
Written by Motif Creatives. โ Published and checked by Bonny Isselt.
Ever seen customers walk away because the price felt โfixedโ?
Some products? You donโt sell them with a big, bold โBuy Nowโ button.
You sell them with a conversation.
Think about it. Bulk orders. Custom-made stuff. Price fluctuates. Showing a fixed number doesnโt feel right. It shuts the door before the customer even knocks.
Thatโs where the Request a Quote button changes everything. Itโs like saying, โLetโs talk. Letโs make this work.โ
In WooCommerce, adding this is easier than you think. And if you integrate it with the cart? Smooth. Customers still shop as usual. They send a quote instead of pulling out their card.
Today, Iโll show you exactly how to do it. Step-by-step. No fluff. And yes, with some stories along the way.
Table of Contents (Click to open).
Why You Might Need a Quote Button
Letโs be real. Not every store needs it. If you sell socks at a fixed price, skip this.
But for certain businesses? Itโs gold.
- Negotiation Friendly โ Some buyers love bargaining. This button invites them in.
- Leads First, Payment Later โ You Get Contact Info. Even if they donโt buy today, you can follow up.
- Custom Pricing โ Perfect if costs vary with size, material, or quantity.
- Relationship Building โ Youโre not just a shop. Youโre a partner.
- Price Privacy โ No need to display your rates to competitors.
This is less about a button. More about flexibility. Control. Sales on your terms.
When It Shines the Most
Let me paint a few pictures.
- A B2B company selling 5,000 printed mugs. Unit price? Depends on design, colors, and deadline.
- A furniture maker crafts tables in oak, pine, or walnut. No two orders are the same.
- A photographer offering wedding packages. Prices change with hours, extras, and travel.
- A machinery supplier selling equipment worth thousands. Price talks happen privately.
See the pattern? The more variables in your product, the more sense a quote button makes.
Why Cart Integration Matters
Some quote tools? Meh. They let you request a price for one product at a time. Thatโs clunky.
Cart integration is different.
- Add multiple products, like a normal cart.
- Edit quantities before sending.
- See everything in one place.
- Works just like shopping, but instead of โPay Now,โ you hit โRequest Quote.โ
Customers feel in control. They can mix and match. And you? You get bigger orders because they see everything together.
Choosing the Right Tool for the Job
You could code this from scratch. But why?
The more brilliant move: use a plugin.
Pick one thatโs:
- Easy to set up.
- Customizable to match your site.
- Cart integrated.
- Email-ready.
- Able to add custom fields.
The WooCommerce Request a Quote plugin by Motif Creatives ticks all those boxes. Itโs built for this exact thing.
Letโs Do It โ Step-by-Step Setup
Iโll break it down. You follow along.
Step 1 โ Install the Plugin
Log in to WordPress. Go to Plugins โ Add New. Search. Install. Activate. Done.
A new settings area appears under WooCommerce.
Step 2 โ General Settings
Turn on the โAdd to Quoteโ button. Choose where it shows โ all products, certain categories, or specific items.
Hide prices if you want mystery. Decide if guests can see it or only logged-in customers.
Step 3 โ Button Customization
Make it yours.
Change text from โAdd to Quoteโ to โRequest Priceโ or โGet a Quote.โ
Tweak colors to match your branding.
Choose position โ above, below, or replacing the cart button.
Step 4 โ Set Up the Quote Cart Page
Your plugin likely creates a โQuote Listโ page. Check it out.
Products should show images, quantities, and notes.
Add the provided shortcode to another page if you want a custom layout.
Step 5 โ Add Custom Form Fields
This is where you collect details: name, email, company, delivery address, and special requests.
Make some fields required. Keep it short, though. No one loves filling out a mini novel.
Step 6 โ Email Notifications
Enter your admin email. Set up confirmation emails for customers.
Make sure the admin email includes all product details and customer info.
Pro tip: CC your sales team. Speed matters here.
Step 7 โ Test Everything
Pretend youโre a customer. Add items. Edit the list. Send the request.
Check the emails. Test as a guest. Then, as a logged-in user.
Fix anything before launch.
How to Make It Work Even Better
The setupโs just the start. Hereโs how to get results:
- Reply fast. 24 hours max.
- Use the customerโs name in replies. Feels personal.
- Be clear in your pricing breakdown.
- Offer limited-time deals in your quotes.
- Follow up if they go silent.
And track what products get the most quote requests. Thatโs your sales goldmine.
Mistakes You Donโt Want to Make
- Hiding all prices with zero explanation. Confuses buyers.
- Asking for too much info upfront. Theyโll bounce.
- Taking forever to respond. Theyโll find another seller.
- Ignoring mobile design. Many quotes come from phones.
- Forgetting to test email formatting. Ugly emails kill trust.
Push It Further โ Advanced Ideas
Once your quote system works, you can level it up. These tweaks make it smarter, faster, and more persuasive.
- Add Dynamic Pricing Rules
Why wait for a quote request to give a bulk discount? Show it instantly. If a customer adds 50 items, let them see a reduced price right away. This creates excitement and encourages them to request even more.
- Show Different Form Fields Based on Product Type
A customer asking about a T-shirt doesnโt need the same form as someone requesting industrial machinery. Use conditional fields โ show only whatโs relevant. This keeps forms clean and improves completion rates.
- Translate Labels for Global Customers
Selling internationally? Donโt assume everyone reads English. Translate the โAdd to Quoteโ button, form labels, and emails into your target languages. Customers feel more comfortable when they see their language.
- Connect to Your CRM
Manually entering leads into your CRM is dull and slow. Instead, integrate your quote requests so every lead lands in your sales pipeline instantly. This means faster follow-up and no lost opportunities.
- Set Quote Expiry Dates
A quote with no deadline sits in a customerโs inboxโฆ forever. Adding a 7โ14 day expiry creates urgency. Theyโll decide faster because they donโt want to lose the deal. And you avoid awkward โIs this price still valid?โ messages months later.
A Story โ How It Works in Real Life
Meet Alana. She runs an online custom furniture store.
One day, a visitor spots a dining table on her site. Loves it. But needs a longer size and walnut wood.
Instead of closing the tab, he clicks โRequest a Quote.โ
He adds matching chairs, too. Adjusts quantity. Writes a note: โNeed by October for my sisterโs wedding.โ
Alana gets the email instantly. She checks materials, calculates cost, and replies with a friendly message:
โHi John, thanks for your interest. We can make your table in walnut and deliver it before October 10. Total price: $2,100. This includes chairs. Let me know if youโd like to confirm.โ
John replies the next day. Order confirmed. Full payment upfront.
Thatโs the magic. The button kept the conversation alive.
Conclusion
Adding a Request a Quote button with cart integration isnโt just a WooCommerce trick. Itโs a sales mindset.
It turns your store from โpay or leaveโ into โletโs talk.โ
It invites bigger orders. It captures leads. It builds relationships.
So, set it up. Test it. Make it part of your sales process.
Because in the right hands, that little button? It can change the way you sell online forever.

This is super helpful! The way you explained the benefits of a โRequest a Quoteโ button with cart integration makes so much sense especially for custom or bulk orders. Definitely going to try this on my WooCommerce store.
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This post is a guest post. I give my guest bloggers a set of rules to breakdown their topics. But thank you for the comment.
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