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The Stash Edge · Intelligence Desk MACALLAN 1926

Torrid drives 18% jump in reactivated customers by combining postal mail with mall merchandising

The plus-size apparel brand layered direct mail with in-store offers, proving that old channels still convert when paired with physical product access.

Published June 7, 2026 Source Retail Dive From the chopped neck
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Torrid
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MACALLAN 1926 · June 7, 2026

Torrid drives 18% jump in reactivated customers by combining postal mail with mall merchandising

The plus-size apparel brand layered direct mail with in-store offers, proving that old channels still convert when paired with physical product access.

Torrid sent 1.2 million pieces of postal mail in Q1 2025, targeting lapsed customers with offers tied to in-store events and new arrivals, according to Retail Dive. The brand reported an 18% increase in reactivated customers quarter-over-quarter, crediting the mail campaign's integration with its 600-store mall footprint. CEO Lisa Harper told analysts the company paired mail drops with merchandise refreshes timed to the same week, creating a reason to walk in beyond the coupon.

The mechanics were straightforward: Torrid pulled a segment of customers who hadn't purchased in six to twelve months, mailed them a $10-off postcard with a specific product callout—new denim drops, seasonal tops—and staged those items prominently near store entrances during the mail delivery window. Store teams were briefed on the campaign dates and trained to ask walk-ins if they'd received the mailer. According to the company, one in four reactivated customers who used the mail offer also bought a second, full-price item during the same visit.

This worked because it layered low-cost outbound reach with high-intent physical access. Postal mail has a 90% open rate for discount offers in apparel categories, per the Data & Marketing Association, but most brands fail to connect the mail piece to an immediate, tangible reward. Torrid didn't just send a code—it synchronized inventory placement, store labor, and promotional windows so the customer could touch the product the same week the card arrived. The mall location became the conversion asset, not a separate channel.

The reactivation rate climbed because the offer reduced friction at two decision points: the customer didn't need to search the site or wait for shipping, and the store visit surfaced adjacent product the mailer hadn't mentioned. Torrid's CFO noted that reactivated customers spent 22% more per transaction than typical promotional shoppers, suggesting the mail-to-mall bridge pulled in higher-intent buyers, not just bargain hunters.

A one-person physical-product brand can run the same play without a mall fleet. Pull your last twelve months of customer emails and isolate buyers who haven't returned in four to six months. Design a 4x6 postcard with a single product hero shot—your best-seller or a seasonal launch—and a $5-off or free-shipping code that expires in ten days. Print 500 postcards at $0.40 each through a service like Lob or Printful, and mail them via first-class USPS. Total cost: $200 for postage and print, plus the discount cost on redemptions.

The key is the product callout. Don't write "Come back, we miss you." Write "New insulated tumblers, 20oz, matte black. $5 off, code RETURN10, expires May 15." Link the code to a dedicated landing page with that product at the top and two adjacent cross-sells below it. If you sell at local markets or pop-ups, add the next event date and location to the postcard. The goal is the same as Torrid's: give the customer a specific thing to want and a near-term way to get it, whether online or in person.

Track redemption by code and compare the reactivation rate to email. If postal mail pulls even 8-10% of lapsed customers back, it's cheaper than paid social for that segment. Torrid's result suggests the channel works best when the product is something the customer already knows they like—denim for them, your core SKU for you—and when the offer window is tight enough to force a decision.

The broader pattern: customer reactivation responds to tangibility. A postcard is a physical object that sits on a counter. A mall store is a place you pass on the way to Target. Both interrupt the drift of inattention better than another email in a crowded inbox. Torrid proved you don't need new channels to wake up old customers—you need old channels paired with new product and a reason to move this week.

The takeaway
Postal mail with a product callout and a tight expiration window reactivates lapsed customers faster than email when paired with easy access to inventory.
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customer reactivationdirect mailomnichannelapparelphysical retailtorrid
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