Email marketing for food & drink brands: The ultimate guide to driving more revenue

How to build an email marketing strategy that turns first-time buyers into loyal customers and transforms email into one of your most profitable marketing channels.
Most food and drink brands don’t have a traffic problem. They have a customer retention problem.
Every day, businesses spend hundreds or thousands of pounds acquiring new customers through Meta Ads, Google Ads, influencers, and SEO. Then they let those customers disappear after a single purchase. That’s where the real money is being lost.
It’s one of the biggest missed opportunities we see when auditing food and drink brands. Businesses pour their budget into customer acquisition but give very little thought to what happens after someone checks out. The result? They find themselves constantly chasing new customers simply to stand still.
The brands growing the fastest aren’t always the ones with the biggest advertising budgets. They’re the ones making every customer worth more.
That’s exactly where email marketing comes in.
Done well, email marketing becomes far more than a monthly newsletter or the occasional promotional campaign. It’s a complete customer retention strategy. It welcomes new subscribers, recovers abandoned baskets, educates customers, encourages repeat purchases, increases average order value, and builds genuine brand loyalty. Better still, much of it happens automatically, generating revenue while your team focuses on running the business.
At KW Marketing, email marketing runs through our veins. It’s where our story began, and it’s still one of our favourite marketing channels today. We’ve spent years helping food and drink brands unlock the full potential of platforms like Klaviyo, transforming email from an afterthought into one of the most profitable parts of their digital marketing strategy.
We’ve helped brands increase email revenue by 46%. We’ve built automated customer journeys that generate sales around the clock. We’ve seen simple changes to segmentation, personalisation and automation unlock hundreds of thousands of pounds in additional revenue.
And the best part?
Unlike social media, you own your email audience. Algorithms don’t decide whether your customers see your message. Advertising costs don’t suddenly double overnight. Your subscriber list belongs to you, giving you a direct line of communication with people who have already shown they want what you sell.
For food and drink brands, that’s incredibly powerful.
Whether you sell speciality coffee, artisan cheese, premium olive oil, craft spirits, healthy snacks or subscription boxes, your biggest opportunity often isn’t finding more customers. It’s giving the customers you already have more reasons to come back.
That’s exactly what this guide is designed to help you do.
We’ll walk you through the strategies we use every day to help ambitious food and drink brands increase revenue through email marketing. From growing your email list and building high-converting Klaviyo flows, to segmentation, campaigns, automation, and customer retention, you’ll learn what actually works and, just as importantly, what doesn’t.
If you’re looking to build an email marketing strategy that delivers long-term, sustainable growth rather than short-term spikes in sales, you’re in exactly the right place.
Why trust us?
We’ve spent years helping food and drink brands grow through email marketing, paid social ads, Google ads, SEO and digital strategy. We’re a Klaviyo Partner, and we work with ambitious brands that want marketing to do more than look good. They want it to generate sales, improve customer retention, and support commercial growth.
We’ve helped food and drink clients increase email revenue by 46%, supported 33% online sales growth through a joined-up Meta and email strategy, and built automated customer journeys that continue generating revenue long after they’re launched.
Most importantly, everything in this guide comes from real experience. Not theory. Not recycled marketing advice. Real Klaviyo accounts, real Shopify stores, real campaigns, real customers, and real commercial results.
Why email marketing matters more than ever
Over the last few years, digital marketing has become more competitive than ever.
Customer acquisition costs have risen across almost every platform. Organic social media reach continues to decline. Consumers are exposed to thousands of marketing messages every single day, making it harder for brands to stand out and even harder to earn repeat business.
For many food and drink brands, the instinct is to keep investing in customer acquisition. More Meta Ads. More Google Ads. More influencer partnerships. More content. More traffic.
Of course, attracting new customers is important. Every growing business needs a healthy pipeline of new people discovering the brand. But there’s a question we think every founder should ask before increasing their advertising budget.
What happens after someone places their first order?
If the answer is “not much”, there’s probably a huge opportunity sitting right in front of you.
Research consistently shows that retaining an existing customer is significantly more cost-effective than acquiring a brand-new one. Yet retention is often overlooked because it feels less exciting than launching another advertising campaign.
The reality is very different.
Imagine spending £25 acquiring a customer through Meta Ads. They visit your website, place a £40 order and then never hear from you again.
Now imagine a different journey.
