Why I Set Up a CRM for My Etsy Business (And What It Changed)
Etsy doesn't give you customer emails. No follow-up. No repeat-buyer automation. I fixed this with a landing page, a freebie, and GoHighLevel. Now 23% of my revenue comes from email — here's the exact setup.
Etsy is a walled garden. You run a successful shop for three years, you rack up a thousand customers, and when you look at your email list you have... zero of those customer emails. Etsy keeps them. Not you.
For a long time I was fine with this. Revenue was growing, traffic was coming, I told myself the marketplace did the heavy lifting. Then I started paying attention to what a repeat buyer was worth versus a cold one, and I realized I was leaving a huge amount of money on the table every month.
The problem in concrete terms
Here's what Etsy doesn't give you:
Etsy's internal messaging is not a substitute. Messages get buried, open rates are terrible, and you can't automate anything meaningful.
So my problem was: how do I own my audience while still selling on Etsy?
The setup
I built this over a weekend. It's a landing page that gives away a freebie (in my case, a printable planner page), feeds emails into a CRM, and runs automated sequences.
The stack:
GHL costs $97/month on the starter plan. Pricey, but it replaces three tools I'd otherwise need (email platform, SMS, landing page builder).
The flows I run
1. Welcome sequence (5 emails, spaced over 10 days)
Email 1: Deliver the freebie, introduce myself, one product I love.
Email 2: A behind-the-scenes of how the product is made.
Email 3: A customer story.
Email 4: A soft pitch for a related product with a first-time discount.
Email 5: Ask what else they're interested in (this tags them in the CRM).
This sequence runs on autopilot. 7% of subscribers buy from email 4. Not massive, but it's income I literally was not getting a year ago.
2. Abandoned browse (Etsy pixel + GHL)
This one's clever. I run a retargeting pixel on my landing page that catches Etsy traffic before they bounce. If they don't complete a purchase, they get:
Conversion on this flow is 11%. Etsy's own abandoned cart? Doesn't exist for sellers.
3. Post-purchase review request
Buyer purchases. Fourteen days later they get an email asking about their experience and nudging them toward an Etsy review. Review rate went from 12% to 34% after I built this.
4. Repeat buyer flow
Buyers who've purchased twice get a VIP tag in GHL and a private discount code. Lifetime-value of tagged buyers is 2.8× untagged buyers.
The ROI
Twelve months in:
That's real money that was previously going into Etsy's pocket every time a buyer bounced.
What a landing page actually needs
Mine is dead simple. One column. Above-the-fold:
Below: three testimonials and a short "about me" paragraph. That's it.
I tried fancier pages. They converted worse. The freebie has to be obvious and valuable in the first two seconds.
What to automate first if you're starting
You don't need all four flows day one. If I were starting from scratch, the priority order would be:
Skip building the sophisticated stuff until the foundation is generating revenue.
The bigger point
Etsy's algorithm can change tomorrow. Your listing can get buried for reasons nobody explains. Your shop can get suspended over a dispute. The one thing that isn't at the marketplace's mercy is your email list.
Every Etsy seller I know who's hit consistent six figures has this figured out. Most of the ones stuck at three figures don't. That's not a coincidence.
If you want help building the same setup — landing page, CRM, the full lifecycle — I run this as a done-for-you service here: CRM platform. Or just steal the structure above and build it yourself. Either way, do it before your next big sales month, not after.
Want to talk through your setup?
Book a free call and I'll walk through what would actually move the needle for your shop or business.