Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Explora Journeys sets sail with 2028 summer collection

    May 20, 2026

    Kim Kardashian’s One-Word Gucci Message Lights Up the Fashion World

    May 20, 2026

    Brother of Ontario man who died demands 911 call takers get regular hearing tests

    May 20, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Select Language
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    NEWS ON CLICK
    Subscribe
    Wednesday, May 20
    • Home
      • United States
      • Canada
      • Spain
      • Mexico
    • Top Countries
      • Canada
      • Mexico
      • Spain
      • United States
    • Politics
    • Business
    • Entertainment
    • Fashion
    • Health
    • Science
    • Sports
    • Travel
    NEWS ON CLICK
    Home»Business & Economy»US Business & Economy»I Sold in 19 Markets. Here’s What Founders Get Wrong About Europe
    US Business & Economy

    I Sold in 19 Markets. Here’s What Founders Get Wrong About Europe

    News DeskBy News DeskMay 19, 2026No Comments6 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest Copy Link LinkedIn Tumblr Email VKontakte Telegram
    I Sold in 19 Markets. Here's What Founders Get Wrong About Europe
    Share
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Email Copy Link

    Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

    Key Takeaways

    • Start in smaller, cheaper markets where returns and CAC teach you about product–market fit before you “earn” Germany.
    • Local payment methods like Bancontact, iDEAL and Klarna matter more to conversion than perfectly translated product copy.
    • Central and Eastern Europe offer faster growth, lower CAC and less competition than saturated Western markets, if you plan for local regulation.

    I run a luxury ecommerce brand across 19 European markets, from the United Kingdom to Romania. Most of what you read about expanding into Europe is written by founders who picked Germany, France or the UK and called the result European expansion. Reality is messier than that.

    As a Romanian founder building in Europe, my playbook looks nothing like the standard one. I have come to call the underlying model the country-signal rule: every European market sends signals on conversion rate, return rate, payment stack and regulation that override almost every Silicon Valley assumption. Here are five lessons I wish someone had told me before I shipped my first order in a foreign currency.

    Germany rewards founders who launch elsewhere first

    When founders ask me where to start a European launch, the first answer is almost always Germany. Biggest economy, largest e-commerce market: clean logic that is wrong for most founders I have watched try it.

    In our first 18 months running across Europe, Germany delivered the highest gross conversion rate on our site. It also delivered the highest return rate, by a margin that surprised our entire operations team. German consumers convert faster than nearly anyone else and return goods at roughly twice the rate of southern European customers. For a young business burning working capital, that combination is a trap dressed as a top-line opportunity. Germany looks like the easy market in a deck. It is the worst one to launch in if you are still funding inventory out of cash flow.

    Start somewhere the cycle teaches you something cheaper. Largest markets are rarely the most instructive.

    Payment method matters more than language

    Translation tools have made language localization easy. Payment localization is where founders still get killed. Translating product copy into French or Italian costs a few thousand euros and a week. Adding the payment methods local customers trust costs more, takes longer and is the single decision that matters most when you enter a new market.

    When we launched in Belgium, our checkout completion rate flatlined for two weeks until we added Bancontact. According to Worldpay’s Global Payments Report, more than 70% of Belgian online checkouts run through Bancontact alone. Each major European market has one or two domestic payment methods most people outside the country have never heard of — iDEAL in the Netherlands, Klarna across the Nordics. Skipping them is the same as locking your front door in that market.

    Translate your copy after you translate your checkout. The order matters.

    Returns reveal what a market actually wants

    Most operators read returns as a cost to suppress. Returns are actually the clearest signal a country sends about your product. A high return rate in one country and a low rate in another, on the same product, is the most direct customer feedback you will ever receive.

    Italian customers ordered confidently and kept what they bought. In Germany, customers bought three sizes of the same item to try at home. Romanian shoppers spent less per order but committed to two or three categories. Each pattern was telling us something different about fit, sizing, and the relationship a country had with our product. Reading those patterns differently is what turns expansion from a dashboard into a strategy.

    What looks like a returns problem is usually a fit problem a country is asking you to solve.

    Central Europe is the most under-priced launch lane in Europe

    Central and Eastern European markets are the most under-priced expansion lanes in Europe right now. Most expansion playbooks rank them last because their per-capita income is lower than Germany’s or France’s. That ranking is reading the wrong number.

    Online commerce in Romania and Poland is growing faster than in any of the established Western markets. Customer-acquisition cost is a fraction of what it costs in the same vertical in Berlin or Paris. According to Ecommerce Europe’s annual European E-Commerce Report, several Central and Eastern European markets are expanding faster than the European Union (EU) average. For a Romanian founder building in Europe, that has been a structural advantage. For an American or Western European founder, it would be the same advantage, available at the same price, ignored.

    Western Europe rewards incumbents. Central Europe still rewards execution.

    European regulation is local before it is federal

    Regulation is the cross-border blind spot most founders ignore. Most founders spend their time on tax and find that compliance is a different beast. Country-specific consumer protection laws and product compliance frameworks change without warning.

