The single most important variable in win-back campaign effectiveness is how long the member has been lapsed. A member who cancelled 60 days ago has a fundamentally different psychological relationship to the decision than a member who cancelled 18 months ago. The 60-day window: the cancellation is recent, the routine is still partially intact, and the reasons are likely situational (injury, travel, work pressure). Re-entry messaging can be soft and reconnection-focused. The 6-month window: the member has established a new routine without the gym. Re-entry requires addressing the psychological distance β why they left, what's changed, why now makes sense. The 12+ month window: the member may no longer identify as 'a fitness person.' Re-entry messaging needs to be identity-based and needs to offer a low-risk way back (a free week, not a discounted month). Build separate win-back sequences for each duration bucket and calibrate the messaging to the psychological distance.
Average win-back email open rates for fitness: 25β35% for members lapsed 30β90 days, 15β22% for 90β180 days, 8β14% for 180+ days. Reactivation rates (members who actually return): 10β20% for the 30β90 day window, 5β10% for 90β180 days, 2β5% for 180+ days. These benchmarks assume segmented, relevant messaging β not a single mass email to all lapsed members.
Win-back messaging that acknowledges the likely reason for cancellation outperforms generic 'we miss you' emails significantly. Most gym cancellations fall into predictable categories: scheduling conflict (class times no longer work), financial pressure, injury or health issue, motivation collapse, or relocation. Your gym management platform's cancellation reason field (if you collect it) is the most valuable data point for personalizing win-back messaging. A member who cancelled due to price sensitivity gets a message about a new value tier or a reactivation offer. A member who cancelled due to scheduling gets a message about new class times or on-demand options. A member who cancelled without a specific reason gets the general reconnection sequence. In ActiveCampaign, cancellation reason is stored as a custom field populated from the Mindbody cancellation event, and conditional branches in the win-back workflow route each former member into the appropriate messaging track.
THE WIN-BACK SEQUENCE STRUCTUREThe most effective gym win-back sequences run three touches over 3β4 weeks. Touch one (day 1): pure reconnection β no offer, no pressure. Acknowledge the gap without making the member feel judged. Reference something specific and genuine about the studio β a new class format, a team milestone, a seasonal challenge that's coming up. Include a single, low-friction CTA: 'Come back for a free class this week. No commitment.' Touch two (day 8): value reinforcement with a mild incentive. If touch one didn't convert, introduce a specific reason to return now β a new program launch, a seasonal challenge, or a referral-based return offer (bring a friend and both train free this week). Touch three (day 15): the final door-closer. A direct, warm message that acknowledges this is the last time you'll reach out about this specifically β 'We won't keep reaching out, but we wanted to try one more time.' Include your best reactivation offer at this touch, and make the CTA extremely easy to act on: a pre-built booking link, not a generic 'contact us.'
Leading with a discount in touch one immediately signals desperation and commoditizes your membership. Former members who see an immediate 30% off offer learn that your standard price isn't real. They'll wait for the next offer before returning β and they'll shop around for who offers more. Earn the reconnection first. Make the offer in touch three if needed.
Former members who don't respond to the primary three-touch sequence move to a quarterly long-term win-back cadence rather than being abandoned. Life changes β a former member who cancelled due to a new work schedule may have that schedule change 6 months later. A former member who left due to cost may have their financial situation shift. A quarterly 'we thought of you' email to your cold former-member list β not promotional, just a genuine studio update with a soft invitation β keeps the door open without being aggressive. Former members who open this email can be automatically re-scored and moved back into an active win-back sequence. This passive ongoing program consistently produces 2β3 reactivations per quarter from members who otherwise would never have returned.
A studio with 300 former members receiving quarterly win-back emails at a 2% quarterly reactivation rate recovers 6 memberships per year from zero additional acquisition spend. At $80/month dues and 12-month average tenure post-reactivation, that's $5,760 in annual recurring revenue from a single automated quarterly email sequence.
Not every former member should receive win-back messaging. Build explicit suppression rules for: members who have unsubscribed from all email communication (legal requirement, not optional), members who cancelled due to a documented negative experience (a complaint, a refund dispute, a trainer conflict β win-back messaging to this segment is more likely to damage than repair), members who explicitly asked not to be contacted, and members who have moved out of your service area (if you collected location data at cancellation). In ActiveCampaign, these suppressions are managed through exclusion lists, status fields, and contact tags. Review and update suppression rules quarterly β a member who moved away two years ago may have returned to the area.
Start by exporting lapsed members from Mindbody or Glofox, segmented by cancellation date. Import into ActiveCampaign with lapse duration and cancellation reason as custom fields. Build separate win-back automation sequences for each lapse duration bucket (30β90 days, 90β180 days, 180+ days). Configure the three-touch sequence for each bucket with messaging calibrated to the psychological distance. Set goal-based exits for members who re-enroll. Move non-responders after touch three to a passive quarterly win-back cadence. Apply suppression rules for unsubscribes, complaint histories, and out-of-area contacts before launching.
For members lapsed 30β90 days with a well-segmented, personalized three-touch sequence: 10β20% reactivation rate. For members lapsed 90β180 days: 5β10%. For members lapsed 180+ days: 2β5%. These are industry benchmarks for studios running genuinely segmented, behaviorally relevant messaging. Generic 'we miss you' blasts to all former members typically produce 1β3% reactivation regardless of lapse duration. The segmentation is where the additional reactivation rate comes from β it's not magic copywriting, it's sending the right message to the right former member at the right point in their post-cancellation journey.
Sparingly and strategically. Lead with reconnection and value in the first two touches β no discount. Introduce an offer only in the third touch if the member hasn't re-engaged. When you do offer a discount, make it time-limited and specific: 'Free first week if you come back before [date]' outperforms 'First month at 30% off' because it lowers the decision threshold without immediately anchoring the member's price expectation to a discounted rate. The goal of the discount is to get them back through the door, not to lock in a lower monthly rate.
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