The Business
She had spent three years building something genuinely beautiful.
It wasn’t.
Not because the products weren’t good enough. They were better than good enough. Not because the prices were wrong. They were fair for the quality and the craft involved. Not because the store was poorly designed or difficult to navigate. It was beautifully built and genuinely enjoyable to browse.
The problem was simpler and more frustrating than any of those things.
Nobody could find it.
The Challenge
The root cause was a dependence on a single, unreliable traffic source.
The social media trap.
Almost all of her traffic came from Instagram. When she posted consistently and the algorithm was kind, people visited the store. When she was busy fulfilling orders, managing suppliers, or simply exhausted from doing everything alone, posting dropped off — and so did traffic. The entire revenue stream of the business was tied to a platform she didn’t own, didn’t control, and that could change its algorithm overnight.
Zero organic search presence.
No email list worth speaking of.
Every customer who bought and left was essentially gone. There was no mechanism to bring them back, remind them the store existed, or tell them about new collections and seasonal launches.
Our Approach
We never start with tactics. We start with understanding — and this engagement was no different.
We began with a fundamental reframe that shaped everything we did.
Phase 1 — SEO Foundation: Making the Store Discoverable
“A hand-thrown ceramic bowl in warm terracotta tones” is a lovely description. But nobody searches for that. They search for “handmade ceramic bowl terracotta UK,” “unique ceramic bowl gift,” or “artisan pottery bowl.” The gap between how the products were described and how customers searched for them was the gap between ranking and invisibility.
We built category pages for the first time — dedicated, optimised pages for ceramics, textiles, candles, and gifts — giving search engines clear, structured entry points into the store’s product range. We addressed technical issues including page speed on mobile, image optimisation, and structured data markup for e-commerce products.
Phase 2 — Email Marketing: Building the Asset the Business Was Missing
We then built an automated email sequence that every new subscriber received — a welcome email that introduced the founder and her story, a second email showcasing the most loved products in the store, and a third email with a first-purchase incentive for subscribers who hadn’t yet bought. This sequence was always on, always converting, and required no ongoing effort beyond the initial setup.
Phase 3 — Integration: Making SEO and Email Work Together
Each element reinforced the others — building a traffic and revenue engine that grew steadily and predictably rather than spiking and crashing with the Instagram algorithm.
The Outcome
- Organic traffic grew by 310% — from an average of 420 monthly visitors to consistently over 1,700, driven by product page optimisation, category pages, and content marketing.
- Email list grew from under 200 to over 2,800 subscribers — a 14x increase driven by the lead magnet, consistent promotion, and list building integrated into every customer touchpoint.
- Monthly revenue increased by 92% — with the growth split between new customers arriving from organic search and existing customers returning through email.
- Repeat purchase rate improved from 14% to 31% — more than doubling the percentage of customers buying more than once, driven entirely by the post-purchase email sequence and broadcast calendar.
- Email open rates averaged 38% — significantly above the e-commerce industry average of approximately 20%, reflecting the quality of the list and the authenticity of the content.
- Abandoned cart recovery contributed 11% of total monthly revenue — converting customers who would previously have been lost entirely.
- The business moved from revenue unpredictability to consistent month-on-month growth — with the founder describing it as the first time she felt truly confident in the future of what she had built.
FAQs
Small e-commerce stores typically begin seeing meaningful improvements in organic traffic within 3 to 5 months of implementing a properly structured SEO strategy — particularly when product pages and category pages are optimised for purchase-intent search terms. Significant and sustained traffic growth generally follows between months 5 and 8, with results continuing to compound as content depth and domain authority grow. The timeline is longer than paid advertising but the traffic generated is owned, sustainable, and increasingly cost-effective over time.
Product page and category page optimisation delivers the highest return on investment for most e-commerce stores — particularly those selling in niche or specialist categories where purchase-intent search volume exists but competition is manageable. Each product page should be written for the specific search terms that buying-intent customers use, include comprehensive product information that answers every likely customer question, and be structured with proper technical markup to help search engines understand and correctly categorise the product. Category pages are frequently neglected but represent significant ranking opportunities for broader search terms.
The most effective email list building strategy for e-commerce combines a compelling lead magnet — a genuinely useful piece of content relevant to the store’s audience — with prominent promotion across the website and social media channels. The lead magnet should be directly relevant to the store’s products and ideal customer — a care guide, styling guide, gift guide, or educational resource that provides immediate value. Once a subscriber joins the list, a well-structured welcome sequence that introduces the brand authentically and provides a first-purchase incentive converts a significant percentage of new subscribers into first-time customers.
The four highest-impact email automations for e-commerce are — a welcome sequence for new subscribers that introduces the brand and drives first purchase, an abandoned cart sequence that recovers customers who leave without buying, a post-purchase sequence that thanks customers, provides product care information, and introduces complementary products, and a win-back sequence for customers who haven’t purchased in a defined period. These four automations, properly built and optimised, can account for 25 to 40 percent of total email revenue while requiring no ongoing effort beyond initial setup and periodic optimisation.
Repeat purchase rate is primarily driven by the quality of the post-purchase experience — what happens after a customer buys. A post-purchase email sequence that thanks the customer genuinely, provides useful product information, shares the brand story, and introduces complementary products at the right time creates the foundation for a second purchase. Broadcast emails featuring new collections, seasonal campaigns, and curated product recommendations maintain brand awareness and purchase intent between natural buying occasions. Loyalty incentives for repeat customers — exclusive access, early launch notifications, or modest discounts — further increase the frequency and value of repeat purchasing.
Email marketing ROI for e-commerce is measured through revenue directly attributed to email — both automated flows and broadcast campaigns — tracked through UTM parameters and e-commerce analytics integrations. Key metrics include total email revenue as a percentage of overall store revenue, revenue per email sent, open and click rates by campaign and automation, list growth rate, unsubscribe rate, and the specific contribution of each automation — welcome, abandoned cart, post-purchase, and win-back — to total email revenue. A well-managed e-commerce email programme typically delivers an ROI of between 30 and 50 times the cost of the platform and management.
Yes — and the combination is significantly more powerful than either channel alone. SEO brings new visitors to the store who have never heard of the brand. Email marketing converts a percentage of those visitors into subscribers and then into customers — and then brings those customers back repeatedly. The compound effect of the two channels working together produces growth that neither can achieve independently. For small e-commerce businesses with limited marketing budgets, the combination of SEO and email marketing consistently delivers the strongest long-term return on investment of any digital marketing channel mix.