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Introduction

Getting started with your new Shopify store.

Welcome to Your Website

Welcome to your new Shopify website, built and delivered by Mind Pattern Studio.

This platform has been designed to give you full control over your online store, allowing you to easily manage products, collections, and site content without needing any technical experience. Whether you're adding new products, updating existing listings, or organising your storefront, everything can be handled through Shopify's intuitive admin system.

This guide will help you get up and running confidently, and serve as an ongoing reference as you manage and grow your store.

Need Help?

If you require any technical assistance or run into any issues while managing your website, we're here to help.

Don't hesitate to get in touch for support, guidance, or further training — whether it's a quick question or something more in-depth, we'll ensure you have everything you need to keep your site running smoothly.

Get in Touch

Reach out to the Mind Pattern Studio team anytime for support, guidance, or further training on your website.

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How to Use This Guide

How to Use This Guide

A brief overview of how this documentation is structured.

This guide has been created to walk you through the key areas of your Shopify website step by step. Each section focuses on a specific part of the system — such as products, collections, or navigation — with clear instructions on how to complete essential tasks.

You can either:

  • Follow the guide from start to finish to build a full understanding of the platform, or
  • Jump to specific sections when you need help with a particular task

Where relevant, we've also included tips and best practices to help you keep your website consistent, professional, and easy to navigate for your customers.

No Experience Needed

No prior experience with Shopify is required — simply follow the steps provided, and you'll be able to confidently manage your website.

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Terminology

Terminology

Common Shopify terms you'll encounter when managing your website.

Before getting started, here are some common Shopify terms you'll see when managing your website.

Products

Individual items you are selling. Each product has its own page with images, description, price, and details.

Product Variants

Different versions of a product, such as size or colour, kept under one listing. These are important to add (even if a product only has one variant) as Filters sometimes require these to narrow down products on a collection page.

Orders

Customer purchases. Managed in the Orders section for fulfilment and updates.

Vendors (Brands)

In Shopify, vendors are used to represent the brand or supplier behind a product. Each product should be assigned to the correct vendor so it can be filtered and organised accordingly.

Collections (Categories)

Groups of products. These act as your website categories, helping customers browse, such as "New In" or "Footwear".

Smart Collections

Automatically generated collections based on rules you set, such as product tags, vendor, or product type. This is the main type of collection used on your site to keep things organised without manual sorting. For example, a "Sweatshirts" collection might have the condition: Product Type is equal to Sweatshirt.

Tags

Labels added to products to help organise them. Used for filtering, searching, or building smart collections.

Inventory

Your stock levels. Shopify tracks how many units you have available.

Metafields

Custom fields used to add extra information to products, beyond the standard Shopify fields. These are configured specifically for your store and can be used to display additional details on product pages.

Filters

Options on collection pages that help customers narrow down products, such as size, designer, or category. These are usually powered by tags or product data.

Navigation (Menu)

The menu customers use to move around the site. Links to products, collections, or pages.

Pages

Standard content pages like About, Contact, or FAQs.

Analytics (Data)

Shopify's reporting area where you can view visitors, sales, customer behaviour, and store performance.

Content (Media Library)

Where all uploaded images and files are stored. This is used when adding product images or updating site content.

Online Store

Accessed on the left hand panel of the dashboard. This is where you manage the design and layout of your website, including templates, sections, and overall page structure across the site.

Themes

The overall structure of your website. Themes control how your site is laid out and how pages function. You can customise them, but do not remove a theme unless absolutely necessary.

Harmonized Code (HC) / Commodity Code

A standardised numerical code used internationally to classify products for customs and shipping purposes. Also known as an HS (Harmonised System) code, it is used by couriers and customs authorities to identify what a product is, calculate applicable duties or taxes, and ensure compliance when shipping internationally. For example, a jacket may have the code 6201.93. Adding these in Shopify ensures the correct code is passed to your courier automatically when fulfilling orders.

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Becoming the Store Owner

Becoming the Store Owner

Accept ownership of your Shopify store before getting started.

Before managing the website, you'll need to accept ownership of the Shopify store. This gives you full control over all areas of the site, including products, orders, and settings.

Steps

1
Check Your Inbox
Look for an email from Shopify with a subject line similar to: "You've been invited to become the owner of [Store Name]".
2
Accept the Invitation
Open the email and click the Accept invitation link.
3
Log In to Shopify
You will be directed to Shopify. Log in to your account, or create one if you don't already have one.
4
Confirm Ownership
Once logged in, confirm that you want to accept ownership of the store.
5
Access the Dashboard
After accepting, you will be redirected to the Shopify admin dashboard.
6
Verify Your Role
To confirm ownership, go to Settings (bottom left) and then Users and permissions. Your account should now be listed as the Store Owner.
All Set

Once completed, you'll have full access to manage your store and can continue with the rest of this guide.

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Billing Setup

Billing Setup

Select a Shopify plan and add your billing details to keep the store active.

To keep your store active, you'll need to select a Shopify plan and add billing details.