The moment they subscribe to your email list, they’re welcomed into your brand with a carefully planned series introducing your story, your products and what makes you different. If they browse your website without purchasing, they’re gently reminded about the products they were interested in. After placing an order, they receive helpful product advice, serving suggestions, recipes or pairing ideas that help them get even more value from their purchase. A few weeks later, when they’re likely to be running low, a perfectly timed reminder lands in their inbox encouraging them to reorder.
Instead of one transaction, you’ve started building a relationship.
That’s where the real value of email marketing lies. It’s not about sending more emails. It’s about sending the right email, to the right person, at exactly the right time.
Why email marketing works so well for food & drink brands
Food and drink is unlike almost any other eCommerce sector.
Most products are designed to be enjoyed, consumed and reordered. Coffee beans run out. Tea tins need refilling. Chocolate disappears. Pantry staples get used. Customers discover new favourites, buy gifts for friends and family, and often return to brands they trust when special occasions come around.
The opportunity doesn’t end when someone places their first order. In many cases, that’s where it really begins.
The brands that see the strongest long-term growth understand that customer lifetime value is just as important as customer acquisition. Rather than measuring success by the number of first-time orders alone, they focus on increasing repeat purchases, extending customer relationships and creating memorable experiences that keep people coming back.
Email marketing allows you to do exactly that.
Instead of hoping customers remember your brand six months later, you can stay front of mind with relevant, timely and genuinely useful communication. That might be recipe inspiration using products they’ve already bought, seasonal gift guides, behind-the-scenes stories, early access to new launches or personalised recommendations based on previous purchases.
Notice what’s missing from that list?
Constant discounting.
One of the biggest misconceptions about email marketing is that every campaign needs to include an offer. In reality, some of the highest-performing emails we’ve built contain no discount at all. They simply deliver value.
The brands that consistently generate the strongest results aren’t necessarily the ones sending the most emails. They’re the ones sending the most relevant ones.
The Email Marketing Playbook
Every agency has a process. Some call it a framework. Others call it a methodology.
We simply call ours The Email Marketing Playbook.
Because great email marketing isn’t about sending more emails. It’s about building a system that works together to generate revenue at every stage of the customer journey.
Too often, we see businesses focus on one piece of the puzzle. They spend weeks designing a beautiful newsletter but have no welcome journey. They obsess over open rates but never look at customer lifetime value. They launch campaigns every week but forget to build the automations that quietly generate revenue in the background.
The reality is that successful email marketing isn’t made up of individual campaigns. It’s an ecosystem.
Every email has a purpose. Every automation has a job to do. Every customer should receive the right message at exactly the right time.
Whether we’re working with a speciality coffee roaster, a premium drinks brand or an artisan food producer, the strategy always follows the same core principles. The products may be different and the customer journey may vary, but the foundations rarely change.
Here’s the playbook we use to help food and drink brands transform email into one of their most profitable marketing channels.
Stage One: Build an audience you actually own
Before you worry about open rates, flows or automation, you need people to email.
It sounds obvious, but it’s surprising how many businesses spend thousands driving traffic to their website without having a clear strategy for converting visitors into subscribers. Every visitor who leaves your website without buying or subscribing is a missed opportunity.
Your email list is one of the few marketing assets you truly own. Social media algorithms change. Advertising costs increase. Platforms come and go. Your email database, however, is yours. That’s why growing it should be one of your highest marketing priorities.
The mistake many brands make is focusing purely on numbers.
“We’ve got 20,000 subscribers.”
Great. But how many of those people have actually purchased from you? How many still open your emails? How many joined your list simply to receive a one-off discount code and never engaged again?
A smaller, engaged database will almost always outperform a large, disengaged one.
At KW Marketing, we focus on attracting subscribers who are genuinely interested in becoming customers. That might be through website pop-ups offering a first-order incentive, recipe downloads, exclusive product launches, competitions, sampling events, loyalty programmes or early access to seasonal collections. Every touchpoint should encourage customers to join your community rather than simply make a purchase.
Because once someone joins your email list, the real journey begins.
Stage Two: Make your first impression count
Imagine walking into your favourite farm shop.
Nobody acknowledges you. Nobody explains what makes the products different. Nobody offers recommendations. Nobody tells you the story behind the business.
You’d probably leave.
Yet that’s exactly what many brands do online. A customer subscribes to their email list… and then hears nothing for days. Or worse, they’re immediately bombarded with discount after discount before they’ve even had chance to understand the brand.
