The Retentionist. Turning one-time buyers into regulars

The retention journal

Turning one‑time buyers into regulars

The Retentionist is a working journal on customer retention in ecommerce. We read the platform benchmarks, take the flows apart and write down what actually brings buyers back: email and SMS, loyalty, win-back and the numbers behind repeat purchases.

  • 3.33% placed order rate
  • 33.00% open rate
  • 41% email revenue
Warm boutique shop counter where a returning customer is being welcomed
Retention starts at the counter: the second visit is the one that counts.

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Paper flowchart sketch and sticky notes on a light office desk
Mechanics

Win-back Campaigns: The Mechanics

Segment definition, trigger timing, sequence design, suppression, and measurement. The unglamorous machinery that decides whether reactivation makes money, laid out step by step.

Smartphone on a light table showing an email inbox next to a coffee cup
Win-back

Win-back Email Examples That Do Not Beg

The 'we miss you' template survives because it is easy, not because it works well. Four win-back archetypes that respect the reader, mapped to how long the customer has been gone.

Analog clock and a smartphone with email notifications on a light desk
Flow design

Abandoned Cart Email Flow: Timing and Sequence

How many emails, how far apart, and what each one is allowed to say. The published data from Klaviyo and Omnisend agrees on the shape more than most marketers expect.

3.33% Klaviyo's benchmark of 143K+ cart flows shows the average brand at a 3.33% placed order rate and $3.65 revenue per recipient, while the top 10% reach 7.69% and $28.89. The practices below are the visible differences between those two groups.
33.00% The economics are honest but modest. In Omnisend's 2026 report data, the lapsed purchase automation averages a 33.00% open rate, 0.52% conversion, and about $0.49 revenue per email against a $94 average order value.
41% Cart flows earn their engineering time. Klaviyo's 2026 benchmark shows automated flows produced roughly 41% of email revenue from just 5.3% of sends.