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Fireside Chat recap: How Mint & Lily turns BFCM buyers into lifelong customers

  • December 16, 2025
  • 2 replies
  • 21 views
GabbyEsposito
Community Manager
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In this fireside chat, ​@dianenoth unpacked her path into ecommerce, key lessons from this year’s BFCM season, and how Mint & Lily plans to strengthen customer loyalty in 2026. Here are the top insights from the conversation:

 

1. Intent > volume: BFCM engagement is shifting

Diane emphasized that BFCM performance wasn’t about emailing more people. It was about deeper intent from those who did engage.

  • She emailed slightly fewer people than last year, yet saw higher click and conversion rates.

  • Timing and simplicity mattered: afternoon and late-evening sends performed best, and short, text-forward emails outperformed heavier designs.
    Big idea: customers moved quickly and valued clarity—lean formats and precise timing drove efficiency.

2. Repeat buyers now power growth (and strategy)

Echoing Klaviyo’s BFCM report, Mint & Lily also saw a “loyalty-led” season:

  • Repeat buyers drove a significant share of BFCM revenue.

  • 40% of new BFCM subscribers went on to purchase, and Diane’s team is pushing toward 60% with stronger onboarding and segmentation.

  • Shift in mindset: Retention work begins before BFCM ends, focusing on turning deal-driven shoppers into long-term customers.

3. Retention as a business multiplier, not just a channel tactic

Diane made a compelling internal case:

  • Acquisition gets more expensive every year; retention improves payback across the entire business.

  • Her team focuses on learning about customers (shopping intent, preferences, behavior) because personalization directly correlates with conversion.

  • Key early signals of long-term value: fast second purchases, post-purchase engagement, browsing after delivery, and affinity for non-discounted items.

4. Segmented, behavior-led journeys win post-BFCM

Mint & Lily runs distinct journeys based on customer type:

  • First-time buyers: trust-building, education, and a fast path to the second purchase via early thank-you incentives + personalized recommendations.

  • Repeat/VIP customers: exclusive access, curated picks, and more personal tone.

  • Engaged non-buyers: lightweight nudges based on what they browsed. Automations play a starring role: post-purchase, browse/cart abandonment, winback, VIP flows, and seasonal moments (shipping cutoff, Valentine’s prompts).

  • Throughline: clarity, simplicity, and behavior-based relevance.

5. Looking ahead: Scaling personalization with leaner creativity

Diane is excited about three forward-looking opportunities:

  1. Capturing richer zero-party data, especially birthdays (for customers and their gift recipients) to unlock deeper personalization.

  2. Leaner, more direct creative that mirrors the website and feels personal, not like a heavy newsletter.

  3. Smarter lifecycle segmentation, treating first-time buyers, repeat buyers, and VIPs as fundamentally different journeys, especially across seasonal moments.


BFCM templates

 


Note for the recording: We experienced some technical difficulties for the first few minutes.

 

2 replies

  • Contributor I
  • December 19, 2025

This is a great recap with very practical takeaways. The focus on intent over volume really stands out. It is interesting to see how repeat buyers are driving growth. The emphasis on simple emails and smart timing makes a lot of sense. Retention being treated as a long term strategy feels very relevant. Thanks for sharing these insights.


GabbyEsposito
Community Manager
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  • Author
  • Community Manager
  • December 19, 2025

@james walker so glad to hear that! Thank you for sharing :)