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Business & Industry

E-Commerce for Roasters

E-commerce and subscription models have transformed how coffee roasters reach consumers. This guide covers platform selection, subscription strategy, fulfillment logistics, and the digital marketing fundamentals that drive online coffee sales.

3 min read

Selling Coffee Online

The direct-to-consumer coffee market has grown dramatically, accelerated by changing consumer habits and the rise of specialty coffee culture. For roasters, e-commerce provides higher margins than wholesale, direct customer relationships, and valuable data about preferences and buying patterns.

Platform Selection

Shopify

The dominant platform for coffee e-commerce. Advantages:

  • Subscription apps: ReCharge, Bold Subscriptions, and Seal Subscriptions integrate directly
  • POS integration: Unified inventory across online and physical retail
  • Ecosystem: Thousands of apps for email marketing, reviews, loyalty programs
  • Scalability: Handles high-volume sale events without custom infrastructure

Cost: $39-399/month plus transaction fees (2.4-2.9% + $0.30)

WooCommerce

WordPress-based alternative offering more customization:

  • Full control: Open source, self-hosted, complete code access
  • Lower fees: No platform transaction fees (only payment processor fees)
  • Flexibility: Build exactly the features you need
  • Complexity: Requires technical maintenance, hosting management, security updates

Best for roasters with technical capability or a dedicated web developer.

Square Online

Simplified option for cafe-roasters already using Square POS:

  • Integrated: Same inventory, customer database, and reporting as in-store
  • Simple setup: Less customizable but faster to launch
  • Lower cost: Free plan available; paid plans from $29/month

Subscription Models

Subscriptions are the holy grail of coffee e-commerce — recurring revenue, predictable demand, reduced marketing cost per order, and stronger customer lifetime value.

Types

Fixed subscription: Customer receives the same coffee on a set schedule (every 2 weeks, monthly). Simple to manage, predictable for production planning.

Roaster's choice: Curated selection changes each delivery. Higher perceived value, showcases range, builds trust in the roaster's palate. More complex operationally.

Build your own: Customer customizes coffee selection, grind, quantity, and frequency. Maximum flexibility but highest churn risk (decision fatigue).

Key Metrics

Metric Healthy Target
Subscriber churn rate <8% monthly
Customer lifetime value (LTV) >$200
Average order value >$30
Subscription as % of revenue 30-60%
Reactivation rate (paused→active) >25%

Reducing Churn

  • Pause vs. cancel: Make pausing easy; many "cancelers" just need a break
  • Skip option: Allow skipping next shipment without canceling
  • Personalization: Track preferences and adjust recommendations
  • Freshness communication: Reinforce that coffee was roasted specifically for their shipment
  • Community: Tasting notes, origin stories, brewing tips with each shipment

Fulfillment

In-House

Most small roasters handle fulfillment internally:

  • Roast-to-order: Roast after orders come in, maximizing freshness. Requires 1-3 day processing time.
  • Batch roasting + stock: More efficient for popular SKUs, allows same-day shipping
  • Shipping supplies: Stock bags, mailers, labels, tape. Budget $1.50-3.00 per package for materials

Third-Party Logistics (3PL)

Larger roasters may use fulfillment centers:

  • Handle storage, packing, and shipping
  • Faster delivery through distributed warehouses
  • Cost: $3-8 per order plus storage fees
  • Loss of "roasted with love" personal touch

Shipping

  • USPS Priority Mail: Best value for 12-16 oz packages within the US
  • UPS/FedEx Ground: Competitive for heavier orders (2+ bags)
  • Free shipping threshold: Set at a level that encourages larger orders ($35-50 typical)
  • Freshness guarantee: Consider inserts or messaging about shelf life, storage instructions

Digital Marketing

Email Marketing

The highest-ROI channel for coffee e-commerce:

  • Welcome series: 3-5 emails introducing brand, brewing tips, and subscription CTA
  • Post-purchase: Thank you, brewing guide for purchased coffee, review request
  • Winback: Re-engage lapsed customers with exclusive offers
  • New release announcements: Build anticipation for seasonal or limited coffees

Platforms: Klaviyo (best for Shopify), Mailchimp, or ConvertKit.

SEO and Content

  • Product descriptions: Detailed flavor notes, origin stories, processing information
  • Brewing guides: How-to content that ranks for informational keywords
  • Origin content: Stories about farmers and regions that build brand narrative
  • Coffee education: "What is single origin?" style content for top-of-funnel traffic

Social Media

Instagram remains the primary social channel for coffee brands:

  • Behind-the-scenes roasting content
  • Latte art and brew showcases
  • Origin trip photography
  • Customer reposts and reviews

TikTok increasingly drives discovery, especially for visually engaging brewing content.

  • Meta (Facebook/Instagram): Best for subscription acquisition. Target lookalike audiences based on existing customers.
  • Google Ads: Capture intent-based searches ("buy specialty coffee online," "coffee subscription")
  • Customer acquisition cost (CAC): Target $15-30. Sustainable only if LTV exceeds 3x CAC.

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