One creative email flow that's worked beautifully for our BigCommerce clients is a "choose your mood" welcome sequence. The first email isn't a discount or a product grid--it's a soft little invitation: "What do you want to feel more of right now?" (confidence, comfort, playful, romantic). Each click tags the customer, and the next 2-3 emails become a mini story curated to that feeling--styling notes, real customer photos, and a simple "this is made for your body, not the other way around" message, with products woven in like suggestions, not pressure. The strongest version of this was paired with a "mirror moment" campaign: we asked subscribers to reply with one line about what they're reclaiming this season (rest, boldness, softness), then featured anonymized replies in the next email like a community poem. It consistently drove higher engagement because women didn't feel marketed to--they felt seen, and that emotional resonance carried all the way to the cart.
One creative way we've used email marketing on a BigCommerce store was by turning abandoned carts into helpful follow-ups instead of basic reminders. We noticed that many shoppers weren't leaving because of price, they were hesitating because they weren't sure if the product was right for them. So instead of sending a simple "You forgot something" email, we built what we call a Decision Helper sequence. For example, when someone left a premium skincare product in their cart, the first email explained who the product was best for, the second answered common objections, and the third included a short customer story showing real results. Each email focused on clarity, not pressure. Within the first month, cart recovery increased by over 25%, and customer replies went up as well because people felt like we were helping them decide, not pushing them to buy. The biggest lesson was this: when email feels like guidance instead of a sales nudge, customers engage more and convert with confidence.
I increased our BigCommerce sales by implementing interactive style quizzes that sent personalized content to customers through emails. I used Klaviyo to send customized follow-up messages that activated 48 hours after shoppers finished our "Style Match" quiz instead of sending out standard marketing emails. The emails included customized results and an artificial intelligence system which selected three products based on their individual responses and online behavior. I included a "Quiz Exclusive" discount code with a 72-hour of valid time for immediate use. This strategy combined behavioral relevance with urgency, ensuring the content felt like a service rather than an ad. The results were explosive as we achieved a 9.2% click-to-purchase rate—3x the industry average. This single automated flow generated $42k in revenue from a small 15k-user segment in just one month. Hyper-personalized data from interactive tools is the ultimate conversion engine.
I run SaltwaterFish.com (BigCommerce) where we ship live marine fish/corals/inverts, so email isn't "content marketing" for us--it's survival + customer confidence. One creative lever that moved the needle was turning our acclimation process into a segmented "Day 0 to Day 8" automation tied to the customer's actual delivery date (not the order date). Example: for every livestock order, we trigger a short sequence: **Delivery Day = drip acclimation checklist** (the exact SaltwaterFish.com Drip Method), **Day 1 = "what normal looks like" behaviors**, **Day 3 = feeding + lights**, **Day 7 = quick health check + how our 8-day guarantee works (photo rules, timing, white background, handwritten date)**. It cut panic tickets and misuse of the guarantee because people stopped guessing and followed a repeatable procedure. That campaign was a big part of why we lifted our livestock quality/customer experience scores by **20%+** while also lowering operational cost--fewer "I did everything right" claims that were really acclimation errors, fewer back-and-forth emails, and better outcomes for the animals. Reddit-style takeaway: don't blast promos--attach email to a real-world customer milestone you can't fake (delivery timestamp, not purchase), and be painfully specific with instructions. In a high-stakes category like live animals, "help them win" beats "sell them more" and still increases repeat purchase.
I've scaled Extreme Kartz on BigCommerce by focusing on technical education and fitment accuracy for high-ticket performance upgrades. My strategy shifts the focus from generic sales to "compatibility verification," which is essential when customers are navigating complex lithium battery conversions and motor upgrades. We use a targeted "Fitment Verification" sequence for shoppers looking at performance systems like Navitas AC conversion kits. Instead of a standard discount code, we send a technical guide that helps the customer confirm their cart's year, make, and model-specific requirements before they checkout. This approach has drastically reduced incorrect purchases and return rates by ensuring customers have the right information for their specific EZGO or Club Car. Prioritizing fitment accuracy over sales pressure builds the long-term trust and authority needed to lead the golf cart upgrade market.
One creative way we used email marketing on our B2B platform was by turning simple Watersafe reorder reminders into short operational updates. Instead of sending a plain "you might need more test kits" message, we added a quick insight drawn from anonymized trends across fleets. Things like higher bacteria positives on warm-water routes or more lead detections after certain ports. It changed the way people reacted. Engineers started replying because the email actually helped them plan. A few large operators even began forwarding the updates inside their teams. The campaign worked because it stopped feeling like marketing and started feeling like useful field intelligence.