Your welcome flow is one of the highest-performing automations you’ll ever build because it captures customers at their point of highest interest. They’ve actively chosen to hear from you. They’re curious. They’re engaged. They’re deciding whether your brand deserves a place in their inbox.
This is your opportunity to introduce who you are, why you exist and what makes your products worth buying. A strong welcome journey shouldn’t just sell products. It should build trust.
That might include sharing your founder’s story, explaining where your ingredients come from, showcasing customer reviews, highlighting best sellers, answering common objections and helping customers understand exactly why your products are different.
For food and drink brands especially, storytelling matters. Customers don’t just buy coffee. They buy the story behind the beans. They don’t simply buy olive oil. They buy craftsmanship, provenance and quality.
The best welcome flows don’t feel like marketing. They feel like the beginning of a relationship.
Stage Three: Recover revenue you’re already losing
Every day, customers browse products, add items to their basket and leave without completing their purchase. It happens to every online retailer. The difference is what happens next.
For many brands, nothing. Those potential customers disappear forever.
For brands using Klaviyo properly, that’s where automation gets to work. Browse abandonment emails gently remind customers about products they’ve viewed. Abandoned basket emails help recover purchases that were moments away from being completed. Back-in-stock notifications bring shoppers back when their favourite products become available again.
These aren’t pushy sales emails. They’re timely reminders that make life easier for customers.
Think about your own shopping habits. How many times have you added something to your basket, been interrupted by a phone call or distracted by work, only to completely forget about it?
A well-timed reminder isn’t annoying. It’s helpful.
Some of the highest-performing automations we’ve built for food and drink brands are remarkably simple. They don’t rely on huge discounts or clever copywriting. They simply arrive at the right moment with the right message.
It’s one of the reasons automated email flows consistently outperform one-off campaigns. They respond to customer behaviour rather than hoping customers happen to be online when you press send.
Stage Four: Turn first-time buyers into loyal customers
This is where we see the biggest opportunity for food and drink brands.
Most businesses work incredibly hard to secure that first order and then move straight back to finding the next customer. Instead, every first purchase should trigger the start of a carefully planned customer journey.
What does your customer need to know after buying? How can you help them get the most from your product? What questions might they have? When are they likely to need a refill? Which complementary products would genuinely improve their experience?
These are the questions that shape great post-purchase email marketing.
For one brand, that might mean recipe inspiration. For another, brewing guides. For another, food pairing suggestions. Perhaps it’s storage advice, serving ideas or behind-the-scenes content explaining how products are made.
The goal isn’t simply to sell again. It’s to become part of your customer’s routine.
When you consistently deliver value after the purchase, repeat sales become a natural outcome rather than something that has to be forced through constant promotional offers.
Stage Five: Build loyalty that lasts
The most profitable customers rarely come from a single purchase. They come back. Again. And again.
That’s why the final stage of our Email Revenue Engine focuses on nurturing long-term loyalty rather than chasing short-term wins.
As your customer database grows, not everyone should receive exactly the same emails. Your VIP customers deserve different communication to someone who subscribed yesterday. Customers who buy every month should be treated differently to someone who hasn’t purchased for six months.
Segmentation allows you to recognise those differences and create experiences that feel personal rather than generic.
That might mean rewarding loyal customers with early access to new launches, exclusive products or behind-the-scenes content. It could involve replenishment reminders based on previous purchase behaviour or carefully timed win-back campaigns designed to re-engage customers before they’re lost altogether.
Just as importantly, it also means knowing when to let subscribers go.
One of the healthiest things you can do for your email marketing is regularly clean your database and remove people who no longer engage. It may feel counterintuitive to make your list smaller, but a healthier database improves deliverability, strengthens engagement and gives you a far more accurate picture of performance.
Ultimately, successful email marketing isn’t about how many subscribers you have. It’s about how many loyal customers you create.
10 lessons we’ve learnt managing email marketing for food & drink brands
Over the years, we’ve worked with food and drink brands of all shapes and sizes. Some have arrived with sophisticated Klaviyo accounts and complex automation already in place. Others have started with little more than a monthly newsletter and a growing ambition to sell more online.
Despite every business being different, we often find ourselves uncovering the same opportunities. Sometimes it’s a missing welcome flow. Sometimes it’s a database full of disengaged subscribers. More often than not, it’s simply that email has never been given the attention it deserves.