    In December 2024, the European Union’s General Product Safety Regulation came into force across all member states. It requires every product sold online to have an EU-based responsible person and updated technical documentation. Most cross-border merchants I know underestimated what compliance would cost. The companies that handled it well started preparing in mid-2024 and built the compliance function before the deadline arrived.

    Most cross-border merchants find out about new regulation on the deadline. Founders who plan for it on the runway have a structural advantage.

    Selling across Europe means running 19 different operations under a shared brand. Localization and marketing are downstream of that. Founders who do this best start with the most instructive market. Bigger ones come later, after they have earned them. Europe rewards the founder who reads it country by country. That habit is the country-signal rule in practice.

    Key Takeaways

    • Start in smaller, cheaper markets where returns and CAC teach you about product–market fit before you “earn” Germany.
    • Local payment methods like Bancontact, iDEAL and Klarna matter more to conversion than perfectly translated product copy.
    • Central and Eastern Europe offer faster growth, lower CAC and less competition than saturated Western markets, if you plan for local regulation.

    I run a luxury ecommerce brand across 19 European markets, from the United Kingdom to Romania. Most of what you read about expanding into Europe is written by founders who picked Germany, France or the UK and called the result European expansion. Reality is messier than that.

    As a Romanian founder building in Europe, my playbook looks nothing like the standard one. I have come to call the underlying model the country-signal rule: every European market sends signals on conversion rate, return rate, payment stack and regulation that override almost every Silicon Valley assumption. Here are five lessons I wish someone had told me before I shipped my first order in a foreign currency.

    Germany rewards founders who launch elsewhere first

    When founders ask me where to start a European launch, the first answer is almost always Germany. Biggest economy, largest e-commerce market: clean logic that is wrong for most founders I have watched try it.

    Europe Growth Strategies Startup Basics Startups
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Telegram Copy Link
    News Desk
    • Website

    News Desk is the dedicated editorial force behind News On Click. Comprised of experienced journalists, writers, and editors, our team is united by a shared passion for delivering high-quality, credible news to a global audience.

    Related Posts

    US Business & Economy

    Chinese chains Luckin Coffee and Mixue are coming for U.S. customers, because U.S. companies taught them how

    May 20, 2026
    US Business & Economy

    4 signs it’s time to change your boss

    May 20, 2026
    US Business & Economy

    Siemens had a wildly popular childcare center. Then it shut it down

    May 20, 2026
    US Business & Economy

    Expedia is preparing for a future beyond travel websites

    May 19, 2026
    US Business & Economy

    AI slop farms are churning out anti-AI data center memes on Facebook

    May 19, 2026
    US Business & Economy

    Exclusive: Amazon and Walmart workers are concerned that AI is making HR decisions

    May 19, 2026
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Don't Miss

    Explora Journeys sets sail with 2028 summer collection

    News DeskMay 20, 20260

    Cruise By TravelPress Staff May 20, 2026 Explora Journeys has set sail with the launch…

    Kim Kardashian’s One-Word Gucci Message Lights Up the Fashion World

    May 20, 2026

    Brother of Ontario man who died demands 911 call takers get regular hearing tests

    May 20, 2026

    Meryl Streep And Martin Short Spark Romance Buzz

    May 20, 2026
    Tech news by Newsonclick.com
    Top Posts

    A T&M Cannes Film Festival Special #1

    May 20, 2026

    Eddie Murphy Gets His Flowers From Hollywood Peers

    April 20, 2026

    Performance reviews are performative (and why that matters now more than ever)

    April 20, 2026

    IPL 2026: Ravichandran Ashwin blasts Riyan Parag for underutilizing Ravindra Jadeja in KKR vs RR showdown

    April 20, 2026
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

    Editors Picks

    Explora Journeys sets sail with 2028 summer collection

    May 20, 2026

    Kim Kardashian’s One-Word Gucci Message Lights Up the Fashion World

    May 20, 2026

    Brother of Ontario man who died demands 911 call takers get regular hearing tests

    May 20, 2026

    Meryl Streep And Martin Short Spark Romance Buzz

    May 20, 2026
    About Us

    NewsOnClick.com is your reliable source for timely and accurate news. We are committed to delivering unbiased reporting across politics, sports, entertainment, technology, and more. Our mission is to keep you informed with credible, fact-checked content you can trust.

    We're social. Connect with us:

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube
    Latest Posts

    Explora Journeys sets sail with 2028 summer collection

    May 20, 2026

    Kim Kardashian’s One-Word Gucci Message Lights Up the Fashion World

    May 20, 2026

    Brother of Ontario man who died demands 911 call takers get regular hearing tests

    May 20, 2026

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • About Us
    • Editorial Policy
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Disclaimer
    • Advertise
    • Contact Us
    © 2026 Newsonclick.com || Designed & Powered by ❤️ Trustmomentum.com.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.