
Why Most Lifecycle Marketing Is Built Backwards
“Lifecycle Marketing is supposed to be what makes people decide that they're in the right place and will buy whatever you offer them.” - Ethan Norville
Most brands treat lifecycle marketing like a set of tactics.
A welcome flow here...
An abandoned cart reminder there....
A reactivation email when revenue dips....
And then they wonder why retention stalls and paid acquisition gets more expensive every quarter.
The problem isn’t that they're not putting in the effort, it's that they're building it all backwards.
The Common (Broken) Way Brands Build Lifecycle
Here’s what I see brands do over and over again:
Run paid ads to drive traffic
Build a few standard email flows
Optimize their subject lines and send times
Chase open rates and click-through rates
Hope repeat purchases follow
On paper, it looks like it makes sense. It's the textbook strategy!
But in reality, it skips the most important question:
What does the customer actually need now? What do they need to understand next?
The best lifecycle marketing campaigns — the ones people tell their friends about and save to read later— are not about messages.
They're about education over time.
Lifecycle Marketing Is Not Just Email Marketing
Email and SMS are delivery methods.
Lifecycle marketing is the strategy behind:
What customers need to learn
When they need to learn it
Why learning it moves them closer to repeat purchase
When brands confuse lifecycle with channels, they end up:
Sending too many promos
Overusing discounts
Training customers to wait instead of buy
Burning paid traffic instead of compounding it
Retention doesn’t come from frequency. It really doesn't matter how many messages you send to your audience, because real retention comes from clarity and understanding.
The Correct Order (Almost No One Follows)
High-performing lifecycle systems are built in this order:
1. Start With the Customer’s Confusion and Create Context
Every product or service has some friction questions:
How it works
Who it’s for
Why it’s different
When to use it
Whether it’s worth repeating
Your lifecycle strategy should exist to remove that confusion—step by step.
The way you answer these questions creates context — the single most powerful thing in marketing to anyone.
And context is the ultimate reason why someone should care about what you have to give them. It's the difference between life with and without your product.
2. Design the Journey Before the Messages
Before writing a single email, map:
What real-world conditions make your product a necessity
What the customer believes at each stage
What they misunderstand
What would make the next purchase feel obvious
Only then do you decide what to send.
3. Use Email and SMS to Teach, Not Push
The best-performing flows:
Explain before they persuade
Normalize hesitation instead of ignoring it
Answer questions customers are already asking silently
Selling becomes easier when learning happens first.
Here's Why This Matters for Paid Social
Paid social doesn’t stop working, but it does have harder jobs to do the longer you keep it running. Ideally, paid social campaigns serve first as entry points into your brand's marketing world, and then as a lifecycle marketing channel for users who are already aware of your product.
When the rest of your lifecycle is weak,
Your ads have to do all the work
Your CPA rises
Your creative fatigue accelerates
And you end up thinking the platform is broken
When your lifecycle marketing is strong,
Your ads introduce the idea
Lifecycle finishes the job
LTV increases
Acquisition becomes more forgiving
Retention is often what makes paid traffic survivable, and what keeps bigger brands from being in the red.
The Real Job of Lifecycle Marketing
Lifecycle marketing exists to do three things:
Reduce uncertainty
Increase confidence
Make the next purchase feel earned
If your emails and SMS aren’t doing that, they’re noise — no matter how “optimized” they look.
And Now, Here's What This Blog Is About:
This blog exists to break down a few things
Why most lifecycle systems underperform
How high-performing brands structure education
Where funnels and paid traffic actually leak
What to fix first (and what to ignore)
No useless hacks,
No templates without thinking (Every template we recommend is previously A/B tested and proven to perform),
Just systems that compound.
If that’s what you’re looking for, you’re in the right place.