Working across so many brands has taught us a huge amount about what actually drives results. Some lessons have been backed up by data. Others have come from years of testing, refining, and seeing what genuinely changes revenue.
These are the lessons we come back to time and time again.
1. Revenue matters more than open rates
For years, marketers obsessed over open rates.
“What did we get?”
“Was it over 40%?”
“Did this one outperform last week’s campaign?”
The truth is, open rates only tell part of the story.
An email can achieve a fantastic open rate and generate very little revenue. Equally, another campaign might have a lower open rate but drive thousands of pounds in sales because the audience, message and timing were right.
That’s why we encourage every client to stop chasing vanity metrics. Instead, ask better questions. How much revenue did that campaign generate? Did it encourage repeat purchases? Did average order value increase? Did it shorten the time between someone’s first and second purchase?
Email marketing should be measured as a commercial channel, not simply a communication channel.
In practice: Miles Tea & Coffee
One of the biggest shifts we made with Miles Tea & Coffee wasn’t simply sending more emails. It was changing what success looked like. Rather than celebrating open rates alone, we focused on building a stronger customer journey, improving automation and creating a better relationship between Meta Ads and email marketing.
Over nine months, that joined-up approach contributed to 33% online sales growth, creating a stronger platform for both customer acquisition and repeat purchases.
Want to see the full strategy? Read how we helped Miles Tea & Coffee achieve 33% online sales growth through a joined-up Meta Ads and email marketing strategy.
2. Your welcome flow is more important than your newsletter
If we had to choose just one automation for a brand launching tomorrow, we’d build a welcome flow before anything else.
Why?
Because you only get one chance to make a first impression.
Someone has actively chosen to hear from your brand. They’re curious. They’re engaged. They’re deciding whether you’re another company offering discount codes or a brand worth building a relationship with.
A welcome journey gives you the opportunity to tell your story, explain your values, showcase your best-selling products and build trust before asking for another sale.
We’ve seen brands spend months perfecting weekly newsletters while their welcome flow consists of a single email saying, “Thanks for subscribing.” That’s like inviting someone into your shop and immediately walking away.
3. Stop discounting every time you want sales
Discounts work. There’s no denying that. But I think discounting has become the lazy answer to poor email marketing.
If your only way of generating sales is taking money off your products, you don’t have an email strategy. You have a pricing strategy.
But if every email includes 15% off, customers quickly learn to wait. Before long, you’re no longer selling the value of your products. You’re selling the value of your next discount.
Some of our highest-performing campaigns have contained no offer whatsoever. Instead, they’ve focused on education, storytelling, new product launches, recipes, seasonal inspiration or simply reminding customers why they loved the brand in the first place.
Discounts have their place, particularly around key trading periods like Black Friday or when clearing seasonal stock, but they should support your strategy rather than become your strategy.
4. Food and drink brands have better stories than they realise
One of the biggest surprises during client workshops is how often founders say, “We don’t really have anything interesting to talk about.”
We almost always disagree.
Food and drink brands are built on stories. Where ingredients come from. Why a recipe was created. How products are made. The family behind the business. Relationships with farmers and suppliers. The passion that started the company in the first place.
Customers buy into those stories just as much as they buy the product itself. When you stop thinking of email as a sales tool and start thinking of it as a storytelling platform, everything changes.
5. The sale doesn’t end at checkout
Many businesses treat a purchase as the finish line. We see it as the starting point.
Your customer has trusted you enough to spend their money. Now it’s your job to justify that decision.
Some of the biggest revenue opportunities happen after someone has checked out. Helping them get the most from your product. Suggesting complementary items. Sharing recipes. Providing serving suggestions. Encouraging reviews. Reminding them when they’re likely to need another order.
Great post-purchase marketing creates better customers, not just more sales.
In practice: Cornish Cheese Co.
With Cornish Cheese Co., we focused on strengthening the customer journey rather than relying on constant promotional emails. Through better segmentation, improved automations and a more strategic campaign calendar, email revenue increased by 46%, supporting an overall 52% increase in online revenue.
The lesson? Email performs best when it supports the full customer journey, not just the next campaign. Read the full Cornish Cheese case study.
6. Bigger databases don’t always make bigger businesses
We’ve audited Klaviyo accounts with huge subscriber databases generating less revenue than brands with a fraction of that number.
