
Retention strategies in e-commerce often fail because operators prioritize high retention rates without accounting for the complex trade-offs involving customer acquisition cost (CAC), average order value (AOV), and total contribution margin. While subscription models typically boast superior rebuy rates, they frequently mask significantly higher acquisition costs and may eventually see revenue curves converge with one-time purchasers as customers reach product saturation. Data from hypothetical and real-world brands, such as Bobby infant formula, illustrate that lower-retention cohorts can actually generate higher total enterprise value if they offer greater volume or superior upfront margins. Effective growth requires moving beyond simplistic retention percentages to analyze the nonlinear relationship between scale and CAC. Ultimately, the most sustainable path to profitability involves aligning offers with genuine customer needs—such as sample-first models—rather than over-investing in high-LTV segments that may yield diminishing returns at scale.
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