

First-time shoppers are evaluating more than your products. They’re deciding whether your store feels trustworthy, transparent, and worth returning to. Financing, including Snap-branded lease-to-own financing and loan options, can reduce friction in that first purchase and help retailers turn one-time buyers into loyal repeat customers.
First-time shoppers are more cautious, more budget-conscious, and less likely to return if the buying experience feels confusing or uncomfortable.
Financing, including Snap-branded lease-to-own financing and loan options, can build trust by reducing pressure, increasing clarity, and helping shoppers get what they really need.
Retailers can strengthen loyalty by making financing visible early, training associates to present it with empathy, and measuring the right post-purchase signals.
When someone shops with a retailer for the first time, it isn’t just a transaction. It’s a trial run. That shopper has questions they're asking themselves:
Do I feel respected?
Do I feel understood?
Do I feel confident buying here?
Can I afford what I really need?
If the answer is yes, you earn the customer. If the answer is no, you may lose them – not just today, but for future purchases, too.
Financing can play an important role in shaping that first impression. When it is presented clearly and confidently, it helps reduce emotional friction, ease uncertainty, and turn a hesitant shopper into a more confident buyer. This is especially important in big-ticket retail, where first-time customers are often balancing urgency, price sensitivity, and a lack of familiarity with your store.
In short, financing supports not only the purchase but also the relationship.
First-time buyers walk into the experience with more questions and less confidence than returning customers. That makes trust harder to build and easier to lose.
A repeat customer already knows your process and your pricing. A first-time shopper does not. They are assessing every detail for signals that your store is credible, transparent, and worth the risk of a large purchase.
Many first-time shoppers are already on alert for tactics that feel aggressive or self-serving. If financing is introduced too late or framed the wrong way, it can reinforce that skepticism. If it is introduced well, it can do the opposite and make the experience feel more supportive.
Sticker shock can end a relationship before it starts. When customers assume the product they really want is out of reach, they may walk away, trade down too far, or leave with doubts about the purchase they made.
Unfamiliarity creates hesitation. If a shopper does not know what happens next, how approval works, or what options are available, they are more likely to delay the decision or abandon it altogether.
Budget stress often comes with emotional pressure. First-time shoppers may not want to reveal financial limits or risk rejection in front of a sales associate. The smoother and more dignified the process feels, the stronger your odds of earning their trust.
When financing is introduced as a clear, customer-friendly part of the experience, it helps close the sale and, even better, fosters the kind of first interaction people remember positively.
Discounts can create urgency. Financing can create relief.
That matters because first-time shoppers are often navigating uncertainty on multiple levels at once: product choice, total cost, payment expectations, and whether they will feel judged in the process. Offering a pay-over-time path early can reduce that tension and make the experience feel more approachable.
When a shopper feels calmer, they are more likely to move forward with confidence and more likely to associate that confidence with your store. The result? Loyalty.
Clear financing presentation signals respect. It tells customers they do not have to negotiate or brace themselves for surprises.
Financing that is clearly posted and consistently explained gets results:
Customers feel informed rather than cornered
Decision making becomes easier
Fear of being “tricked” starts to fade
That kind of transparency can be especially powerful for first-time buyers, who are still deciding whether your brand is one they can rely on.
A shopper who settles for less than they actually need may complete the transaction, but that does not mean they leave satisfied.
When customers downgrade too far (choosing a smaller mattress, lower-performing appliance, or incomplete furniture setup just to fit the upfront budget), disappointment often shows up later.
Financing can help customers get products that better match their real needs. Better-fit purchases often lead to stronger satisfaction and a better reason to come back.
Early financing visibility can help normalize the process for customers who may already feel uncertain about their options.
A clear path to review available inclusive financing options can signal something important to the shopper: This store is prepared to work with people in different financial situations.
That reassurance can make first-time buyers feel less judged and more willing to engage.
First-time shoppers are often not buying one item in isolation. They may be furnishing a room, replacing multiple essentials, or trying to solve a broader household need all at once.
Financing can make it easier for them to complete the purchase in a way that feels cohesive and practical – for example, a mattress with a base, a sofa with a loveseat, or a washer with a dryer.
A more complete solution often leads to a better ownership experience, and that can lead to stronger loyalty.
In their memory of the transaction, customers do not always separate the financing provider from the retailer. Even though Snap Finance is the provider, what they remember is that your store helped them move forward.
That emotional takeaway matters. If the experience felt smooth, respectful, and empowering, the customer is more likely to return to the same retailer when the next need arises.
