this post was submitted on 18 Nov 2023
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I'm an absolute idiot.

I have an ecommerce brand that I started at the very beginning of 2020 and have had great success every year since.

Covid helped A LOT with it gaining traction so it was profitable right out the gate. We hit almost $2-million in revenue in the first year alone.

But here's where I made a huge mistake... I got lazy and complacent.

So much so that my only means of generating revenue and sales were through paid ads. And although my brand was able to stay profitable in the front end (we have low product costs and can scale without any major bottlenecks)... when Covid was finally declared over, we started seeing a MASSIVE decrease in profit even though our revenue was up due to rising ad costs.

See, the one thing I severely neglected (among other stuff), which is probably the most BASIC and FUNDAMENTAL thing for every business, was sending out promotional emails. In other words, I didn't take advantage of the most valuable asset that my business has: my audience/customer base that I've already invested money in.

Yes, you read that right, I didn't send out a SINGLE promotional email until this year. I was so content with the results I was getting from paid ads, I thought to myself, "Ehh, I'll do emails later once I've grown my business more".

But now email accounts for around 35% of my revenue, and we net 70% of the sales generated through these emails. I could operate at break even or at a loss in terms of acquisition, and our emails will more than make up for that. I'm basically just printing money at this point, and my open rate, click rate, and placed order rate are going up with each new campaign I send out.

There's also nothing special about my emails. I literally just have my logo, a simple image with a promo code on it (made via a basic Canva template), and then about 4 - 5 lines of text talking about the promo and how they'll be missing out if they don't take advantage of it. That's it. The area where I probably spend the most time is probably the subject line, but even that's easy to do, just grab a swipe file of headlines and look for one that fits your brand, then plug your product in.

Of course, the money I "lost" is just an estimate based on my last year's revenue, but still, just thinking about it makes me sick to my stomach.

At the end of the day, success in ecommerce or in any industry, in my opinion, is really just about the fundamentals. You need to put in the groundwork by first creating or branding a product that fulfills a need/want in your niche, promote the hell out of it through paid ads/posts, and then cultivate a relationship with the audiences you've built through these channels.

Anyone who tells you otherwise or that there's a secret sauce/formula to starting a successful business is just trying to take advantage of your naivety and make money off you.

But yeah, if there's one takeaway from this post, please don't make the same mistake I did and neglect promotional emails. I know if you're just starting out it may seem like it's not even worth it with a small or no audience, but if I could start over and do one thing different, it would be sending out emails at the very start. I can't stress how important emails (and I would extend this and say social media content as well) are.

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[–] DRD7989@alien.top 1 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Can you give someone some advice for starting out? How to find or research niche etc..?

[–] StanleyTussy@alien.top 1 points 2 years ago

Honestly, best advice I can give is to either look at the industries and niches that you're already a part of, or just look at some of the ads that appear on your social media feed.

What hobbies do you have? Is there anything that you wished you had for your hobbies that aren't currently available? Or maybe they do exist, but don't quite fill the need/want you have. Could you capitalize on that?

That one is a bit more limited since you're looking at your own experiences. But.. what I've found works best is to just scroll through Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok and actually look at the ads that are being shown to you.

That's how I came across my current business idea. I saw an ad in my feed and I thought to myself, "I can do better than them". And whaddayaknow, I ended up doing better than them.

If you do find an ad that interests you, start searching around for reviews about that company or similar products, there'll be a theme across the complaints/negative reviews you see which are an opportunity for you to capitalize on.

[–] jdogworld@alien.top 1 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Same thing here. I run meta ads only and have been averaging about 1-2 emails per month. Nowhere near enough. I do work full time outside of my business but it’s no excuse. Rising ad costs have been devastating. We will likely lose 100k this year.

[–] StanleyTussy@alien.top 1 points 2 years ago

Yeah man, it's actually crazy. So last year, our ads were profitable from after Father's Day until basically the end of the year (at 2 ROAS and above). This year? We'd be lucky to have a 1.5 ROAS during any of these times.

I thought things would flip once November started, but nope, I've had down days a few times this month. But emails have carried me and kept me profitable even with my ads doing horrible.