I've used a "choose your own bundle" email where people pick what they want by clicking tiles in the email, instead of reading a long pitch. Each click takes them to a pre-filled BigCommerce cart (or a filtered collection) with the bundle already built. It feels like a quick quiz, but it's just smart links and tracking. In one campaign, I sent it to past customers who'd bought one item in a range, and the email let them add matching add-ons in one or two clicks. The simple change that helped most was using the click data to trigger a follow-up: if someone clicked "Option A" but didn't check out, they got a short reminder showing the exact bundle they clicked, not a generic promo. I don't have exact numbers to share, but it drove more repeat orders than our normal "new arrivals" emails.
PRODUCT USAGE CONTENT DRIVES ENGAGEMENT BETTER THAN PROMOTIONAL CAMPAIGNS - The most creative email approach that works across e-commerce platforms involves sending customers detailed content about maximizing value from their purchases rather than immediately promoting additional products. One consumer brand implemented email campaigns featuring user-generated content showing creative product applications and combinations, which generated substantially higher engagement than standard promotional emails. The successful strategy involved treating email as an extension of customer success rather than pure marketing channel, sending tips, tricks, and community examples that helped customers get better results from products they already owned. This approach increased both email open rates and repeat purchase frequency because customers felt the brand genuinely cared about their experience rather than just driving transactions.
Head of North American Sales and Strategic Partnerships at ReadyCloud
Answered 2 months ago
One creative campaign we've run on BigCommerce is a "self-segmentation" email where customers click the reason they're shopping, then we tailor the next emails around that choice. The email looked simple, three buttons like "best sellers," "new arrivals," and "gift ideas," and each click dropped them into a short sequence with product picks and a quick tip that matched their intent. It worked because customers did the targeting for us, so engagement stayed high and the offers felt relevant without being creepy. Revenue lifted because the follow-up emails had a clear theme and fewer products, which reduced decision fatigue and pushed more people to checkout.
One creative strategy we used on Brandualist's BigCommerce platform was integrating personalized post-purchase email campaigns that suggested complementary products. After a customer purchased an item, they received an email with tailored recommendations based on their purchase history and browsing behavior. We also added a limited-time discount to create urgency. The result was a 22% increase in repeat purchases within 30 days. By using AI-driven insights to deliver truly relevant product recommendations, we not only engaged customers but also increased average order value.
One of our most successful creative campaigns on BigCommerce was our "product life milestone countdown" email series. Instead of blasting them with a simple upsell 30 days later, we charted our average consumption period as 42 days and created a 3-email campaign beginning at day 35. Email 1 showed them their projected "day they will run out" based on qty ordered. Email 2 provided an incentive to reorder within 72 hours for $15 off their next order. Email 3 presented a bundle offer $28 more than their initial purchase, leaning into convenience and unit savings. It boosted our reorder rate by 26% and grew our average order value from $86 to $113 in 60 days.
An example of an inventive campaign we executed on BigCommerce was a "surprise unlock" email sequence mapped to achieve customer milestones. Instead of sending standard promotional codes, we sent an email to the customer gave the customer an email upon their completion of their third purchase. The subject of the email was "You have just unlocked something." The body of the email included the first opportunity to purchase a limited amount of a product bundle, which was not posted on the website for sale. The automation was created in Klaviyo, which automatically aligned the purchase history of the customer (data from BigCommerce). Once a milestone was completed, the email was automatically sent out to the customer. The overall conversion rate of the campaign was 24%, and as a result of the campaign, customer LTV (lifetime value) increased by 17% the following quarter. Customers appreciated feeling recognized as opposed to being marketed to. Personal milestones outperformed traditional promotional conduct.
I run three digital marketing agencies and we've worked with hundreds of businesses on email campaigns, though I'll be straight with you--most of my BigCommerce clients are in roofing and home services rather than traditional ecommerce. But the principle I'm about to share works across any platform. One of our roofing contractors used what I call "thank you card automation" tied directly to purchase completion. Within 2 hours of a customer paying their invoice through their BigCommerce checkout, they received a personalized video email from the owner thanking them by name and asking for feedback. Not asking for a review yet--just genuine appreciation and opening a two-way conversation. The kicker was the second email 10 days later. If they responded positively to the thank you, we triggered an automated "refer a neighbor" campaign with a specific discount code they could share. If they hadn't responded, they got a different path asking if anything needed attention. This simple branch increased their referral rate by 34% and caught three potential service issues before they became bad reviews. The reason it worked wasn't the platform--it was the timing and genuine human touch at scale. Most businesses either automate too much and sound robotic, or they try to personalize everything manually and can't keep up. This found the middle ground.
