Essential Guide to Ecommerce Email Marketing for 2022
Want to grow your ecommerce business without spending a fortune on marketing channels you hardly control?
In this article, I’ll show how you can increase your ecommerce sales using a channel that, unlike many others, isn’t pay to play.
We’ll talk about email marketing for ecommerce for online retailers.
Specifically, we’ll cover:
- What is ecommerce email marketing
- Types of ecommerce email marketing campaigns
- Benefits of using email marketing for ecommerce businesses
- 11 ecommerce email marketing best practices
- How to track revenue from your ecommerce emails
- 10 step ecommerce email marketing strategy from basics to advanced
- 10 amazing ecommerce email template examples
Let’s dive right in.
Want to grow your ecommerce store more easily? Try GetResponse ecommerce email marketing software. It packs all the right tools an ambitious ecommerce business needs to grow – email templates, email automation, transactional emails, web push notifications, paid ads, and live chat. Plus it integrates with all major ecommerce platforms like Shopify, Magento, PrestaShop, WooCommerce, and more.
What is ecommerce email marketing?
Ecommerce email marketing is the strategy of using emails to generate sales for your online store. It can be simple, like sending a message presenting your latest offer to your whole mailing list. Or complex, like sending highly targeted emails triggered by your customers’ actions on your ecommerce site.
Online retailers use ecommerce email marketing as their standard practice to grow their business and build a loyal customer base. As you’ll read more in a few moments, this often involves coming up with different strategies aimed at attracting new buyers, turning first-time buyers into repeat customers, and fostering relationships with loyal customers.
Some of the best examples of using email marketing campaigns to boost ecommerce sales include:
- sending emails announcing new product lines and offers,
- sending coupon codes to email subscribers on special occasions,
- sending emails when shoppers abandon their shopping carts,
- cross selling and recommending complementary products in newsletters,
- sending transactional emails such as shipping and order confirmations.
To help you better understand the type of marketing communications we’re talking about, check out this great example of a cart abandonment email sent by an ecommerce company, MCM.
Notice that this email not only reminds a user about the products they left behind in their online shopping cart but also contains a list of recommended products they may be interested in, too.
We’ll discuss why you may want to consider sending abandoned cart emails and other ecommerce messages to your own audience a bit later in this guide. Plus, we’ll show you how you can do with the right email service provider, like GetResponse.
If you’d like to go over the foundations first, consider reading our beginners guide on how to do email marketing.
Types of ecommerce email marketing campaigns
Every ecommerce email marketing strategy is different, but they all have something in common – they utilize these three types of marketing emails:
Promotional emails
This is when you use email to inform your subscribers about deals in your store, new product lines, new collections, etc. These include:
- new product launch emails
- periodic newsletters
- subscriber-only discount promo code emails
- content updates
- seasonal deals emails
- special promotions for a particular audience segment (e.g. most loyal customers)
- top of mind messages e.g. containing the latest blog posts and tips from your team
Tip: Promotional emails are usually sent by hand, as a newsletter or broadcast.
Transactional emails
These are functional emails sent to the customer with key information about a specific transaction in your store, like:
- subscription confirmation emails
- order confirmation emails
- shipping information emails
- customer satisfaction survey emails
Tip: Transactional emails can be sent directly from your ecommerce platform or via an email automation platform, like GetResponse. The latter often gives you more design capabilities but may often require a technical setup using API or SMTP. Luckily, in GetResponse we’ve added a new feature called Quick Transactional Emails that lets you set up essential transactional emails with no coding at all!
Lifecycle emails
Lifecycle emails are automated emails triggered by your shopper’s action and depending on where they are in their customer lifecycle such as:
- welcome email series
- win-back email series
- shopping cart abandonment emails
- browse abandonment emails
- upselling and cross selling emails
Naturally, you don’t need to use all these types of messages in your marketing strategy. However, as you keep growing your online store, you’ll want to make sure your communication is versatile and tailored to users at different stages of your funnel. If you keep sending only promotional messages your shoppers will quickly get tired, they’ll stop opening to your messages, and your conversion rate will drop, so it’s important to sequence your emails thoughtfully.