Steps

1
Open Billing Settings
Go to Settings and click Billing.
2
Select a Plan
Click Select a plan (if not already set).

Note: In some cases, a 3-month trial may already be active, so you may not need to select a plan straight away.

3
Choose Your Plan
Choose the Basic Plan (or the plan agreed for your store).
4
Enter Billing Details
Enter your billing details, including your payment method (card or other available options).
5
Confirm Subscription
Review the plan details and confirm your subscription.
6
Managing Billing
In the Billing section, you can:
  • View invoices
  • Download receipts
  • Update your payment method
All Set

Your billing is now set up and the store will remain active.

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Setting Up Payments

Setting Up Payments

Configure payment methods so customers can complete purchases.

Before you can start taking orders, you'll need to set up your payment methods. This ensures customers can complete purchases and funds are paid into your account.

Steps

1
Open Payment Settings
Go to Settings in the bottom left, then click Payments.
2
Set Up Shopify Payments
Under Shopify Payments, click Complete account setup.
3
Enter Business Details
Enter your business details, including:
  • Business name and address
  • Bank account details (where payouts will be sent)
  • Personal details for verification
4
Submit for Verification
Submit the information and wait for Shopify to verify your account.
5
Set Up PayPal Optional
Set up PayPal by clicking Activate under PayPal and linking your account.
6
Confirm Active Status
Once complete, ensure a payment provider is marked as Active.
All Set

Your store is now ready to accept payments.

Note

You can also add additional payment methods in this section, such as Clearpay or Klarna, if you wish to offer flexible payment options to customers.

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Adding a Product

Adding a Product

How to add new products to your Shopify store.

Video Tutorial

Adding a new product to your store is straightforward when following best practice. To keep your workflow consistent, we recommend starting by duplicating a similar existing product and updating the necessary fields.

Steps

1
Open a Similar Product
Find a product similar to the one you are adding. This will serve as a template.
2
Duplicate the Product
Click the Duplicate button in the top right corner.
3
Set Up the New Product
  • Enter the Product Title
  • Uncheck Media and Inventory Quantities
  • Set Product Status to Draft

Further details such as variants and pricing will be added in the steps below.

4
Add Product Description
Write a clear description for the new product.
5
Add Product Images
Upload images and reorder them by dragging the dots.
6
Product Organisation — Type
Type the Product Type.
  • Important: This must match the collection type for the product.
  • If you duplicated from a similar product, this may already be set correctly.
7
Add a Vendor
Enter the brand or supplier name in the Vendor field (e.g. your own brand, or a third-party brand if applicable).
8
Set the Category
Change the category under the main image. Shopify may suggest one automatically.
9
Update Variants
Add or update product variants (e.g. Size, Colour) as needed. Click Done after editing each variant option.
10
Set Price and Stock
In the variants section, add Price and Stock for each variant. Click on a variant to edit its details.
11
Add a Harmonized Code (HS Code) Recommended

Scroll down to the Shipping section and enter the product's Harmonized Code (also called an HS or commodity code).

This data is pushed to your courier and is mandatory for international orders. You can add the code when shipping manually, but best practice is to add it in Shopify — this way the HS code carries over automatically if you duplicate the product in future.

Important: If you have duplicated this product from another listing, always check and update the HS code — do not leave a code that belongs to a different product type.

Metafields (Extra Product Details)

These fields allow extra information to display on the product page:

12
Complete the Metafields

Scroll down to the metafields section and fill in any custom fields configured for your store. These will vary depending on your setup, but may include things like:

  • Product Type / Category Required
  • Additional descriptions or specifications Optional
  • Custom display options Optional

Only fields relevant to your store will appear here. If you're unsure what a field is for, refer to this guide or contact us.

13
Set Product Status
  • Scroll to the top and set Status to Active if you want the product live.
  • Otherwise, leave as Draft to save and return later.

Your product has now been created. If you set it to live, it will appear in the relevant categories on your website.

Things to Note

Depending on your store setup, new products may receive tags automatically when published — for example, a "New In" tag that adds them to a featured collection. These automations can be adjusted if needed, so just let us know.

If your store uses tags to power Smart Collections or filters, make sure any required tags are applied correctly when creating each product.

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Creating a Collection

Creating a Collection

How to set up a new Smart Collection on your store.

Video Tutorial

Your store is set up predominantly using Smart Collections rather than manual ones.

A smart collection automatically pulls in products based on rules you define, such as product type, tags, or designer. This means you don't need to manually add products to collections.

Why Smart Collections?

As you add new products, they will automatically appear in the correct collections, keeping everything organised and improving the customer experience — with no manual sorting required.

Steps

1
Open Collections
Click Products in the left-hand panel, then select Collections.
2
Add a New Collection
Click Add collection.
3
Enter a Collection Name
Enter a Collection Name (e.g. Sweatshirts).
4
Set the Collection Type
Set the Collection Type to Smart.
5
Set Up the Condition
  • Change the first dropdown to Product type
  • Leave the condition as is equal to
  • Enter the collection name in the final field

Important: This must exactly match the Product Type used on your products.

6
Finalise the Collection

Scroll back to the top and press Save.

