Imagine a luxury jewellery brand with a strong product but a weak email programme — say, email contributing 7% of total revenue when industry benchmark for a brand their size is 30–40%. The framework below is exactly how to rebuild that email infrastructure in 6 weeks. With proper execution, brands at that size routinely move from 7% to 30%+ email revenue contribution.

Email marketing's dirty secret: most brands are sitting on a $400K–$1M annual opportunity they're completely ignoring. They just don't know it because their current programme is too broken to measure properly.

The Audit: Why Their Email Was Failing

Before building anything new, we audited everything. What we found was typical of brands that treat email as an afterthought:

The first thing we did before launching any new flows was a list re-engagement campaign and hygiene purge. We removed 31% of the list. Their open rates went from 12% to 41% overnight. Deliverability unlocked.

Flow 1: The Abandoned Cart Sequence (3 Emails)

Abandoned cart is the single highest-ROI email flow for any e-commerce brand. the brand was leaving 72% of this revenue uncaptured with their single-email approach. We rebuilt it as a three-email sequence:

1
Sent: 1 hour after abandonment

The Gentle Reminder

No discount. No pressure. Just a clean reminder that their cart is saved, with a high-quality image of the product. The goal is to capture the people who abandoned due to distraction — which is the majority. Subject line: "Your [Product Name] is waiting." Open rate: 58%.

2
Sent: 24 hours after abandonment (if no purchase)

The Value Reinforcement

This email leads with social proof — reviews, press mentions, the story behind the piece. It addresses the emotional hesitation without mentioning the cart directly. Subject line: "Why 2,400 customers chose this piece." Open rate: 44%, click rate: 18%.

3
Sent: 72 hours after abandonment (if no purchase)

The Offer Close

Only at email 3 do we introduce a limited-time incentive — complimentary gift wrapping or free express shipping (not a percentage discount, which devalues luxury positioning). Subject line: "A little something — expires tonight." Open rate: 39%, purchase rate: 11%.

The 3-email abandoned cart sequence recovered 23% of abandoned carts, versus 4% with the single-email approach. For a brand doing $3M/year, that difference is substantial.

Flow 2: The Post-Purchase Sequence (5 Emails Over 30 Days)

Most brands send a receipt and nothing else. The post-purchase window is the highest-trust moment in the customer relationship — and most brands waste it completely. We built a 5-email sequence designed to maximise LTV and generate referrals:

1
Day 0: Immediately after purchase

The Experience Confirmation

Not just a receipt — a brand experience. Tells the story of the artisan who made their piece, sets expectations for delivery, creates anticipation. 71% open rate.

2
Day 3: During transit

The Unboxing Primer

Prepares the customer for the unboxing experience with tips on care, styling, and a subtle nudge to share on Instagram. Plants the referral seed without asking directly.

3
Day 7: After delivery

The Review Request

Sent after confirmed delivery. Framed as sharing their story, not leaving a review. 34% review completion rate (industry average: 8%).

4
Day 14

The Referral Activation

A genuine, personal-feeling referral ask with a gift for both the referrer and their friend. Not "get £20 off" — "give a friend £50 off their first piece." Framing matters enormously in luxury.

5
Day 30

The Complementary Piece

A curated recommendation of pieces that complement their purchase, framed as the stylist's pick. 14% of recipients made a second purchase from this email alone.

Flow 3: The Win-Back Sequence

the brand had 4,200 customers who hadn't purchased in 12+ months. That's a dormant revenue asset. Our 3-email win-back sequence reactivated 8.4% of them — generating $67,000 in a single month from people who had essentially been written off.

The Broadcast Strategy

Beyond the automated flows, we implemented a monthly broadcast calendar aligned to the product launch schedule. Key changes from their previous approach:

The 30-Day Results

The $400K wasn't magic. It was the result of treating email as a relationship channel, not a broadcast channel. Every email had a job. Every email respected the customer's intelligence. And every email was sent to people who actually wanted to receive it.

How Much Revenue Is Your Email Leaving Behind?

Get a free email audit. We'll show you exactly how much you're leaving on the table and what a rebuilt programme could generate for your brand.

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