These aren’t made-up stories; they’re real voices from D2C founders in the trenches. And they’re not rare exceptions. 8 out of 10 D2C brands silently collapse within just 2 years.
Here’s what’s actually going wrong and how you can sidestep mistakes and sustain your D2C brands.
1. ROAS May Look Good, But Your Bank Account Says Otherwise.
ROAS only shows how efficient your campaign is, and 2.2 to 2.5 ROAS is not the same for all businesses; it changes according to each company's margin. If your product has high margins (say, digital downloads or luxury goods), a 3:1 ROAS might be highly profitable. But if you’re in a low-margin category (like beauty or apparel), even a 5:1 ROAS could still mean you’re barely breaking even or losing money.
To improve your ROAS, focus on targeting your audience with the data, personalize your campaigns, improve your landing pages, and invest in channels that consistently provide higher ROAS.
A Better Approach:
Calculate your true break-even ROAS, including product cost, shipping, COD (cash on delivery) fees, returns, platform charges, and profitability insights. This gives you a realistic view of what you need to earn per dollar spent just to break even and helps avoid spending cash blindly.
Focus on real-time contribution margin, the difference between sales revenue and variable costs, which shows how much money is left over after covering costs like product manufacturing, shipping, and advertising. This reflects your true profit margin before fixed costs and offers a more accurate measure of financial health than vanity metrics like revenue or follower count
Bundle products and run personalized campaigns on your customers preferred channels to raise AOV (Average Order Value) and reduce CAC (Customer Acquisition Cost). By encouraging customers to buy more in a single transaction, you increase revenue per order while keeping your ad costs the same. Which means your business can generate more from each customer using the same ad spend.
Ads can buy clicks, but not customer trust. If your product, brand, or funnel isn’t strong, you're not scaling; you're just burning money and time. Mistakes made in paid ads include chasing ROAS blindly, skipping the creative testing, ignoring post-purchase flows, and scaling too fast.
A Better Approach:
1. Use Paid Ads for Discovery, Not Everything
Ads should introduce your product, not carry your entire business. Use paid ads to drive initial traffic and learn customer behaviour. Once a user clicks on your ad, your brand’s strength and funnel design should take over. This includes trust building, conversion optimization, retention through various channels for effective communication.
2. Retention is Important than Acquisition
Retaining customers is 5x cheaper than acquiring new ones. Leverage marketing automation tools to build segmented email flows based on purchase history or behavior, WhatsApp broadcasts for restocks, events, or special drops, and SMS reminders for abandoned carts and loyalty perks. Think of re-targeting your customers; this fills the gap between acquisition and retention.
3. Invest in Organic Channels
Content Marketing: Build authority and SEO through blogs, guides, and tutorials
Influencer Partnerships: Trust is easily transferred from creators to your brand
Community Building: Loyalty grows in communities (WhatsApp, Instagram Lives)
SEO: Ranking for relevant keywords gives you free, long-term traffic
4. Own Your First-Party Data
With Apple and Google cracking down on third-party cookies, the brands that own their data will win. Focus on growing your email and phone number lists. Tracking behavior through tools available online and creating rich customer profiles to personalize marketing at scale.
5. Avoid Overdependence on One Channel
Don’t rely on a single platform to communicate with your customers; instead, meet them where they prefer to engage. While some customers may only respond to email, others might prefer WhatsApp, SMS, or even Instagram DMs. In many cases, people switch between two to three channels depending on context and convenience. That’s why adopting an omnichannel communication strategy is essential. It helps your brand stay connected throughout the customer journey.
3. The Dark Side Of COD
A beauty brand experienced a 45% return rate on its orders, leading to losses in the thousands. Many customers even claimed, “No one tried delivering.” The core issue? Delivery agents often deprioritize Cash-on-Delivery (COD) orders, as they carry a higher chance of rejection. With no upfront payment, there’s less urgency to fulfill them compared to prepaid orders. But COD doesn’t just increase risk. It inflates costs, clogs operations, and drains brand trust. For fast-moving D2C brands, this can quickly become unsustainable.
