Rather than hoping those eager customers find their way back to your site once you replenish your supply, you can easily and effectively notify them with a back-in-stock email.
As the name implies, a back-in-stock email is a message you send after restocking an item to ignite interest and drive sales. You can send back-in-stock emails to your entire audience or to a segment of people who opted in to get notified when a specific product becomes available. Regardless, these little reminders have a huge impact on your brand.
Back-in-stock emails have a whopping 65.32% open rate. That’s the highest of any campaign type (the average email open rate is 20.4%, for context). Conversion rates for back-in-stock emails are impressive, too, clocking in at nearly 15%.
To help you maximize your ROI, we outlined 5 elements every back-in-stock email should have (along with real-life examples).
Get our best content on ecommerce marketing in your inbox 2 times a week
As with any campaign, back-in-stock emails need a subject line that grabs recipients’ attention. Your goal is to get them excited about your restock, but you only have a few seconds to earn that click.
When it comes to copywriting, clear is better than clever. The people receiving this email are familiar with your brand, and they may have even signed up to get notified about this specific product. So you don’t have to over-sell or over-explain yourself. All it takes is a few words to drum up excitement about the restock.
Here are a few standout subject lines you can try:
Notice how all of these subject lines communicate the same simple idea (the product is back in stock) but reinforce it with a sense of urgency or scarcity.
When in doubt, think to yourself: Would I open this email?
Good wordplay is crucial for back-in-stock emails, but it’s not enough. You also need high-quality product photos to create appeal and remind your audience what the product is without having to click through to your store.
Eberjey nailed their product photos after re-introducing their Nordic Stripes collection. Notice how they featured a close-up photo to showcase the details, then added two smaller photos of the entire product below.
Many of the most effective back-in-stock emails tap into the scarcity effect, which is when people place a higher value on something that’s rare or difficult to get ahold of.
Instead of simply telling your customers that your product is back in stock, go for a humble brag and remind them your product sells out quickly. This way, your customers might be more likely to follow through with a quick buy rather than bookmarking it for later.
The apparel brand AYR has mastered the art of creating a sense of urgency with their back-in-stock emails. But not because they’re pushy. It’s because they tell their audience why they sell out so fast.
AYR manufactures their products in small batches, so when they do a drop, it sells out within days. They also cap off their body copy with a blunt statement to make people feel that FOMO: “Waiting sucks.”
Another way to add a sense of urgency to your back-in-stock emails is to include an “order by” date. When Magic Spoon restocked their gingerbread cereal for the holidays, they reminded shoppers to place their order by December 13 to get it before Christmas.
Of course, you want your shoppers to get excited when an item is back in stock, but it’s important to make them feel confident about your product too. That’s where social proof from satisfied customers comes in.
One of the best ways to generate social proof in your emails is by showcasing your best product reviews. This user-generated content takes the pressure off you to promote yourself, plus it reminds shoppers why your product sold out in the first place.
Here’s another example from Magic Spoon, which added three raving reviews at the bottom of their email when they restocked their blueberry flavor:
The takeaway here is to add something that’s unique to your brand, whether that’s a case study, an interesting statistic, or a review that stands out amongst the others.
Your subject line, images, and body copy all lead up to a small but mighty component of your back-in-stock email: your call to action (CTA). It’s easy to rush through this part of your campaign, but perfecting it can give someone the nudge they need to act quickly.
A lot of brands use the standard “buy now” or “shop now” copy for their CTA buttons, so this is an opportunity for you to stand out. One way to do that is by using language that aligns with your brand’s personality. You want your audience to feel like they’re getting a message from a friend, not a sales pitch.
Here’s a fun one from Bark Box: “Spoil My Dog”
In a perfect world, you’d never have to worry about running out of your top-selling products and potentially leaving money on the table. But it happens.
Luckily, back-in-stock emails can recoup some of those would-be sales and even make your brand more desirable in the long run because of the scarcity effect.
Not an email expert? Don’t sweat it. Privy has all the tools and resources you need to send professional emails. Plus, it integrates with Shopify & Wix. Try it free for 15 days and join 600,000+ ecommerce brands.