Tip: You can send lifecycle emails using marketing automation. If you’ve never done that before, you can start by using pre-build automation workflows that’ll get you setup in moments.
Speaking of conversion rate, let’s look at the different benefits your company can take advantage of if it follows a solid email marketing strategy.
Is your store built with Shopify? Check out how GetResponse can help you run Shopify email marketing campaigns more effectively today.
Ecommerce email campaigns benefits
While the benefits of using emails for ecommerce are endless, here are the six most important ones for you to consider:
- Email supports the transactions in your ecommerce store as the main channel of communication with your customers – their inbox is the first place they go to check if the purchase was successful.
- You can gather important feedback after each transaction, sending surveys so that customers can rate their experience and provide social proof that’ll help you convert future shoppers.
- You can build lasting relationships with your customer base throughout their lifecycle: by welcoming subscribers to your store, guiding them through transactions, sending them thank-you notes, and even birthday emails. Invite the customers back if they abandoned a cart or reactivate customers who haven’t visited your online store for a while.
- You can also reward the most loyal customers with exclusive deals and loyalty programs, sent through automated emails.
- You can grow your mailing list by encouraging word of mouth marketing and offering exclusive deals to subscribers who’ll recommend your store to their peers. This practice can increase your brand awareness among your core audience and keep your loyal shoppers engaged.
- But, the most important benefit of ecommerce email campaigns is: they increase your conversions in ways no other medium can – and at a fraction of the cost.
11 ecommerce email marketing best practices
So what can online retailers do to make sure their campaigns move the needle? Here’s a list of 11 tips that’ll improve your ecommerce email marketing strategy.
While we’re focusing here on online stores, don’t forget to follow these general email marketing practices, too.
1. Send your emails at the right moment.
One of the easiest ways to keep your email list engaged is to send your subscribers relevant information at the right time via proper email sequencing.
You can either do this with behavior-triggered campaigns in your email marketing automation workflows or with send-time optimization algorithms that are available in email marketing services like GetResponse.
While the first method requires that the user performs an action (e.g. a visitor leaves a site without completing the purchase), the second one just requires that your platform notes down your recipient’s geolocation (e.g. using their IP address) or looks at when they’ve previous engaged with your messages.
Both methods are great, and to no surprise – they deliver remarkable results. Here are the average email opens and clicks for various types of messages, including triggered campaigns. Notice how they outperform regular newsletters? That’s because they’re timely and relevant.
And if you’re wondering if using send-time optimization is difficult – you’ll be relieved it only takes one click to switch it on. The rest’s taken care of by your email marketing platform.
2. Personalize your email campaigns.
Don’t just rely on generic emails that aren’t aimed at anyone specific (a.k.a. email blasts). Make sure the content, arguments, and incentives you use in the communication are relevant to the target audience you’re trying to convert.
Not sure what kind of data you could use to tailor your email’s content? Here are five ideas that’d work for any ecommerce business:
- Person’s name
- Person’s location
- The product your visitor looked at and/or added to their cart
- The product or product category your customer bought from you recently
- The product your visitor added to their wish list and is currently back in stock
And if you’ve never used personalization before, here’s how you’d add it to your email subject line:
3. Keep your transactional emails on brand
Transactional emails are perhaps the only type of email communication that gets even more attention than your welcome message. So, why not take this opportunity and use transactional emails to strengthen your brand and build customer loyalty?
To achieve that, you’ll need to ensure that your transactional emails are on brand – including your logo, using the same color scheme and fonts you’re using throughout your other communication.
The challenging part is that most ecommerce platforms like Shopify offer basic email design capabilities or require you to code your emails from scratch. But the good news is that in GetResponse, you can build essential transactional emails using our intuitive drag and drop editor.
This feature is called Quick Transactional Emails and lets you set up cart abandonment emails and order confirmations. You can also use our API-based transactional email service for more advanced communications.
4. Make your content engaging.
If you want your brand to shine then you need to understand what type of content resonates best with your audience. Are these emails with user-generated content like testimonials and reviews? Maybe these are your latest blog posts? Or perhaps videos explaining how to use your products? Analyze your results and use the data to engage your subscribers better.
