Seasonal Email Marketing: How to Plan Campaigns That Match Customer Intent
Every year, brands scramble to put together a Black Friday campaign on November 20th and wonder why they get crushed by competitors who started planning in September. Seasonal email marketing isn’t about reacting to holidays — it’s about anticipating customer intent before it peaks and building campaigns that meet customers exactly where they are.
The brands that plan seasonal campaigns 6-8 weeks in advance generate 2-3x more revenue from those campaigns compared to brands that wing it. That’s not theory. That’s data from 300+ e-commerce stores we’ve managed through multiple holiday cycles.
Here’s how to build a seasonal email strategy that actually works.
Key Takeaways
- Start planning seasonal campaigns 6-8 weeks before the event for maximum impact
- Customer intent shifts throughout the year — your email strategy should shift with it
- The pre-season warmup phase is where most revenue is actually won
- Post-season follow-up captures 15-25% of additional seasonal revenue that most brands miss
- Segment your seasonal sends by past seasonal behavior, not just general engagement
- Klaviyo’s Smart Send Time and A/B testing features are critical for seasonal optimization
Why Timing Is Everything in Seasonal Marketing
Seasonal marketing works because customer intent is predictable. People start searching for Valentine’s Day gifts in late January. Back-to-school shopping starts in July. Holiday shopping has been creeping into October for years.
The problem is that most brands time their emails to the event itself, not to the intent curve. If you send your first Valentine’s Day email on February 10th, you’re reaching people who have already bought their gifts elsewhere.
The Intent Curve
Every seasonal event follows a predictable pattern:
- Early Awareness (6-8 weeks out): 10-15% of buyers start planning and browsing
- Research Phase (3-5 weeks out): 25-35% are actively comparing options
- Peak Buying (1-2 weeks out): 40-50% of purchases happen here
- Last Minute (final 3-5 days): 15-25% are buying under pressure
- Post-Event (1-2 weeks after): Self-gifters, returns, and gift card redeemers
Your email calendar needs to cover all five phases. Most brands only cover phase 3 and miss 50-60% of the opportunity.
The Month-by-Month E-Commerce Email Calendar
January: New Year, New Customers
Key events: New Year’s, post-holiday sales, wellness/fitness season
Strategy:
- Week 1-2: Post-holiday clearance. Customers who received gift cards are ready to spend. Target gift card purchasers with curated recommendations.
- Week 2-3: “New Year, New You” campaigns work for health, beauty, fitness, home, and apparel brands. Lean into fresh-start messaging.
- Week 3-4: Re-engagement campaign. Holiday buyers who haven’t engaged since December are at risk. Send a winback sequence.
Klaviyo tip: Create a segment of customers who purchased during BFCM/holiday season but haven’t opened an email since January 1. Target them with a “We’ve got new arrivals” campaign.
February: Valentine’s Day + Gift Giving
Key events: Valentine’s Day, Super Bowl
Strategy:
- Week 1 (6+ days before V-Day): Gift guides segmented by recipient (“Gifts for Her,” “Gifts for Him,” “Gifts Under $50”). Start here — 35% of Valentine’s shoppers buy more than a week early.
- Week 2 (Feb 8-12): Urgency on shipping deadlines. “Order by [date] for guaranteed delivery.”
- Feb 13-14: Digital gift cards and last-minute options. This captures panic buyers and represents 20% of Valentine’s revenue.
- Feb 15-16: Self-love / treat-yourself campaign. Post-Valentine’s self-gifting is a $2B+ market.
March-April: Spring + Easter
Key events: St. Patrick’s Day, Easter, spring cleaning, tax refund season
Strategy:
- Spring collection launches aligned with weather changes (use Klaviyo’s location data to time these by region)
- Easter gift campaigns for relevant categories
- Tax refund messaging: “Treat yourself” campaigns in mid-March through mid-April when refunds hit bank accounts
May: Mother’s Day
Key events: Mother’s Day, Memorial Day, graduation season
Strategy:
- 3 weeks before Mother’s Day: Gift guides and bundles
- 2 weeks before: Social proof — “Best-selling gifts for Mom”
- 1 week before: Shipping deadline urgency
- 2-3 days before: Digital gift cards and expedited shipping
- Memorial Day weekend: Kick off summer sales
Mother’s Day is the third-largest spending holiday after Christmas and Back-to-School. Average spend per person is $275. Don’t underestimate it.