I tried something new. For cherry blossom season, I put together a Hanami at Home set and told the story of the festival in my email. People didn't just click more, they started adding multiple items to their carts together. It changed my whole approach. Now I always try to add a small story or detail instead of just selling products. If you have any questions, feel free to reach out to my personal email
In my position as Head of Technology and Builder for a B2B SaaS company (capitalizing on the BigCommerce platform), I have observed that the email open rates over the last ten years are dropping below 20%. This demonstrates that engagement is based on creativity and personalisation. Many mass mailings still fail to engage people because they do not take into consideration behavioural data, the data that tells you how each individual behaves and what influences them. To address this issue, we developed a dynamic story loop, which is a data-driven, "choose-your-own-adventure" type of email program built using Klaviyo's platform. The messages within this email program evolve in real time based on the individual's behaviour and stage of the journey. For example, users may receive the question "What is your next device move, eco-friendly or professional/elite?" The interactivity of story telling makes what are typically passive observers users of the story content. By combining live cart content with curiosity driven subject lines, we experienced a 45% increase in click through rates and a 28% increase in revenue by Q4 2025. Simply put, when emails become stories that dynamically adapt to the reader, conversion becomes engagement. (Case Study: Empirical Edge)
By sending out an email series that contains behind-the-scenes content, I have successfully connected with customers who have an interest in purchasing products on my BigCommerce site. I don't send out discount offers; instead, I create excitement and have my customers feel like insiders so they become loyal fans who want to buy when they see a new product. Method: Behind-the-Scenes Email Series In advance of launching new products, I send out teaser emails that provide development updates and product previews prior to the actual launch. Implementation: In BigCommerce Using Klaviyo and/or Omnisend as my email service providers, I create separate segments of my audience consisting of engaged customers. I then automate launch email sequences for each segment. Measuring Success: Open Rates: Up to 65% CTR: 4% - 6% Strong Preorder Sales Overall, this practice encourages increased loyalty, community, and conversion rates.
One of the more creative email strategies we implemented for a client on BigCommerce came from recognizing that most abandoned cart emails feel transactional and predictable. While leading strategy at NerDAI, I worked with a mid-sized eCommerce brand that was heavily discount-driven. Their abandoned cart flow relied almost entirely on urgency and coupon codes. Open rates were decent, but margin erosion was becoming a real issue. Instead of offering another discount, we redesigned the sequence around buyer hesitation psychology. The first email wasn't "You left something behind." It was framed as "Still deciding?" and included a short, plain-language breakdown of the product's most common pre-purchase concerns based on real customer support data. The second email featured a brief customer story highlighting why someone almost didn't buy and what changed their mind. The third email introduced a limited-time value-add, not a price cut, such as expedited shipping or bonus content. The shift was subtle but powerful. Cart recovery improved by just over 22%, but more importantly, we reduced discount dependency significantly. Average order value held steady because we weren't conditioning customers to wait for a price drop. What I've learned from campaigns like this is that email works best when it mirrors real conversations happening in the buyer's mind. On platforms like BigCommerce, the data is there, but it has to be translated into empathy, not just automation triggers. From an entrepreneurial perspective, the biggest unlock wasn't the tool. It was reframing email from a reminder mechanism into a trust-building sequence. When you address doubt directly instead of masking it with urgency, engagement becomes more sustainable and more profitable over time.
I've run retention email for BigCommerce stores where one email shift can change weekly revenue. My favorite creative play was a "pick your perk" launch for a niche home goods shop. Instead of a normal promo, the email asked one question and offered three buttons: Free shipping, 10% off, or a bonus add on. Each button tagged the shopper, dropped them into the right customer group, and sent them to a prefilled BigCommerce cart with the matching coupon. We built it as a three email sequence. The last message was plain text and came from the founder. The follow up was simple. We sent a short reminder that referenced their choice, plus two product recommendations based on what they browsed. It felt personal without being creepy, and it reduced decision fatigue. The campaign became our highest click flow that month and pulled in repeat buyers fast.
Stop sending the same email to everyone. I ran a series that sent different patient stories to different doctors. When we sent before-and-afters of actual procedures to cosmetic surgeons, open rates went up. People respond to what's real. Keep your groups updated with actual patient experiences instead of marketing copy. It makes a real difference. If you have any questions, feel free to reach out to my personal email
We used a travel style email series called Climate Stories from Your Zip Code. We mapped local weather swings and sent timely reminders before heat waves. Each message paired one efficient upgrade with a cost calculator snippet. BigCommerce automation watched browsing patterns and delayed offers until interest appeared. We included a scarcity angle by forecasting regional stock pressure. Customers engaged because the emails felt like local intel not advertising. Click through improved after we added a quick quote button.