Dig into your email marketing service’s reporting dashboard and integrate it with your analytical tool, like Google Analytics. By powering the two together, you’ll understand your audience better so that you’ll be able to provide them with a better customer experience.
5. Always be optimizing.
Your gut feeling’s important, but we’re often biased and choose things we’re more familiar with rather than what’s best for us. The same goes for your mailings – use data to formulate A/B tests and optimize your campaigns and win in the long game.
The best thing about A/B tests is that they’re easy to set up, yet they can have an enormous impact on your sales results. Think about it: if one of your email subject lines performed better by 5% and that resulted in 5% more click-throughs, how much more revenue that could mean for your businesses? And now multiply that for every marketing campaign you launch – the numbers keep adding up.
Here’s what the subject line A/B test configuration looks like in GetResponse:
6. Ask customers for their help.
When optimizing your email communication don’t forget the key element behind all of what you’re doing – your customers.
Ask your customers for their feedback to learn more about what it is they’re looking for. Use survey emails or send them a direct live chat link to get to know them better, to improve their customer experience, and improve your marketing campaigns.
And don’t put roadblocks preventing your subscribers from sharing their voice. Change that no-reply email address to something more human. Don’t make it a marketing stunt.
Start caring more about your customers’ opinions and whenever possible, fix things where others have found problems. This will help you improve your brand image, drive more visitors to your site and bring you more sales in the long run, too.
7. Use social proof to improve your conversion rate.
Once you’ve gone with the previous best practice, don’t stop – turn your customers into brand advocates. Customer reviews and opinions are the best pieces of marketing you’ll ever have. And when it finally happens, make sure the customers who shared their opinions are appreciated and that others know about it.
People generally seek others’ opinions before making a purchase online. So by encouraging your shoppers to provide their feedback, you’ll have a higher chance of converting your future store visitors.
Learn how Selsey, an online furniture store, doubled their conversion rates from cart abandonment emails using customer reviews.
8. Segment your audience
Not all customers are the same, we all know that. But only a few marketers change how they communicate in their emails based on who they’re targeting. Those that do, however, tend to see impressive results.
Take Submission Technology, for example. This GetResponse customer actively segments their audience and continues to see average click-throughs far beyond the industry benchmarks – often as high as 6-7%.
And what about those that don’t segment their audience? They often do OK, but nothing close to the above-mentioned results.
So if you want your company to thrive then take the time to analyze your audience. Try to identify individual segments that you can use to tailor your messaging and drive more sales from your emails.
Here are five customer segments most ecommerce businesses would find useful:
- High spenders (people with high average order value or high lifetime value)
- Loyal customers (people who’ve bought from you more than X times)
- Trendsetters (people who’ve bought products from your newest lines without a discount)
- One-time buyers (people who’ve only purchased once and would need a bit of convincing to buy again)
- Recent buyers (people who’ve bought from you less than X days ago)
Should you be treating them the same way as people who’ve only subscribed to your newsletter and never bought anything? Absolutely not!
So think about it before you’re going to launch your next email program. I’m sure that among your own subscribers there are people at different funnel stages that’d be more convinced to make a purchase if you tailored your communication.
Below’s a great example of an email marketing campaign that started with segmentation. Huel looked at their current customers and identified those who haven’t tried their latest product yet. By knowing these customers already trust their brand, they used a simple piece of information (no purchase history of this particular item) to create an effective and personalized email campaign.
Also, if you’re wondering whether setting up segments is difficult – it’s not. Here’s how you’d set up a segment of people who’ve purchased a specific product in your store:
9. Improve your email templates with compelling copy
Ecommerce emails often focus on beautiful images and flashy design. But that’s not all there is to successful email programs. Email copy is just as important. So pay attention to it.
First, start with your subject line. Over half of all email recipients base their decision whether to open the email on that one single factor.
Then go with the preheader, header, and call to action buttons.
They all should reinforce your message and help you drive more sales for your ecommerce store.
For copywriting guidance, consider reading this guide by Joanna Wiebe on how to write newsletters that get read, opened, and clicked. It’s packed with email marketing tips that’ll help you write more compelling copy throughout all your message elements.
10. Aim for all devices
It’s been said too many times already, but I’ll say it one more time.