Optional: Add a Collection Image. Some areas of the site use this image, so it's recommended if the collection will be displayed with a thumbnail.

All Done

Once set up correctly, any matching products will automatically appear in this collection.

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Adding Menu Items

Adding Menu Items

How to update and structure your website navigation.

Video Tutorial

Your website navigation uses a structured menu system. Understanding this structure is important before making any changes.

  • Top Level (Primary Categories): Main categories displayed prominently in the navigation
  • Second Level (Sub Categories): Sub-groups that appear when hovering or clicking a top-level item
  • Third Level (Sub Sub Categories): Individual page or collection links nested within a sub-category

For example: A "Clothing" top-level item might contain sub-categories like "Men's" and "Women's", each linking to their respective collections.

Important

Always review the existing menu structure before making changes to understand how items are currently organised.

The order of items from top to bottom in the menu editor reflects the order they appear on the website, so be mindful when rearranging.

How to Add a Menu Item

1
Open Content
Click Content in the left-hand menu.
2
Open Menus
Click Menus.
3
Select a Menu
Select the menu you want to edit (e.g. Main Menu).
4
View the Structure
Use the arrows to expand and collapse menu items to view the structure.

Note: The order from top to bottom is how items appear on the website.

5
Add a Menu Item
To add a new item, click Add menu item within the level you want to place it.
6
Set Name and Link
Enter the Name and select the Link (collection, product, or page).
7
Organise Items
To organise items, drag and drop them using the dots:
  • Drag slightly to the right to nest under another item
  • Drag left to move it up a level
8
Save
Once finished, click Save. Your updates will then be visible on the front end of the website.
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Managing Orders

Managing Orders

View, fulfil, and manage customer orders from your Shopify admin.

Once your store is live, all customer purchases will appear in the Orders section. This is where you can view, fulfil, and manage any issues with orders.

Viewing Orders

1
Click Orders
Click Orders in the left-hand menu.
2
View Order List
You will see a list of all orders, with their current status (e.g. Paid, Unfulfilled).
3
Open an Order
Click on an order to view full details, including products, customer information, and payment status.

Marking an Order as Fulfilled

1
Open the Order
Open the order you want to process.
2
Click Fulfil Items
Click Fulfil items.
3
Confirm and Add Tracking
Confirm the items being fulfilled and add tracking information if available.
4
Complete Fulfilment
Click Fulfil items to complete. The order will now be marked as fulfilled and the customer may be notified.

Refunds & Cancellations

1
Open the Order
Open the order you want to update.
2
Click Refund
Click Refund.
3
Select Items
Choose the items to refund and adjust quantities if needed.
4
Process Refund
Confirm the refund amount and process the refund.

Cancelling an Order

1
Open the Order
Open the order.
2
Click More Actions
Click More actions (or the options menu).
3
Cancel the Order
Select Cancel order and confirm.
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Shipping

Shipping

Control how customers are charged for delivery and where you ship to.

Shipping settings control how much customers are charged for delivery and where you ship to. In Shopify, this is managed using Rates, Markets, and Shipping Profiles.

Key Terms

Rates: The cost of shipping charged to the customer (e.g. £5 standard delivery, free shipping over £100)

Markets: The countries or regions you sell and ship to (e.g. UK, Europe, International)

Shipping Profiles: Groups of products that share the same shipping rules

Accessing Shipping Settings

1
Go to Settings
Go to Settings in the bottom left.
2
Click Shipping and Delivery
Click Shipping and delivery.

Setting Shipping Rates

1
Select a Profile
Under Shipping, select the profile you want to edit.
2
Click Manage Rates
Click Manage rates.
3
Choose a Shipping Zone
Choose the shipping zone (e.g. United Kingdom).
4
Click Add Rate
Click Add rate.
5
Enter Rate Details

Enter the following:

  • Rate name (e.g. Standard Shipping)
  • Price (or set conditions like free shipping over a certain amount)
6
Save
Click Done, then Save.

Managing Markets (Shipping Regions)

1
Go to Markets
Go to Settings and click Markets.
2
View Existing Regions
You will see existing regions (e.g. United Kingdom).
3
Add a New Market
To add a new market, click Add market.
4
Select Countries
Select the countries or regions you want to include.
5
Save
Save your changes. Note: shipping rates must also be set up for each market.

Using Shipping Profiles

Shipping profiles allow you to apply different shipping rules to different products.

1
Go to Shipping and Delivery
Go to Settings → Shipping and delivery.
2
Select or Create a Profile
Under Shipping profiles, select an existing profile or click Create new profile.
3
Assign Products
Assign products to this profile.
4
Set Shipping Rates
Set specific shipping rates for those products.
5
Save
Click Save.
Next
Checklist

Checklist

Track your progress as you get your store set up and running.

Use this checklist to work through the key tasks for getting your store set up and running. Tick each item off as you complete it — your progress is saved in your browser.

Getting Started

Products

Collections

Navigation

Orders

Shipping

Need Help?

If you get stuck on any of these tasks, use the Need Assistance? button to send us a message and we'll help you get sorted.

Need Assistance?