June: Father’s Day + Summer
Key events: Father’s Day, start of summer, Pride Month
Strategy:
- Father’s Day follows the same framework as Mother’s Day
- Summer product launches and seasonal transitions
- For relevant brands, Pride Month collections and campaigns (authenticity matters — only do this if it aligns with your brand values)
July-August: Back to School + Summer Sales
Key events: 4th of July, Back-to-School, Prime Day competitor sales
Strategy:
- July 1-4: Summer sale blitz. Independence Day is a strong promotional window.
- Mid-July: Back-to-school campaigns begin. BTS is the second-largest retail event of the year at $130B+ in total spending.
- August: End-of-summer clearance + fall preview campaigns
September-October: Fall Transition + Halloween
Key events: Labor Day, Halloween, fall season
Strategy:
- September: Fall collection launches, cozy-season messaging
- Early October: Halloween campaigns for relevant brands
- Mid-October: BFCM pre-planning starts HERE. Tease upcoming sales, build VIP early-access lists, grow your email list aggressively.
The brands that start building their BFCM email list in October add 15-25% more subscribers before the big event.
November: The Main Event
Key events: BFCM, Thanksgiving, Small Business Saturday
This deserves its own entire strategy (we’ve written one), but the short version:
- Week 1: VIP early access and sneak peeks
- Week 2: Build anticipation with “what’s coming” teasers
- Thanksgiving week: Launch. 2-3 emails per day to engaged segments is normal.
- Black Friday - Cyber Monday: Peak sending. Expect 3-5x normal email revenue.
- Post-BFCM week: Extended deals for non-buyers, thank-you emails for buyers
December: Holiday Season
Key events: Christmas, Hanukkah, New Year’s Eve
Strategy:
- Dec 1-15: Gift guides, curated collections, shipping deadline reminders
- Dec 15-20: Last chance for standard shipping. This is the second revenue peak after BFCM.
- Dec 20-24: Express shipping and digital gift cards only
- Dec 26-31: Post-holiday sale, year-in-review campaigns, New Year’s teasers
The Three-Phase Seasonal Campaign Framework
For every seasonal event, use this three-phase structure.
Phase 1: Warmup (3-4 Weeks Before)
Goal: Build awareness and capture early intent.
- Email 1: Teaser. “Something special is coming for [Holiday].” Build anticipation without revealing everything.
- Email 2: Gift Guide / Collection Preview. Show your seasonal products. Use Klaviyo’s product recommendation blocks to personalize based on browsing and purchase history.
- Email 3: Social Proof. Reviews, ratings, customer photos from last year’s seasonal products.
Sending frequency: 1-2 extra campaigns per week on top of your regular cadence.
Phase 2: Peak (1-2 Weeks Before Through the Event)
Goal: Drive conversions with urgency and relevance.
- Email 1: Main Promotion Launch. Clear offer, clear deadline, clear CTA. No ambiguity.
- Email 2: Reminder + Shipping Deadline. “Order by [date] for guaranteed delivery.”
- Email 3: Last Chance. Final hours messaging. This email typically generates 25-35% of total seasonal campaign revenue.
- Email 4 (for BFCM/major holidays): Extended Sale. “We’re extending through [date].” Captures fence-sitters.
Sending frequency: Daily sends to engaged segments are acceptable during peak seasonal events.
Phase 3: Follow-Up (1-2 Weeks After)
Goal: Maximize post-event revenue and set up future engagement.
- Email 1: Thank You + Cross-Sell. To people who purchased. “Great choice — here’s what goes perfectly with it.”
- Email 2: Post-Season Sale. Clearance on seasonal inventory.
- Email 3: Re-engagement. To people who engaged but didn’t buy. “We noticed you were browsing our [Holiday] collection. Here’s what’s still available.”
Most brands skip Phase 3 entirely. That’s a mistake. Post-seasonal follow-up captures 15-25% of additional revenue.
Segmentation for Seasonal Campaigns
Generic seasonal emails are lazy. Use Klaviyo’s segmentation to create targeted sends.