When designing your email templates, landing pages, and ad campaigns – focus on all the devices your customers might be using to access them. If a single element in this equation’s not working, you might be wasting your marketing budget and your customers’ interest.
Pay attention to the images, size, and placement of your call-to-action buttons, the product page, check-out process, and everything else your customers might encounter on the way. You’ll want the experience to be as smooth and frictionless as possible.
This email from Kiva checks all the right boxes.
- The logo doesn’t take up a lot of space, so the subscribers immediately see the email content.
- The headline is highly visible, short, and to the point. You know what the offer is about in a matter of seconds.
- The call to action button is right on the first screen and is surrounded by a reasonable amount of negative space. Because of that, clicking the button with your thumb won’t be a problem. And the CTA copy clearly describes what the button does, too.
- The supporting text that follows the CTA further explains the offer and clears any doubts you may have before hitting that button.
11. Pay attention to your mailing frequency
Every once in a while, we all get tempted to send just one more message. We do it thinking that there’s little harm in it and the outcome can only be good for the business.
While in many cases that might be true, the data from our study seems to be telling a different story.
Before you decide to increase your mailing frequency make sure to analyze the data carefully and take note of when you’re making the changes.
The number one reason why subscribers opt-out from receiving emails is that they receive too many of them in general.
At the same time, the total revenue you’ll make from the campaign may outweigh the costs of attracting new customers to replace the ones who unsubscribe.
Whatever you decide, make sure your long-term goals aren’t sacrificed by your short-term plans.
Now that you’re familiar with these 10 ecommerce email marketing best practices, it’s time to explore how you can track revenue from their ecommerce mailings.
How to track revenue from your ecommerce email marketing campaigns
The easiest way to measure the revenue you’re making from email marketing is by adding UTM parameters to your messages, setting up goals in your analytics tool (e.g. Google Analytics), and looking at the conversion rates and generated revenue over there.
Although it’s the simplest way to measure your email marketing ROI, it’s not the most accurate one. That’s because when setting up goals you have to assign the value of the goal conversion yourself.
If you only sell several products and they have different URLs, then it’s not a big problem. You can set up several goals and assign them a specific value.
The problem appears only if someone decides to buy several items of the same product within one session. That’s because Google Analytics would count that as a single goal conversion. This way your email marketing programs might not be getting enough credit. Your sales revenue from this channel would only be an approximate one. At the same time, measuring this way is better than not measuring your sales revenue at all.
The second slightly more advanced way to track revenue from your emails in Google Analytics is to use the Enhanced Ecommerce Analytics plugin. This plugin lets you track user interactions with products on your ecommerce website.
If they view a product, click on it, check product details, add it to their shopping cart, start the checkout process, complete the transaction, or abandon it – you’ll have all that information in your Google Analytics dashboard.
More importantly, you’ll get accurate information on how much your customers spend with their transactions because the value of each individual transaction will get automatically sent to GA.
And if you connect your ecommerce store to GetResponse, you’ll be able to use that information to create customer segments and send targeted emails.
Be it abandoned cart emails, product upselling emails, or product recommendations.
Now let’s go over this 10-step strategy that’ll drive more visitors to your store and will help you convince them to purchase from your more often.
Ecommerce email marketing strategy – from basics to advanced
Step 1. Start building an email list
Most ecommerce brands start with little or no email list. What they do have, however, are website visitors, social media followers, and of course – existing customers.
To start growing your email list, consider doing the following:
- Add a pop-up form that’ll appear after your visitors entered your website (ideally on all pages or just those that get the most website traffic)
- Add an embedded signup form (e.g. in the footer), so that users can join your list even if they’ve closed the pop-up or for some reason, didn’t trigger it
- Promote your newsletter on social media highlighting the benefits and exclusive perks your subscribers get
- Run a giveaway or contest that’ll encourage your audience to opt into your list
- Run a paid advertising campaign advertising your exclusive offers (make sure the pop-up form appears on the pages you’re promoting)
- Run a referral marketing campaign where existing customers or subscribers can recommend others to join your list in exchange for a reward
Pro tip: Offering a discount or free shipping is probably the easiest way to convince folks to opt into your email list. And if you don’t want to offer deals right away, you can always make the offer available only on their second purchase.
