A customer who bought once and never returned is not lost. They are dormant. A win-back flow is the systematic approach to reactivating those customers before they fully churn. For most D2C brands, 20 to 30 percent of their total customer base is in a dormant state at any given time. Reactivating even 10 percent of those customers is often worth more than acquiring the same number of new customers.

When to Define a Customer as Dormant

The dormancy threshold varies by your product category's natural repurchase cycle. For supplements with a 30-day supply: a customer who has not repurchased after 90 days is dormant (3 missed repurchase cycles). For fashion with seasonal buying patterns: 180 days without purchase. For home goods with longer replacement cycles: 12 months without purchase. Set your threshold at 2 to 3 times the expected repurchase interval for your category, not at an arbitrary 90-day default.

The Win-Back Sequence Structure

Email 1 (threshold reached): soft re-engagement, no promotional push. "We have not seen you in a while. Here is what is new." Show new products, recent customer stories, or any relevant brand news. Subject line that does not mention sale or offer. Goal: reopen the email relationship and remind them why they bought from you in the first place.

Email 2 (7 days later, no engagement from email 1): light offer. 10 percent off their next order. Frame it as a personal offer, not a mass sale. "Because you have shopped with us before, here is something just for you." Personalise with their name and optionally reference what they previously bought.

Email 3 (14 days later, still no engagement): stronger offer. 20 percent off or a free gift with purchase threshold. Urgency: "Offer expires in 72 hours." Genuine expiration. Do not extend it if they do not act. Credibility of your urgency claims compounds over time. Every fake deadline you extend teaches your customers to ignore deadlines.

Email 4 (21 days later, final attempt): "We do not want to clutter your inbox." One final offer, or a "stay or leave" email that lets customers opt down to quarterly sends rather than regular campaigns. This email both makes a final conversion attempt and manages unsubscribe risk by giving lapsed subscribers a lower-commitment option than full unsubscribe.

Win-Back Performance Benchmarks

Win-back flow open rates are typically lower than active list averages: 15 to 25 percent versus 30 to 45 percent for engaged subscribers. Click rates: 3 to 8 percent. Reactivation rate (completed a purchase from the win-back sequence): 5 to 12 percent of dormant customers who receive the full sequence. Below 5 percent reactivation, the offer is not strong enough or the dormancy threshold is too long. Above 15 percent, consider moving the trigger earlier, when customers are warm rather than cold.

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