To build loyalty, financing has to feel like part of the customer experience, not a last-minute add-on. Retailers that make it visible, understandable, and low-pressure are more likely to earn trust from first-time shoppers.
New customers often will not ask about financing right away. They are observing the environment, reading the room, and deciding whether they feel comfortable continuing the conversation.
That is why visibility matters. Use entrance signage, product page placement, shelf tags, point-of-purchase displays, and other merchandising tools to show that financing is available before the shopper has to raise the topic themselves.
If you are a Snap partner, talk to a Snap sales rep to explore POP signage and marketing materials that can help support this visibility.
The way financing is presented matters just as much as whether it is available.
Associates should avoid pressure, jargon, and positioning financing as a last resort. Instead, they should introduce it as a normal, supportive option that can make shopping feel less stressful.
A simple example: “A lot of our customers like to look at pay-over-time options early because it can make choosing the right product feel a lot easier.”
This kind of language can help first-time shoppers feel guided rather than judged.
Timing can shape trust. If financing only appears after a shopper hesitates at the register, it can feel reactive or sales-driven.
When financing is introduced earlier – during product exploration, ticket-size discussion, or bundle planning – it helps reduce fear and gives the customer more control over the decision. That is especially valuable for shoppers with limited or challenged credit, who may be carrying extra anxiety into the interaction.
First-time shoppers often need more than one item to solve the problem that brought them in. A single purchase may not fully meet their needs.
Financing can help make bundles feel more realistic, whether that means furnishing a room, upgrading a full sleep setup, or completing a home office. Framed correctly, bundles do not have to feel like upselling. They can feel like helping the customer leave with a complete solution.
Loyalty is strengthened after the transaction, too.
Post-purchase messaging can reassure first-time customers that they made the right decision, remind them what to expect next, and keep your brand top of mind. This can include care tips, delivery updates, satisfaction check-ins, or future-shopping reminders. When the experience feels supported from beginning to end, retailers have a stronger chance of earning repeat business.
If financing is truly supporting loyalty, the signals should show up beyond same-day conversion.
This is one of the clearest indicators that the experience worked. When a customer returns and uses financing again, it suggests that the first interaction built enough confidence to come back.
Returning customers who trust your store may be more willing to pursue larger or more complete purchases over time. Tracking average ticket among repeat shoppers can help show whether loyalty is translating into stronger lifetime value.
Not every applicant will be approved. But if customers stay engaged after a decline, continue shopping, or return later, that can still be a positive loyalty signal. It suggests the overall experience preserved trust even when the outcome was not ideal.
Financing clarity and ease can influence how customers talk about your brand. A smoother, more transparent experience can improve sentiment and strengthen willingness to recommend your store to others.
Customer reviews can reveal whether financing is shaping perception in the right way. Look for phrases that suggest relief, clarity, or support – language such as “helped me afford,” “worked with my budget,” and “easy process.”
When financing is simple, inclusive, and transparent, it becomes a relationship-building tool.
Snap Finance helps support that experience by giving retailers access to financing, including Snap-branded lease-to-own financing and loan options, that can reduce friction early in the sales journey. Across Snap content, the emphasis is on fast decisions, accessible applications, clear pay-over-time pathways, and repeat usage behaviors that can support ongoing customer relationships.
Some of the advantages retailers may highlight:
No-credit-needed application path for lease-to-own financing, which can reduce fear of rejection¹
Mobile-first application experience with decisions in seconds
Payment options that help customers pay over time
Support for larger or more complete purchases
Repeat usage potential that can help create a built-in return path for future needs
Partner support tools such as signage and resources that can help make financing more visible in-store and online
For retailers trying to convert first-time shoppers in a high-pressure environment, Snap Finance can create a stronger first impression. And stronger first impressions are often where loyalty begins.
First-time shoppers are not just evaluating products. They are evaluating whether your brand feels trustworthy, transparent, and worth returning to.
Financing can help retailers answer those questions in the right way. When shoppers feel informed, respected, and supported in that first purchase, they are more likely to come back with confidence the next time.
Talk to your Snap sales representative about how to make the most of your Snap partnership. Not a Snap partner? Partner with Snap Finance today to start building loyalty.
Snap-branded product offering includes retail installment contracts, bank installment loans, and lease-to-own financing. For more detailed information, please visit snapfinance.com/legal/products
1 Not all applicants are approved. Approvals subject to underwriting qualification criteria.