Dan Bond is VP of Marketing at RevLifter, an eCommerce technology company helping retailers optimize conversions through intelligent promotional offers. Working with eCommerce brands as diverse as Laithwaites, Club L London, and Radley.
In this episode, Dan explains why most brands are leaving money on the table with blanket discounts and reactive promotions. He shares how to build a smarter promotion strategy that increases conversion and average order value while protecting your margins.
Dive in:
[05:39] When promotions go wrong
[06:57] Setting a discount strategy
[10:49] Strategic discounting and incentives
[13:46] Adapting to external changes
[17:01] Helping retailers with managed services
[22:18] Driving sales with add-ons
[24:34] Insider Tips from Dan!
Treat discounts as a strategy, not a last-minute tactic
Most eCommerce brands use discounts as a quick fix when sales dip. That approach leads to wasted margin and poor long-term results. Instead, you need a clear plan for when and why you discount. Decide who should see offers, which products qualify, and what level of discount makes sense. This helps you stay in control of your brand and profitability. A simple strategy beats random promotions every time.
Measure deeper than revenue and conversion rate
It’s easy to focus on top-line metrics like revenue and conversion rate. But these numbers can hide real problems. A promotion may boost sales while hurting your margins or attracting low-value customers. You need to track metrics like profit, customer lifetime value, and incremental lift. Always ask: would this sale have happened without the discount? Better measurement leads to better decisions and stronger growth.
Test, personalize, and optimize continuously
There is no “set and forget” promotion strategy. What works today may not work next month. You should test different offers, audiences, and timings on a regular basis. Use customer behavior to personalize offers instead of giving the same deal to everyone. For example, target exit-intent users or increase basket size with spend thresholds. Small, ongoing improvements can drive big gains over time.
Takeaways:
Find the notes here: https://keepopt.com/301