Here’s an example of a popup form created inside GetResponse you could use on your site:
And here’s an example of a giveaway contest run by one of GetResponse customers, Sabaton, where one of the key actions the contestants had to take was to sign up for the newsletter.
Step 2. Welcome new subscribers, automatically
Now that you’ve started collecting new email subscribers, it’s important to onboard them with a welcome email.
A welcome email is the single most engaging email you can send – it gets an average open rate of over 80% and a click-through above 20% according to our Email Marketing Benchmarks study.
A great welcome email can serve several purposes. It can help you:
- Set the tone for the relationship you’re starting to build with the subscriber
- Express the appreciation for entrusting you with their email address
- Bring visitors back to your website
- Motivate new subscribers to make their first purchase (e.g. through a discount code)
- Present your different product categories and other key information, e.g. about the delivery costs, refund policy, or ways to reach you
There’s also another key benefit welcome emails can help you achieve – great email deliverability. That’s because, unlike email blasts that are sent to the whole of your email audience, welcome emails are delivered to individual subscribers by your email automation platform.
This steady flow of highly engaging emails shows to the Internet Service Providers (ISPs) like Gmail or Yahoo that you’re a solid email marketer and that your emails should be filtered into the mailbox, skipping the spam folder.
Here’s an example of a simple marketing automation workflow that’d send the welcome email for you, automatically.
Bear in mind that you could build out this workflow even further and turn your welcome message into a whole series. This is especially useful if you’re offering a wide variety of product categories and you don’t send promotional/sales emails all that often.
This is the approach one of GetResponse’s customers, Landcafe, took when they developed a whole educational series for their new subscribers. Their six-email series not only helps to tell the brand’s story and guide their customers through a variety of different coffees they sell but also helps them generate revenue. In fact, 54% of their sales come from their onboarding sequence.
The visual below portrays what their educational email series looks like:
Step 3. Start sending promotional emails, regularly
With the first two steps out of the way, it’s time to get into the habit of sending promotional emails to your audience.
Although you don’t want to overwhelm your subscribers with too many messages, you do need to make sure they remember about your business and visit your website. The best practice is to send at least one email per month, but ideally, you’d be looking at a weekly or biweekly schedule – depending on how versatile and engaging your content is.
Most email marketing services come with ready-made email templates you can fill in with your own copy, images, and colors to match your branding. Building your marketing messages this way won’t take too much of your time and will help you drive more sales from your ecommerce shop.
Here’s an example of an email template you can find inside GetResponse that’s been designed with ecommerce businesses in mind.
And here’s a walkthrough video that shows you how you can build an email from scratch using our new Email Maker.
Step 4. Send reminders to those who did not convert
Once you’ve started sending your emails more regularly, you’ll probably notice that not all of your recipients will open all of your messages. And that’s natural – our inboxes get cluttered or our schedule becomes too busy.
Given that newsletters get an average open rate of just over 22%, it means that roughly 80% of your email list won’t open your message. This is still a great result compared to other marketing channels, but sometimes you may want to present your offer to those who didn’t open the first time, once again.
To do that, all you need to do is pick a different email subject line and leave your message content as it were. After all, they haven’t seen it yet ? Once you’ve done that, you’re ready to send the message to those who’ve not opened your first email.
Now, depending on the email marketing service you use, there may be several ways to launch such a message.
In GetResponse, you can do this in three ways:
1) By selecting those who didn’t open the message directly in your email analytics report.
2) By looking up those who received your email and didn’t open it, and then saving them as a segment in Search Contacts.
Like this:
3) By setting up a marketing automation workflow that’ll automatically send your reminder message after, e.g. 48 hours from your initial message.
Like this:
Keep in mind this tactic shouldn’t be used too often as you may end up resending your messages to recipients who are genuinely no longer interested in your brand. And if you do find such contacts among your segments, you’ll want to try and reactivate them with a win-back campaign.
Step 5. Segment your audience and tailor your communication
As your email marketing list grows, you’ll want to ensure you keep your audience engaged. The best way to do that is by segmenting your recipients and tailoring the content to these individual groups’ needs.