A Better Approach:
Limit COD to low-risk regions with lower RTO (Return to Origin) rates.
Use AI-based platforms that flag potentially risky orders using patterns like past cancellations, fake numbers, or suspicious zip codes.
Set up auto-confirmation calls or OTP verification before dispatch to ensure the customer is serious.
Add small prepaid discounts or freebies to encourage online payments.
4. Consistency Is Your Centerpiece
You might have stunning branding, but if your product pages, ads, and checkout experience don't match that energy, trust breaks instantly. The result? Clicks but no conversions. Make sure that your hard work is being paid off by being consistent with your customers.
A Better Approach:
Keep it consistent: Your ads, landing page, and checkout flow should have the same tone, visuals, and value proposition. Instead of relying on one or two creatives, use AI tools to quickly generate multiple ad variations, each tailored to different audiences that still align with your brand’s tone and goals. Then do the A/B testing to see what actually resonates with your audience
Build trust fast: Add real reviews, trust badges, delivery timelines, and return policies right on the product page.
Fix the leaks: Audit your funnel regularly to spot and plug drop-off points, from slow-loading pages to confusing checkout steps.
5. CAC-LTV: The Foundation For Any D2C
At first, acquiring customers is cheaper thanks to organic buzz and early excitement. But as you grow, your Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) climbs. CAC is what you spend to get a new customer (ads, promotions, marketing). If your Lifetime Value (LTV) (the total revenue a customer brings over time) doesn’t grow alongside it, you're bleeding capital. Customers need to come back, not just buy once. Repeat purchases are what can turn a one-time buyer into a profitable relationship. Long-term sustainability depends on increasing LTV to offset rising CAC
A Better Approach:
Know your average 3-month and 6-month LTV to understand actual value per customer, not just day-one revenue.
Introduce subscription models, loyalty points, or upsells to boost repeat rates. Focus on customer retention, not just acquisition.
6. Let your customers be your mentors
Many brands skip customer discovery and end up solving problems assumed by themselves. Assumptions kill more startups than bad ideas. Customer research is the gateway for any D2C brand. Be empathetic and build what’s actually needed.
A Better Approach:
Talk to your customers: Use interviews and surveys; use engagement tools like WhatsApp workflows or behavior tracking and post-purchase surveys for structured, scalable feedback
Email feedback loops: Ask open-ended questions in thank-you emails or follow-ups to learn what they loved, what confused them, or what could be better
Test offers, not just products: Validate what people are willing to buy before you scale.
Co-create with your community: Involve early customers in feedback loops; they'll help you shape something people actually want.
7. Be Present Even After Past Purchase
For the first few days, D2C brands focus on bringing in new customers; they focus on all aspects of running paid ads. Launch offers. Set up landing pages. Obsess over ROAS and then go silent. Once the customer buys, there is no follow-up, no thank-you email, no SMS, and no loyalty building. In reality, the first sale is just the start of the customer journey. What happens next defines the profitability. Without the retention flow, you're constantly paying to acquire new customers...while completely ignoring the leads already in the system. That means there is no second purchase, no word-of-mouth growth, no customer lifetime value, and no brand loyalty.
A Better Approach:
This is where marketing automation becomes your silent growth partner. It helps you to create and send automated emails, SMS, and retargeting flows can re-engage customers, upsell, and nurture loyalty.
Offer surprise gifts or next-order discounts.
Ask for feedback and UGC.
Recover missed sales with abandoned cart emails.
Build Memories, Not Just Thoughts
In a world that moved from room-sized computers to nanometers, D2C is no different; the landscape shifts fast, and brands must adapt even faster. But failure isn’t inevitable; it’s often the result of blind spots, not bad products.
If you focus only on ROAS, ignore retention, or scale without knowing your numbers, you risk becoming part of the 80% that quietly disappear.
But if you prioritize contribution margin and invest in customer relationships instead of just paid reach, your brand will thrive in the long run.
Treat every customer like a long-term asset. Let real data, not assumptions, guide decisions.
You're not just building a D2C brand that stays afloat; you're growing one with roots like the sacred fig, strong enough to stand the test of time.
