.
Why it works: it removes the mental work of sorting and comparing, which makes decisions easier.
This is a catalog that reads like a magazine. It uses themes, chapters, and short copy to give products context, instead of showing endless grids. It works well for larger inventories because it helps you spotlight what matters most.
Why it works: it guides attention, so readers do not feel like they are browsing a warehouse.
These issues lead with narrative. You can focus on craftsmanship, materials, founder stories, customer use cases, or the lifestyle around the brand. Products appear naturally inside the story, linked at the moment they are shown or mentioned.
Why it works: it earns attention first, then offers the product when the reader is already engaged.
These are built for buyers who need to review the range quickly and make purchase decisions with confidence. You can organize by collection, category, or margin-friendly bundles, and link each item to a product page with specs or ordering details. It also works well as a follow-up asset after a sales call.
Why it works: it shortens the path from review to order, without forcing buyers to ask for every detail.
A shoppable magazine works best when people need context to decide. Here’s when it makes the most sense, and what you gain from it.
You can show complete looks, sets, or bundles and link each item right where it appears, so readers can shop the full picture without guessing.
You can add short notes, tips, and recommendations that help people choose faster and feel more confident about the decision.
You can lead readers through themes or chapters, then place product links at the exact moment interest peaks.
Readers do not have to stop, search, or remember product names. They click what they like while they are still focused on the page.
Each product link can open the exact Shopify product page, which keeps the buying path simple and predictable.
You can publish the magazine on your website, include it in email campaigns, share it in B2C promotions, and use it in B2B outreach and follow-ups.
Track signals like product clicks and time spent reading, then adjust the pages, themes, and product order based on what people interact with most.
A shoppable magazine gives you space to guide people with ideas and context. When the content stays useful, readers have a reason to return, and repeat visits build familiarity over time.
Because there is more to explore than a standard product page, readers often stay longer and come back more often. The practical move is to track your own repeat visits and time spent, then improve the pages that perform best.
Many shoppers are cautious, especially online. A magazine lets your brand explain choices, show products in use, and reduce doubts before people drop off.
Instead of presenting items as isolated listings, you place them inside a narrative that gives them meaning. That helps readers connect products to real use and makes the click to shop feel natural.
Start with the content you already have, or build from a template.
If you have a finished design, upload your PDF and turn it into a flipbook. If you want to start from scratch, pick a template and design directly in Flipsnack.
If your PDF includes visible SKUs and you work with many products, you can also speed things up by linking a product feed and using SKU-based detection to make the catalog shoppable faster.
Make the catalog feel like your brand before you add shopping.
Set the cover, add your logo, and keep fonts and colors consistent. Then build a clear reading flow with sections, short descriptions, and product groupings that make sense for the buyer.
If you plan to show product details inside the catalog, decide what you want to display, like name, price, short description, and a clear button label. Product tags support these details and can also include multiple product images.
This is the point where browsing turns into buying. These are the checkout options you can offer to transform your magazine into a sales tool:
Once it is ready, publish it and make it easy to access.
A shoppable magazine only works if people actually see it. These are the ways you can share your magazine:
Add it to collection pages, landing pages, and campaign hubs, where visitors are already in discovery mode. It works well as a richer alternative to a long product grid, especially for seasonal edits and new arrivals.
Use it in product drops, gift guides, and promotions. Email gives you intent, so the magazine becomes the next step, not a random link. One strong cover visual and a clear call to action usually beat listing ten products in the email.
Give reps a single link they can send after a call, attach to follow-ups, or include in outreach sequences. It helps buyers review the range on their own time, then click through when they need details.
Put QR codes on signage, printed lookbooks, product tags, inserts, and event materials. This is an easy way to connect offline interest to online product pages, without asking people to type or search.
Social users decide fast. Lead with a strong cover, a clear theme, and a simple promise, like “Shop the full lookbook.” Then link to a page that loads quickly and makes it obvious how to click and shop.
Treat your magazine like a performance asset. Check how people interact with it, then improve the next issue based on real behavior. Flipsnack analytics can help you track metrics like views, time spent, clicks, and downloads, so you can see what pages and products drive action.
If your products need context to sell, a shoppable magazine gives you that space. You can guide people through a story, show items in real use, and still make buying only a click away.
Create one issue to start. Pick a lookbook or a gift guide, make it shoppable in Flipsnack using the checkout option that fits your flow, then publish and share it through your main channels. Once it is live, check the clicks and engagement, and use that data to improve the next edition.
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