Are You Neglecting Your Email Marketing?

Most brands don’t decide to neglect email marketing.
They just keep pushing it down the priority list.

Ads feel urgent. Social feels visible. Email feels… old.
So it becomes “something we’ll sort later.”

And later never comes.

The irony?
For most ecommerce and retail brands, email is the highest-margin channel they already own, and the most underused.

If you’re doing consistent revenue and relying mainly on paid ads or footfall, there’s a good chance email marketing isn’t underperforming.

It’s just being ignored.

The uncomfortable truth about email marketing

When I audit brands, email usually falls into one of three buckets:

  1. Barely exists
    A few campaigns a year, no flows, no strategy.
  2. Exists, but badly
    Generic templates, constant discounts, no brand voice.
  3. Quietly printing money
    But no one is paying attention to why it works.

What’s striking is that email almost never fails because of the platform, the deliverability, or the list size.

It fails because it’s treated as an afterthought.

“Our email doesn’t work” usually means this

When a brand tells me email “doesn’t work for them,” it usually means one (or more) of the following:

  • No welcome flow (or a weak one)
  • No abandoned cart or browse recovery
  • Email is used only for discounts
  • Every email looks and sounds the same
  • The list is big, but engagement is low
  • Email has no clear role in the customer journey

In other words: there’s no strategy — just sending.

Email marketing isn’t about volume.
It’s about intent, timing, and tone.

What email should actually be doing for your business

Email isn’t just a sales channel.
And it definitely isn’t just a discount channel.

Done properly, email does three jobs at once:

1. It captures value you already paid for

You’ve already paid to acquire the customer via ads, SEO, or footfall.
Email ensures you don’t lose that value.

2. It stabilises revenue when ads wobble

When CPMs spike, tracking gets messy, or budgets tighten, email becomes the most reliable channel you own.

3. It builds brand depth, not just transactions

Email is where tone, personality, trust, and long-term loyalty are built — not in a 30-character ad headline.

For most healthy ecommerce brands, email should be responsible for 20–40% of total revenue.

If yours isn’t even close, that’s not normal, it’s a signal.

The biggest mistake: treating email like ads

One of the most damaging habits I see is brands trying to make email behave like paid ads.

  • Same messaging
  • Same urgency
  • Same “BUY NOW” tone

But email isn’t rented attention.
It’s permission-based.

Your emails land in someone’s personal space — their inbox — often next to messages from friends, family, and colleagues.

That changes the rules.

The best-performing emails don’t shout.
They sound human.

A pattern we see again and again

A common scenario:

A brand comes in heavily reliant on ads.
Email exists, but it’s doing maybe 8–10% of revenue.

They assume that’s “just how their customers are.”

Once proper flows are built, tone is aligned with the brand, and email is treated as part of the customer experience — not a bolt-on — something interesting happens:

  • Revenue from email climbs without increasing traffic
  • Repeat purchases rise
  • Ad pressure eases
  • Profit margins improve

Nothing magical changed.

Email just stopped being neglected.

How to tell if you’re neglecting email marketing

Ask yourself honestly:

  • If ads stopped tomorrow, would email carry the business?
  • Do your emails sound like your brand, or any brand?
  • Are you nurturing customers or just asking for money?
  • Do you know which emails actually drive revenue?

If any of those made you uncomfortable, that’s your answer.

Final thought: email is owned land

Social platforms change.
Ad costs rise.
Algorithms shift.

Your email list is one of the only channels you actually own.

Neglecting it doesn’t cause instant damage — which is why it’s easy to ignore.
But over time, it quietly limits growth, profit, and resilience.

Email marketing isn’t outdated.

Ignoring it is.

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