Desperate times call for desperate Google/Chat GPT searches, right? "Best Shopify apps for sales." "How to increase online sales fast." "AI tools for ecommerce growth."
Been there. Done that. Installed way too many apps. But here's what nobody tells you while you're doom-scrolling through Shopify app reviews at 2 AM—that magical online sales-boosting app you're searching for? It doesn't exist. Because if it did, Jeff Bezos would've bought (or built!) it yesterday, and we (fellow eCommerce store owners) would all be retired in Bali by now. Growing a Shopify store and increasing online sales isn’t easy—we get it. While everyone’s out chasing the next “revolutionary” tool/trend (looking at you, DeepSeek), the real revenue drivers are probably hiding in plain sight—right there inside your customer data. After working with Shopify stores like yours (shoutout to Cybele, who recovered almost 25% of their abandoned carts with WhatsApp automation), we’ve cracked the code on what actually moves the needle. Ready to stop app-hopping and start actually growing your sales by using what you already have? Here are four fixes that will get you there!
The Painful Truth: You're probably losing about 70% of your potential sales to cart abandonment. That's not just a statistic—it's real money walking out of your digital door. And looking for yet another Shopify app for abandoned cart recovery isn't going to fix it if you're not getting the fundamentals right.
The Quick Fix: Everyone knows you need multi-channel recovery that hits the sweet spot between "Hey, did you forget something?" and "PLEASE COME BACK!" But here's the reality—most recovery apps are a one-trick pony. They either do email OR WhatsApp, not both. And don't even get us started on personalizing offers based on cart value—that usually means toggling between three different dashboards while praying your apps talk to each other.
Enter ZEPIC: This is where we come in. With ZEPIC's automated Flows, you can: Launch WhatsApp recovery messages (with 95% open rates!) Set up perfectly timed email sequences (or vice versa) Create personalized recovery offers not just on cart value but based on your customer’s behavior/preferences Track and optimize everything from one dashboard
Fix #2: Reactivate past customers today
The Painful Truth: You're probably losing about 70% of your potential sales to cart abandonment. That's not just a statistic—it's real money walking out of your digital door. And looking for yet another Shopify app for abandoned cart recovery isn't going to fix it if you're not getting the fundamentals right.
The Quick Fix: Everyone knows you need multi-channel recovery that hits the sweet spot between "Hey, did you forget something?" and "PLEASE COME BACK!" But here's the reality—most recovery apps are a one-trick pony. They either do email OR WhatsApp, not both. And don't even get us started on personalizing offers based on cart value—that usually means toggling between three different dashboards while praying your apps talk to each other.
Enter ZEPIC: This is where we come in. With ZEPIC's automated Flows, you can: Launch WhatsApp recovery messages (with 95% open rates!) Set up perfectly timed email sequences (or vice versa) Create personalized recovery offers not just on cart value but based on your customer’s behavior/preferences Track and optimize everything from one dashboard
Offering light at the end of the tunnel is Google’s Privacy Sandbox which seeks to ‘create a thriving web ecosystem that is respectful of users and private by default’. Like the name suggests, your Chrome browser will take the role of a ‘privacy sandbox’ that holds all your data (visits, interests, actions etc) disclosing these to other websites and platforms only with your explicit permission. If not yet, we recommend testing your websites, audience relevance and advertising attribution with Chrome’s trial of the Privacy Sandbox.
Top 3 impacts of the third-party cookie phase-out
Who’s impacted
How
What next
Digital advertising and acquisition teams
Lack of cookie data results in drastic fall in website traffic and conversion rate
Review all cookie-based audience acquisition. Sign up for Chrome’s trial of the Privacy Sandbox
Digital Customer Experience
Customers are not served relevant, personalised experiences: on the web, over social channels and communication media
Multiply efforts to collect first-party customer data. Implement a Customer Data Platform
Security, Privacy and Compliance teams
Increased scrutiny from regulators and questions from customers about data storage and usage
Review current cookie and communication consent management, ensure to align with latest privacy regulations