Why?
Because list size means very little if people aren’t engaged.
An engaged database of loyal customers will always outperform a huge list full of inactive subscribers who haven’t opened an email in years. Growing your list is important. Looking after it is even more important.
Sometimes the healthiest thing you can do is remove people who no longer engage. It improves deliverability, strengthens performance and gives you a much clearer picture of what’s actually working.
7. Personalisation is about more than using someone’s first name
Adding “Hi Kate” to the top of an email isn’t personalisation.
Understanding what Kate bought, when she bought it, what she’s interested in and what she might genuinely want next… that’s personalisation.
Modern email marketing allows brands to create experiences that feel incredibly relevant. A coffee customer doesn’t need to receive every tea promotion. Someone who buys gift hampers every Christmas could receive early access before the festive rush. A loyal customer who’s ordered ten times deserves a different experience to someone making their very first purchase.
The more relevant your emails become, the less they feel like marketing.
8. Consistency beats perfection
We’ve seen businesses spend weeks trying to create the “perfect” newsletter. Then never send it.
The reality is that consistent, valuable communication almost always outperforms occasional bursts of activity.
You don’t need a groundbreaking campaign every week. You simply need to remain useful. That might mean sharing recipes one week, introducing a team member the next, celebrating a customer story after that and announcing a product launch the following month.
Showing up consistently builds familiarity. Familiarity builds trust. Trust drives sales.
9. Email should never work in isolation
Some brands expect email marketing to do all the heavy lifting. It shouldn’t.
The strongest digital marketing strategies are connected. Your Meta Ads grow your email list. Your emails encourage social media engagement. Your blog content feeds your newsletters. Your customers create reviews. Those reviews improve conversion rates.
Everything supports everything else.
When your channels work together rather than competing for attention, your marketing becomes significantly more effective.
10. Relationships will always beat transactions
If there’s one lesson we’ve learnt above everything else, it’s this.
People don’t remember emails. They remember how brands make them feel.
The brands with the highest customer lifetime value aren’t necessarily sending the cleverest campaigns or using the most sophisticated automation. They’re the brands that consistently deliver value. They educate. They entertain. They inspire. They solve problems. They make customers feel part of something bigger than a transaction.
That’s ultimately what great email marketing should achieve. Not just another sale. A customer who chooses to come back again and again because they genuinely want to hear from you.
Is your email marketing leaving money on the table?
If you’re reading this wondering whether your email marketing could be working harder, ask yourself these questions.
- Do you only send newsletters?
- Are you relying on discount codes to generate sales?
- Do you know how much revenue email generated last month?
- Do you have a welcome journey?
- Do customers receive emails after purchasing?
- Have you segmented your audience?
- Are customers reminded to reorder?
- Do you know your repeat purchase rate?
- Are you testing campaigns regularly?
- Have you reviewed your Klaviyo account in the last 12 months?
If you answered “no” to several of these questions, there’s a good chance your email marketing isn’t reaching its full potential.
The good news? Every one of these opportunities can be fixed.
Often, the revenue is already there. It’s sitting inside your database, inside your customer journey and inside the moments where people are ready to buy again but haven’t been given a reason to.
That’s why we don’t see email marketing as an isolated channel. We see it as a commercial growth system.
Why we recommend Klaviyo for food & drink brands
We’ve worked with a range of email marketing platforms over the years, but for most ambitious food and drink eCommerce brands, Klaviyo is our platform of choice.
Why?
Because Klaviyo is built for eCommerce growth. It allows brands to go far beyond basic newsletters and build customer journeys based on real behaviour. What someone browsed. What they bought. How many times they’ve purchased. How much they’ve spent. When they’re likely to buy again. Which products they may be interested in next.
For food and drink brands, that level of data is incredibly powerful.
If someone buys coffee every four weeks, Klaviyo can help you remind them when they’re likely to be running low. If someone buys a Christmas hamper every year, you can give them early access before the seasonal rush. If a customer regularly buys one product category but has never tried another, you can introduce complementary products at the right time.
This is where email marketing becomes much more than communication. It becomes customer experience.
Klaviyo also integrates beautifully with Shopify, making it easier to connect email activity with actual revenue. That means we can see which flows are generating sales, which campaigns are driving repeat purchases and which segments are most valuable to the business.
