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An email wishlist reminder is an automated message sent to shoppers who saved specific items for later but haven’t bought them yet. Instead of blasting generic newsletters, your store’s backend acts like a digital concierge. It monitors the exact products a customer “favorited” and automatically emails them when a price drops, an item restocks, or inventory runs low. This highly personalized approach perfectly bridges the gap between casual browsing and a completed sale.
To truly grasp how this strategy grows your store, you need to understand both the psychology of your shoppers and the technology running behind the scenes. In modern e-commerce, shoppers suffer from heavy decision fatigue. Adding an item to a cart creates immediate mental friction. The shopper suddenly has to think about spending money, paying for shipping, and navigating a checkout screen.
A wishlist removes all of this pressure. It allows the customer to get the fun, rewarding feeling of shopping without the immediate financial commitment. This creates what psychologists call a “micro-commitment.” Once a user makes a tiny commitment by actively saving a product, they feel a subconscious pull to stay consistent with that action. This makes them incredibly open to future emails about that specific item.
When your store sends a reminder, it taps into powerful behavioral triggers. If you send a low-stock warning, you trigger a genuine fear of missing out because the scarcity is backed by real inventory numbers. If you send a price-drop alert, you tap into the shopper’s desire to get a great deal.
Making this happen requires your store’s database and your email platform to talk to each other seamlessly. When a user clicks your “Add to Wishlist” button, your site sends an AJAX request.
Think of an AJAX request like a silent hand signal to a bartender. You can order another drink without stopping your conversation or leaving your table. In your store, AJAX lets the shopper save an item to the database without forcing the web page to reload and interrupt their shopping.
To make sure the shopper doesn’t lose their list, your store uses session cookies or local browser storage.
Think of a session cookie like a digital sticky note attached to the shopper’s browser. It remembers exactly what they liked, even if they wander away.
Finally, your store relies on webhooks to tell your email platform when to send a message.
Think of a webhook like a restaurant pager. Instead of walking up to the host stand every five minutes to ask if your table is ready (which wastes time and energy), you just wait. The pager buzzes you the exact second your table is free. A webhook does the exact same thing; it pushes an instant alert to your email software the exact second a price drops.
Imagine a mid-sized outdoor apparel brand that sells premium hiking jackets and boots. This store gets roughly 100,000 user sessions every month. Based on the standard e-commerce conversion rate of 2.5%, about 2,500 of those visits turn into an immediate, on-the-spot purchase.
But what about the other 97,500 sessions? Most of those shoppers naturally leave. A massive 70.19% of them will abandon their carts entirely. Many leave because they are just browsing, while 26% leave because they hate being forced to create an account.
To capture this lost revenue, the brand installs a guest-friendly wishlist feature. They do not force anyone to make an account. Thanks to this low-friction setup, they successfully capture 5,000 saved items from those browsing users.
Now, the automated reminder system goes to work. When the store runs a seasonal sale and drops the price on several hiking jackets, the system automatically emails the specific users who saved those exact jackets. Over time, following the industry benchmark of a 10.5% wishlist-to-sale conversion rate, the brand pulls approximately 525 of those saved items back through the checkout funnel.
By simply capturing top-of-funnel intent and patiently waiting to send automated price-drop alerts, the store creates a massive secondary revenue stream out of thin air. They didn’t have to pay for more ads; they just smartly recycled the traffic they already had.
While both are automated emails designed to recover lost sales, they target entirely different stages of the buyer’s journey.
Cart abandonment shows incredibly high intent. When a shopper puts an item in their cart, they are telling you they are ready to buy right now. If they leave, it is almost always due to friction. In fact, 48% of people abandon carts because of unexpectedly high shipping costs or taxes, and 16% leave because they couldn’t see the total upfront. Because intent is so high, cart recovery emails are aggressive. You typically send the first one within 30 to 60 minutes, and another at 24 hours.
Wishlist abandonment is actually a fake term; the user didn’t abandon anything, they just postponed it. A wishlist shows medium intent. The shopper is using your site to curate items, plan a budget, or wait for a discount. Because their timeline is longer, your email strategy must be patient. You might not send a wishlist reminder for six months. You only send it when a backend event—like a price drop—happens to solve the shopper’s reason for waiting.
Like any powerful e-commerce tool, building a wishlist system comes with incredible financial benefits and a few strategic risks.
Absolutely not, and doing so will actively hurt your store. Research shows that forcing account creation drives away about 26% of shoppers. The best practice is to use a “Guest Wishlist.” This stores the saved items in a temporary cookie on the user’s browser. Later, when they show enough interest, a simple pop-up can ask for just their email address to save the list permanently, skipping the hassle of full passwords and registration.
They represent two totally different mindsets. A shopping cart is a transactional tool; buyers use it when they want to buy today. If they leave, they hit a roadblock like a high shipping fee. A wishlist is a planning tool; buyers use it to bookmark things for later because they are waiting for a payday or a sale. You should email cart abandoners quickly (within hours), but you should only email wishlist users when a specific event happens, like a price drop.
You connect them using an API (Application Programming Interface).
Think of an API like a bilingual translator helping two people who speak different languages talk to each other seamlessly. When an app like Swym or Wishlist Hero spots a price drop, it uses a webhook to push a JSON payload over to Klaviyo.
Think of a JSON payload like a standard shipping label. It neatly packages the product image, price, and customer email so Klaviyo knows exactly how to read it. Inside Klaviyo, you set up a flow that listens for that specific metric, automatically drops the product details into a template, and sends the email.
Email wishlist reminders transform your static product catalog into an active, revenue-generating engine. By giving shoppers a low-pressure way to save items and using automated tech to notify them of price drops and restocks, you capture future sales that would otherwise be lost to the internet forever.
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