A skincare brand I know spent six months and significant budget building an acquisition funnel that was genuinely working. New customers were converting well. The product was good. Reviews were strong. And yet at month nine, revenue had plateaued. New customers were coming in but the customer base wasn't compounding the way the founder expected.
When we looked at the data, the answer was visible in one number: their 90-day repeat purchase rate was 18%. For a daily-use cleanser, that means 82% of customers who liked the product enough to buy it once hadn't bought it again within three months. Some would return later. Many wouldn't.
This is more common than most beauty founders realise, and it rarely shows up in the moment - only in the aggregate, months later, when growth feels harder than it should.
The Post-Purchase Silence
The most common place repeat purchase is lost is the first four weeks after delivery. The customer receives the product. If it lands nicely - good packaging, maybe a card - there's a moment of brand warmth. And then for most brands, nothing. No further communication until a promotional email two months later.
In that four-week window, the customer is forming a habit. Or not. Whether a beauty product becomes part of a routine is largely determined in the first fortnight of use. If the customer isn't sure when to use it, how much to use, or what results to expect and when, the product goes into a drawer. Once it's in a drawer, the relationship is effectively over.
Post-purchase communication during this window doesn't need to be elaborate. A three-email sequence - day three, day ten, day twenty-one - that covers how to use the product, what to expect in the first few weeks, and what real customers have noticed, can move repeat purchase rates meaningfully. The content exists already in most cases. It's in the product copy, the founder story, the FAQ page. It just needs to be sequenced and sent.
The Replenishment Blind Spot
For products with a known usage cycle - a 30ml serum that runs out in six weeks, a body oil that lasts roughly four weeks if used daily - there is a precise window when the customer is about to run out. This is the highest-intent moment in the customer lifecycle, and most brands miss it entirely.
A replenishment prompt at day 35 for a 6-week product lands when the customer is starting to think about running out. At day 42, they may have already bought from a competitor or switched to something else from a retailer. The window is real and relatively narrow.
The data to calculate this is available from your product and average order data. The execution is simple: a single well-timed email or SMS, product-focused, low-friction reorder. The brands that do this consistently see repeat purchase lift of 10 to 20 percentage points on the products where they run it.
When the Second Product Doesn't Exist in Their Mind
A second failure mode is customers who genuinely like the brand but have no clear path to a second product. They bought the cleanser. They don't know what else to buy next, or whether it's relevant to them.
This is a product discovery problem that lives at the intersection of post-purchase sequencing and on-site experience. After a customer has been using a product for three weeks and is presumably seeing some benefit, they're the most receptive they'll ever be to a complementary recommendation. A "what to try next" email at day 21 - paired with clear rationale for how product two complements product one - converts well and increases customer lifetime value significantly.
This requires knowing your product pairing logic and communicating it clearly. Not "you might also like" with a grid of six products, but "if you've been using the cleanser daily, this is why founders add the serum at week three and what it does differently."
The Loyalty Programme Misconception
Many brands reach for a points-based loyalty programme as the answer to retention. Sometimes it's the right answer. More often it's a symptom of not having addressed the underlying retention problem.
Points programmes work well for brands with high purchase frequency and a wide product range, where accumulating and redeeming points is genuinely relevant to the customer's behaviour. For a skincare brand with four to eight products and a monthly-ish replenishment cycle, a points programme adds administrative complexity without addressing the real issue: customers aren't coming back because they haven't embedded the product in their routine, not because there's insufficient reward.
Fixing the post-purchase experience - the communication sequence, the replenishment timing, the product discovery path - costs far less to build and moves the needle faster. Points programmes can come later, once the baseline of routine-building and replenishment is solid.