With the right approach, you can help your customers move along your marketing funnel more effectively, which will of course lead to more repeat customers and sales.
A moment ago, I’ve presented five customer segments you’ll probably want to set up in your email marketing service. These are high spenders, loyal customers, trendsetters, one-time buyers, and recent buyers.
On top of that, here several more segmentation criteria that are particularly helpful for ecommerce brands:
- Gender
- Location
- Preferred brand or category (e.g. based on their clicks or buying behavior)
- Product size
- Price sensitivity (e.g. buys only when there’s a sale)
- Date of last purchase (e.g. within last 30 days, 30-90 days)
- Lack of purchase (newsletter subscriber only)
Here’s an example of how Submission Technology tailors their email content to target males and females, individually.
Once again, starting with email segmentation’s super easy. Here’s an example of how you’d set up a segment comprising of people who’ve not bought anything in your store and signed up within the last 30 days.
Step 6. Retrieve lost sales with abandoned cart emails
Finally, it’s time to optimize your conversion rates. Given that you’ve already invested so much into getting visitors onto your site, it’s natural you’ll want to maximize the chances of them finishing their order.
A simple email reminding users about the product they’ve left in their shopping cart can help you achieve that. To set it up, you’ll need to integrate your ecommerce platform with your email automation tool and build a workflow like this one:
All the workflow does is wait for the signal from Shopify, Magento, PrestaShop, or any other platform you’re using that a user has left the website without finishing the transaction. When we get that signal, we launch whatever message or sequence of messages you’ve added into your workflow and help you win back the customer.
In GetResponse, there’s also another way to set up your cart abandonment emails, that’s currently reserved for Shopify. It uses the previously mentioned feature called Quick Transactional Emails. It requires only that you integrate your Shopify store with GetResponse, customize the layout of your email template using our Email Creator, and hit ‘activate’.
Related: The best marketing automation software for Shopify
Once again, you can use an email template to build your message and launch it to your audience in no time.
Step 7. Reactivate subscribers with win-back campaigns
Over time, some of your subscribers may become unengaged and reluctant to open your messages. Even though this is expected, it’s not something you’ll want to leave unattended.
Unengaged subscribers not only cost you money (they use up space in your database) but also affect your email deliverability. Their lack of activity shows to the ISPs that your content is unattractive and that you don’t keep your list hygienic. These signals then are used to filter your messages and placing them in the other subscribers’ mailboxes.
That’s where win-back programs come into play. Their purpose is to not only try to win back those who may still be interested in your brand but also to keep the “lost-cases” away. Recipients whom you’ve failed to reactivate on multiple occasions should ideally be moved away to a different segment that you won’t communicate with regularly or be removed altogether.
While parting ways with your inactive subscribers may seem scary at first, it’s a process that can have a tremendous impact on your deliverability and revenue.
Once again, the process of setting up a win-back campaign is simple.
Here’s what your segment could look like if you used the GetResponse Engagement Score feature to identify people who signed up for your newsletter more than 60 days ago and have the engagement score of 1 indicating that they’re “unengaged”.
And here’s the workflow that would first wait for 90 days, then check if the recipient’s present in the inactive segment, and then would send them an automated reminder. Should the recipient ignore the reminder message, they’ll be assigned a tag “lapsed-customer”.
Step 8. Ask buyers for their feedback
I’ve already mentioned why social proof is important and how you can use it in your email marketing program. Now it’s time to encourage your buyers to provide their feedback so that you can use it throughout your marketing communication.
The process is simple, all you need to do is to build a workflow that’d send an automated message sometime after someone’s made a purchase. This could be a week, two, or maybe a month – depending on how long it takes to both deliver your product and get a good feel for it.
Here’s a workflow that you could use to ask your buyers for feedback about your products:
Step 9. Send recommendations based on shoppers’ behavior
I’m a big fan of Netflix and how they use recommendations to offer me the best movies and shows based on what others like me enjoyed. If you’re like me, you’ll be happy to know that you can the same approach in your email marketing program.
Once you’ve connected your store with your email marketing service, all you need to do is set up a workflow and prepare a message that would contain your product recommendations.