[–] IneffablyEffed@alien.top 1 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Extremely refreshing to see some actual entrepreneurship advice on the sub for a change. Thank you!

[–] StanleyTussy@alien.top 1 points 2 years ago

You're very welcome!

[–] baghdadcafe@alien.top 1 points 2 years ago

Great post OP. The power of email is vastly under-rated. I think this is because email is perceived as unsexy and unsophisticated.

Let's face it, a lot of marketing people want to come up with exceptional "grand ideas" that will propel a company to exponential growth. When in reality, it's boring old email that does this job!

[–] browser1994@alien.top 1 points 2 years ago (1 children)

What exactly are your email open rates at now? Do you use click-baity subject lines?

[–] StanleyTussy@alien.top 1 points 2 years ago

58% currently. And that's up from the 30% open rate I used to get. I wouldn't necessarily say they're all click-baity... but some of them are.

One of them was a variation of the famous "Do you make these mistakes in English" headline. I of course reworded it so it was related to a mistake that my customers make during this holiday season, but I actually had some useful info in it so it wasn't 100% clickbait. It also wasn't 0% clickbait either tho lol.

What has worked extremely well for me is doing a 3-step email campaign during any major holiday.

I'll have a "PRE" discount that's emailed to my customers and I'll say something like "Get access to our holiday sale before everyone else", then the next one is on the day of the holiday where it just says "In celebration of ____, get 30% off", and the final one is "Last Chance: Get 30% off your order" on the day after the holiday.

All 3 emails have the same content, it's just the subject line that's different each time.

[–] lgats@alien.top 1 points 2 years ago

tldr: In summary, you run a successful e-commerce brand that initially relied heavily on paid ads. You later realized the importance of email marketing, which significantly boosted your revenue and profits. This experience taught you the value of utilizing your customer base and the importance of basic marketing strategies like email campaigns and social media content in e-commerce.

[–] softwareforall@alien.top 1 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Preach! As an email marketing agency, I see this all the time.

Don't beat yourself up for starting late.

Also, don't forget the flows. Promotional campaigns are just the tip of the iceberg here. Flows should be bringing in a good 60% of your email revenue if done right.

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[–] Hungry_Toe_9555@alien.top 1 points 2 years ago

I had an e-commerce business that was was starting to make pretty solid sales , had a different problem during Covid, supply crunch inflated inventory costs and caused huge delays. Had to shut down, make sure to plan for economic shifts and how they could affect future operations.

[–] Ashamed_Jaguar461@alien.top 1 points 2 years ago

Can I work for you

[–] 140BPMMaster@alien.top 1 points 2 years ago

At least you haven't been stuck on disability payments your whole adult life. Things could be a lot fucking worse

[–] Healthy-Rent-5133@alien.top 1 points 2 years ago

I've never done nothing with an email like that but instantly delete and block as spam.. just saying

[–] stalhaq@alien.top 1 points 2 years ago

Congrats on figuring out the bottleneck and acting upon it.

I have a question though, reaching 2m revenue must have left an organic trail that might have been a progressive source of customers, enough or almost at least 30% of your paid search Or was this not the case with you?

I just collect interesting data.

[–] FlyingJoeBiden@alien.top 1 points 2 years ago

I made the same mistake, let's look at the future now though 😌

[–] Low_Latency_Me@alien.top 1 points 2 years ago

This is why a lot of orgs work with a marketing firm or set up a pre-scheduled PR/engagement itinerary with services like Hootsuite and Constant Contact. Occasionally forgetting those details because of the usual awkward growth phase happens.

I once scraped an email list of >40,000 industry focused contacts for sales/marketing staff, and the quality of potential leads also made a world of difference in their success rate.

And don't get me started about the 'Startup Leeches' "just trying to take advantage of your naivety and make money off you"! The moment that company had money, a wild business groupie appeared and now is trying to pretend he runs the place.

If you haven't set up an automation process for promotions, then do it soon. You'll have better things to do with your time.

[–] jttab20@alien.top 1 points 2 years ago

I'm new to Reddit. Want to get people to test out my prototype. Would appreciate any uparrows so I can post a bigger announcement

[–] Whole-Ad2365@alien.top 1 points 2 years ago

test testsss

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