When it comes to performancewear brands making waves in the Australian eCommerce scene, STAX. and Front Runner are two names that stand out. Both have built cult-like followings, leveraged limited-edition drops, and used email marketing as a key driver of growth. But while they share some strategic DNA, their approaches to email differ in ways that reflect their brand personalities and customer journeys.
In this edition of Digital Six’s Digital Autopsy, we’re putting STAX. and Front Runner head-to-head, unpacking how each brand uses email to create urgency, tell stories, and drive conversions.
1. Welcome Series: First Impressions
STAX. kicks things off with a visually polished welcome series that blends brand storytelling with exclusivity. The tone is aspirational and community-focused, with early access and loyalty hooks.
Front Runner, on the other hand, leans into a more grounded tone. Their welcome emails often focus on value, functionality, and performance benefits, highlighting products for serious athletes and offering incentives to convert early.
Takeaway: STAX. builds hype; Front Runner builds trust.
2. Drop Culture vs Evergreen Offers
STAX. is synonymous with drop culture. Their emails fuel hype around limited collections, sellouts, and restocks. With heavy segmentation, STAX. builds tailored momentum leading up to every launch.
Front Runner focuses less on hype and more on consistency. Their emails highlight bestsellers, new arrivals, and seasonal promos—designed to keep traffic and sales flowing steadily rather than spiking around drops.
Takeaway: STAX. thrives on urgency and scarcity; Front Runner wins with consistency and breadth.
3. Narrative & Brand Voice
STAX. emails are lifestyle-forward. Their copy and creative emphasise movement, confidence, and body positivity. The result? A brand that speaks to emotion and identity.
Front Runner keeps things clean, focused, and benefits-driven. Their emails highlight product features, performance stats, and functional value, less about lifestyle, more about results.Takeaway: STAX. sells a vibe; Front Runner sells a purpose.
4. Collabs and Community Building
Both brands leverage collaboration – but in different ways.
STAX. teams up with influencers and lifestyle brands to drive mass appeal and social proof. Their collab emails are highly visual and emotionally driven.
Front Runner partners with athletes and sports-focused initiatives, often highlighting performance credentials and real-world use cases in their content.
Takeaway: STAX. seeks influence; Front Runner seeks authenticity.
5. Segmentation Strateg
STAX. uses behaviour-based segmentation around drop engagement, cart activity, and loyalty tiers to personalise emails.
Front Runner leans into demographic and product interest segmentation—sending targeted emails based on sport type, gender, and performance category.
Takeaway: Both use segmentation well—but STAX. leans emotional, Front Runner leans logical.
Final Verdict: Who Wins?
It’s not about who’s better…it’s about which strategy aligns with your brand.
- If you want to build hype, spark urgency, and connect emotionally, STAX. is your blueprint.
- If you want to educate customers, highlight performance, and build loyalty over time, Front Runner shows how to do it.
What they share is just as powerful: both treat email as a core revenue channel, not an afterthought. And that’s a strategy worth replicating.
Inspired by what these brands are doing? Talk to Digital Six about building a revenue-driving email strategy that’s tailored to your brand DNA.