For us, that matters. We’re not interested in sending pretty emails for the sake of it. We want to know what’s working, what’s converting and where the next commercial opportunity is hiding.
As a Klaviyo Silver Partner, we use the platform every day to help food and drink brands build smarter automations, improve segmentation, grow email revenue and increase customer lifetime value. Whether a brand needs a full Klaviyo setup, an audit of their existing account or ongoing email marketing management, Klaviyo gives us the tools to build strategies that are both creative and commercially focused.
That doesn’t mean Klaviyo is magic. Like any platform, it only works if the strategy behind it is strong.
But when the right strategy meets the right technology? That’s where email marketing starts to become one of the most profitable channels in the business.
Frequently asked questions about email marketing for food & drink brands
What is email marketing for food and drink brands?
Email marketing for food and drink brands is the process of using email campaigns and automated customer journeys to increase sales, encourage repeat purchases, improve customer loyalty and build stronger relationships with your audience. For eCommerce brands, this often includes welcome flows, abandoned basket emails, post-purchase journeys, replenishment reminders, win-back campaigns and regular campaign emails.
Why is email marketing important for food and drink brands?
Email marketing is important because food and drink products are often repeat purchase products. Customers buy, consume and reorder. A strong email strategy helps you stay front of mind, encourage customers to buy again and increase customer lifetime value without relying purely on paid advertising.
Is Klaviyo good for food and drink brands?
Yes. Klaviyo is particularly strong for Shopify and eCommerce food and drink brands because it allows you to segment customers based on their behaviour, automate key customer journeys and track revenue generated from campaigns and flows.
How often should food and drink brands send marketing emails?
There is no one-size-fits-all answer. Some brands perform well with weekly campaigns, while others may send more frequently during key seasonal periods. The most important thing is to send emails that are relevant, valuable and aligned with your customer journey rather than sending for the sake of it.
What email flows should every food and drink brand have?
Most food and drink brands should start with a welcome flow, abandoned basket flow, browse abandonment flow, post-purchase flow, replenishment flow, win-back flow and review request flow. The exact setup will depend on your product range, buying cycle and customer behaviour.
What is the difference between email campaigns and email flows?
Email campaigns are one-off sends, such as newsletters, product launches or seasonal promotions. Email flows are automated journeys triggered by customer behaviour, such as signing up, abandoning a basket, placing an order or becoming inactive.
Should every email include a discount?
No. Discounts can be useful, but relying on them too heavily can train customers to wait for offers. Strong email marketing also uses storytelling, education, product inspiration, social proof and helpful content to drive sales without constantly reducing margin.
How do I know if my email marketing is working?
Look beyond open rates. The most important metrics include email revenue, revenue per recipient, repeat purchase rate, average order value, customer lifetime value, flow revenue, campaign revenue, subscriber growth and list health.
When should I hire an email marketing agency?
You should consider hiring an email marketing agency if you’re using Klaviyo but not seeing strong revenue, if your customer journeys haven’t been reviewed in over a year, if you don’t have core flows in place or if you know email could be performing better but don’t have the strategy or time to improve it internally.
Can email marketing work alongside paid social and Google Ads?
Absolutely. In fact, email marketing works best when it supports your wider digital strategy. Paid ads can help grow your audience, while email helps convert, retain and increase the value of those customers over time.
Ready to turn email into one of your biggest revenue channels?
Email marketing isn’t about sending newsletters. It’s about building relationships. It’s about increasing customer lifetime value. It’s about making every pound you spend acquiring customers work harder.
And for food and drink brands… it could become the most profitable marketing channel you own.
If you’ve made it this far, chances are you already know your email marketing could be working harder.
Maybe you’re sending campaigns but not seeing enough revenue. Maybe your Klaviyo account hasn’t been reviewed in months. Maybe you have flows in place, but they feel basic, outdated or disconnected from your wider marketing strategy.
Or maybe you know there’s an opportunity sitting inside your customer database, but you need a fresh pair of expert eyes to help you find it.
At KW Marketing, we specialise in helping ambitious food and drink brands build email marketing systems that don’t just generate opens. They generate revenue.
Whether you need a Klaviyo audit, a Strategic Growth Workshop or fully managed email marketing support, we’ll help you uncover the opportunities hiding inside your customer journey and build a strategy designed to increase sales, repeat purchases and customer lifetime value.
Ready to see what your email marketing could really achieve?
Book a discovery call with Kate and let’s get started.