Segments to Build for Every Seasonal Event
Past Seasonal Buyers
- Definition: Purchased during this same seasonal period last year
- Why: These are your highest-intent audience. They’ve already demonstrated seasonal buying behavior.
- Message: “Back for another year? Here’s what’s new.”
Gift Buyers
- Definition: Have purchased with gift wrapping, shipped to a different address, or bought gift cards
- Why: Their needs are different from self-purchasers. They want curation, convenience, and confidence.
- Message: Gift guides, bundles, and “most-gifted” products.
High-Value Customers
- Definition: Top 20% by lifetime spend or predicted CLV (use Klaviyo’s predictive analytics)
- Why: Give them early access and exclusive offers. They account for 50-60% of seasonal revenue.
- Message: “VIP Early Access: Shop before everyone else.”
New Subscribers (No Purchase)
- Definition: Joined your list in the last 60 days but haven’t purchased
- Why: A seasonal event with a strong offer might be the push they need.
- Message: Lean heavier on social proof and introductory offers.
Lapsed Customers
- Definition: Purchased 90-365 days ago with no recent engagement
- Why: A seasonal event gives you a natural reason to reach out without seeming desperate.
- Message: “It’s been a while — here’s what you’ve missed.”
Optimizing Seasonal Campaign Performance
Subject Lines That Win During Seasonal Peaks
During peak seasons, inbox competition is brutal. Average office workers receive 120+ emails per day during BFCM. Your subject line is everything.
What works:
- Specificity: “25% off our best-selling moisturizer — today only” beats “Holiday Sale Inside”
- Curiosity with a payoff: “The gift they’ll actually use” beats “Gift Guide Inside”
- Urgency with a deadline: “Ships in time for Christmas if you order by midnight” beats “Last Chance!”
- Numbers: Subject lines with specific numbers get 15% higher open rates
What doesn’t:
- ALL CAPS (triggers spam filters and feels desperate)
- Emojis in every send (one or two per season is fine, every email is noise)
- Misleading urgency (“Last chance!” five times in a row trains people to ignore you)
Send Time Optimization
Seasonal send times differ from your regular cadence. During peak events:
- Morning sends (7-9 AM) work best for research-phase emails
- Lunch sends (11 AM-1 PM) work for promotional pushes
- Evening sends (7-9 PM) work for “last chance” and impulse-driven messages
Use Klaviyo’s Smart Send Time feature to automatically optimize delivery for each recipient based on their historical engagement patterns. For seasonal campaigns where timing is critical, this can improve open rates by 10-15%.
A/B Testing During Seasonal Campaigns
High-traffic periods give you enough data to test and iterate quickly.
What to test:
- Subject lines (always — they have the biggest impact)
- Offer structure (percentage off vs. dollar amount vs. free gift)
- Email design (product grid vs. single hero product)
- CTA placement and copy
In Klaviyo, set up A/B tests with a 20% sample size and a 4-hour hold. The winning version goes to the remaining 80%. During a 7-day seasonal campaign, you can run 3-4 meaningful tests.
Measuring Seasonal Campaign Success
Don’t just compare seasonal campaigns to your average campaigns — compare them to last year’s seasonal campaigns. The benchmarks are completely different.
Seasonal benchmarks (for engaged segments):
| Metric | Non-Seasonal Average | Seasonal Peak |
|---|---|---|
| Open Rate | 35-45% | 40-55% |
| Click Rate | 2.5-4% | 3.5-6% |
| RPR | $0.05-$0.10 | $0.15-$0.40 |
| Placed Order Rate | 0.03-0.08% | 0.10-0.25% |
If your seasonal numbers don’t meaningfully exceed your non-seasonal averages, your campaigns aren’t capitalizing on the increased customer intent.
The Bottom Line
Seasonal email marketing isn’t about slapping a pumpkin on your email template in October. It’s a strategic discipline that requires planning, segmentation, and follow-through. The brands that treat seasonal campaigns as a three-phase process — warmup, peak, follow-up — capture 2-3x more revenue than brands that only show up during peak buying windows.
Start planning your next seasonal campaign today. Your competitors already have.
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