This quick walkthrough shows how you can set this up in the GetResponse Email Creator:
And here’s the workflow that’d deliver the product recommendation email to your recipients two weeks after they bought from you:
Step 10. Take advantage of transactional emails to build customer loyalty
Last but not least, you’ll want to take advantage of transactional emails in your email marketing program.
In GetResponse, there are two ways to set them up:
- You can design them in our Email Creator and send them via Quick Transactional Emails feature
- Or you can set them up using our transactional email service via API or SMTP
The latter solution gives you more flexibility, while the first one is quick, easy, and requires no coding whatsoever. Whichever method you choose, transactional emails are worth sending.
Transactional emails not only provide the reassurance that the transaction was processed correctly, but they also give you an opportunity to strengthen your customer relationships.
Take this example from MeUndies, an online retailer selling underwear. Doesn’t this email look fun and enjoyable? Even though it’s just a transactional email, it shows the brand’s personality and sets the tone for the long relationship they’re trying to build with their audience.
Finally, let’s look at some noteworthy ecommerce email template examples you may want to get inspired by.
10 amazing ecommerce email template examples
We’ve just discussed how email marketing can be used by ecommerce brands to facilitate their customers’ journey.
Now let’s take a look at the best ecommerce email examples – those that can help you build stronger relationships as well as those that are aimed to sell more products.
1. Welcome email
Here’s an example of a welcome email from Adidas. Notice how it successfully makes you feel like you’re part of a community and gets you back on the site, to shop for your new favorite clothes.
2. Onboarding campaign
The goal of an onboarding email series is to familiarize your new recipients with the brand and the full range of products and services you’re offering. Here’s a newsletter that delivers on that premise from Huckberry, an ecommerce brand that backs up its products with inspirational content.
3. Flash sale campaign
Flash sales are designed to help you deliver on short-term results. They create a sense of urgency, get your customers to act quickly, and generate revenue fast. Here’s an example from Casper that follows this approach and does it very well:
4. Cart abandonment email
Although emails are not sent very frequently, they’re aimed at visitors who are *this close* to buying from you. And since many customers expect to receive cart abandonment emails, they often get average open rates of 40-50% and CTRs above 15%. Here’s an abandoned cart email example from American Giant that’s particularly good.
Learn how BeautySleep achieves 25% sales rate with 6-email cart abandonment series.
5. Browse abandonment email
The idea is similar to the one above. The only exception is that they’re aimed at people who’ve not added the product to their cart but they’ve shown interest in them (e.g. clicked on it in another email). Here’s how Timberland uses this approach:
6. Product recommendation email
Product recommendation emails are powerful and you can send them even if you’re targeting new users. All you need to do is pick the best-sellers from your store and present them in an email like this one from MVMT:
7. Review email
Asking recent buyers for feedback? Here’s an example of how Target asks their audience to write anything positive or negative about their latest purchase:
8. Transactional email
Here’s a great activation email example that asks the user to confirm they wanted to set up an account with their email address. What’s worth noting is that it carries on the same branding the company uses across all their email marketing campaigns.
9. Email campaign using user-generated content
User reviews, testimonials, and even social media posts can make your email marketing more authentic and impactful. Here’s how MeUndies uses posts from Instagram to drive more engagement with their marketing communication:
10. Referral email
Turning those customers into brand advocates? Here’s how Huel does this in their onboarding sequence. Note: the email was originally in Polish, but I’ve translated it to English so that you can get a better feel for its content.
Want to see more ecommerce newsletter examples? Here’s an in-depth guide that explains what email marketing automation is & shows over 30 examples of automated emails that’ll work great for your business.
How will you grow your ecommerce company?
Now that you’ve seen how email can help your ecommerce business grow (even if you’re mostly brick-and-mortar!), it’s time you answer this one simple question:
What’s the first step you’re going to take?
If you’re going to follow the sample strategy I’ve described above, you’ll probably want to use a tool that’ll help you achieve your ambitious goals.
And if you’re shopping for an email marketing service provider, I highly encourage you to give GetResponse a try.
It comes with 30 days free trial and you don’t need to provide your credit card details. And on top of emails, it’s packed with plenty of other tools that’ll help your shop grow.
So go on, connect your online store with GetResponse and launch your first email marketing campaign today.