Winter Storage Messaging — Crazy Lenny's
Overview
During the November 2025 marketing review, Steve Lindenau flagged that an outgoing winter storage email used the subject/headline phrasing "Last Call for Winter Storage." This was revised to "Reminder: Winter Storage" before the email was sent.
The change reflects a broader principle: avoid urgency language that implies a deadline when no real deadline exists.
The Problem with "Last Call"
"Last Call" implies the service is ending soon — creating a false deadline. For Crazy Lenny's, winter bike storage is an ongoing, always-available service with no cutoff date. Using deadline language risks:
- Eroding trust if customers later discover storage is still available after the "last call"
- Suppressing sign-ups from customers who miss the implied window and assume they're too late
- Misrepresenting the offer, which is particularly problematic when weather conditions (e.g., an unseasonably warm November) mean customers aren't yet thinking about storage
Steve noted that at the time of the meeting, temperatures were still in the low 50s — customers weren't in a winter mindset yet, making a false urgency message even less effective.
The Fix
| Before | After |
|---|---|
| "Last Call for Winter Storage" | "Reminder: Winter Storage" |
"Reminder" accurately frames the message as informational — a helpful nudge — rather than a closing-time alarm. It keeps the door open for customers who aren't ready yet.
Generalizable Principle
Don't manufacture urgency for evergreen services. Reserve deadline language ("Last Call," "Ends Tonight," "Final Hours") for offers with genuine, fixed end dates. For always-available services, use softer framing ("Reminder," "Don't forget," "Still available") to inform without misleading.
This applies across any client with recurring or open-ended service offerings (storage, maintenance plans, subscriptions, etc.).
Context
- Client: [1]
- Meeting: [2]
- Decided by: Steve Lindenau (client)
- Actioned by: Karly Oykhman
Related
- [3]
- [4]