The abandoned cart sequence is table stakes for any Shopify brand running Klaviyo. And yet most of them read exactly the same way: your cart is waiting for you, here’s what you left behind, here’s 10% off if you come back now. Functional. Forgettable. Often slightly embarrassing for a brand that has worked hard to build an elevated identity.
The issue is not the mechanic — abandoned cart emails do recover revenue, and they should exist. The issue is that most brands treat them as a pure conversion tool and neglect that they are also a brand moment. Every touchpoint either builds or erodes perception.
Email one: frictionless, not urgent. The first email, sent within an hour or so of abandonment, should be practical and calm. You left something behind. Here’s an easy way to come back. No manufactured urgency, no “limited time” language for something that isn’t actually limited. The tone should match your brand voice, not a generic retail playbook.
Email two: address the objection, not just the behavior. If someone abandoned their cart, they had a reason. Email two is an opportunity to be useful: speak to your return policy, your quality guarantee, answer the most common pre-purchase question your customer service team hears. Help them make a decision rather than pressuring them into one.
Email three: give them something to return to. Social proof, a customer story, a specific detail about what makes the product worth owning. This email earns the conversion rather than pushing for it. If you offer a discount at this stage, it should feel like a genuine offer, not a last-ditch attempt to close.
Discounting in every abandoned cart flow is not a requirement. Many brands recover a significant percentage of abandoned carts without ever offering a discount, simply by having better copy and a more human sequence. Start with zero discount and test from there.
