The Situation
American Discount Foods had been losing sales year over year for multiple years. Their entire digital presence was a single-page coupon site with no tracking, no email program, no paid advertising, and no strategy connecting any of it.
This was not a case of underperforming campaigns. There was nothing to underperform. Digital simply did not exist as a growth channel for the business, and reversing the decline meant building one from scratch rather than optimizing what already existed.
The Primary Challenge
Traffic alone was not going to fix this.
The business was missing every piece of infrastructure that makes traffic valuable: no conversion-focused website, no lifecycle communication, no mechanism to bring customers back after their first visit, and no funnel for paid media to feed into. Without that foundation, any single tactic would have generated activity without producing results.
Key Outcomes
- 8% year-over-year sales decline reversed to a 40% increase, a 48-point swing
- Email built from zero into a core retention channel
- Weekly subscriber-only coupon program created a recurring reason for customers to return
- Paid media on Meta and TikTok launched into a system already built to convert and retain
- Analytics and event tracking established across the website, email, and paid media channels
Our Approach
We treated this as a ground-up rebuild with a deliberate sequence: website and tracking first, retention second, paid acquisition third. Each layer was built to support the next one rather than asking one channel to carry the entire turnaround.
Execution Highlights
Website: Rebuilt from Scratch
The one-page coupon site was replaced with a fully rebuilt, conversion-optimized website designed around clarity and usability. Analytics and event tracking were implemented so every decision going forward could be based on real data, and every downstream channel had something reliable to build on.
Email: Built the Entire Lifecycle
There was no email program, so we created one from zero: welcome flows, location-based flows, post-purchase follow-ups, and re-engagement sequences. New subscribers received store-specific offers, first-time buyers were routed into follow-up messaging, and inactive customers were pulled back in with weekly subscriber-only promotions. Email went from nonexistent to a consistent revenue and retention channel.
Weekly Subscriber-Only Coupons: The Retention Engine
Instead of generic coupons with no strategy behind them, we built a recurring exclusive coupon program tied to the email list. Subscribers had a clear reason to stay subscribed, open their emails, and walk back into the store every week. This became the centerpiece of the retention system and a consistent driver of repeat visits.
Paid Media: Launched Into a System That Was Ready
Paid media was not activated until the funnel was in place. Once it was, we launched Meta and TikTok campaigns into a system already designed to convert, capture, and retain. Acquisition spend worked from day one because it was feeding infrastructure, not replacing it.
Results
American Discount Foods went from an 8% year-over-year sales decline to a 40% increase in sales, a 48-point swing driven by every part of the system working together.
Email became a core retention channel, with the weekly subscriber-only coupon program giving customers a consistent reason to return. Paid media on Meta and TikTok handled acquisition, while the website and email program gave that traffic somewhere useful to go next. The website stopped leaking traffic and started contributing to revenue.
Constraints We Navigated
- Multiple years of declining sales momentum, meaning every decision carried real urgency
- Zero existing digital infrastructure, requiring every component to be built before any channel could launch
- Sequencing had to remain disciplined despite pressure to activate spend quickly and show results
The system worked because the build sequence was protected, not rushed. Urgency shaped the pace. It did not override the process.
Strategic Takeaway
Growth systems fail when acquisition is prioritized before infrastructure.
The website gave paid media somewhere to send people. Email gave the business a way to bring them back. The weekly coupon program gave subscribers a reason to return every week. Paid media amplified all of it. Each layer made the next one more effective, and that compounding is what produced the 48-point swing, not any single tactic in isolation.
When conversion, retention, and tracking are in place first, paid acquisition becomes a multiplier instead of a cost center.












