TLDR: Most agencies lose clients silently. These 7 hospitality-specific emails match key moments—without begging, bribing, or overselling.
Introduction
Retention doesn’t start with a discount. It starts with relevance. These 7 emails help hospitality agencies stay top of mind at the right time—when it matters most.
Table of Contents
1. Why Retention Emails Work in Hospitality
You don’t lose clients because of performance. You lose them because of silence. Hospitality is seasonal, chaotic, and full of talent churn. These emails cut through that noise—without adding more.
2. The 7 Client & Chef Retention Emails
Each email includes:
- Subject Line:
- When to Send:
- Full Copy:
1. The No-Pitch Check-In
Subject: Quick check-in – no ask, just here
When: 4–6 weeks after last contact
Hi [Name],
Hope all’s steady on your end. No pitch—just saying hello.
Let me know if there’s anything tricky coming up that we might be able to ease.
—[Your Name]
2. The Past Win Reminder
Subject: Remember this result? Still proud.
When: 1–2 months post-placement
Thought of this today—remember when we [solved X / placed Y]?
Still one of our favourite outcomes.
Hope your team’s thriving.
3. The Honest Ask
Subject: Quick 2-second question for you
When: When launching a new offer/resource
Working on a new [tool/blog/process].
You’ve got sharp instincts—mind taking a look?
No pitch. Just input from someone who’s seen both sides.
4. The Give, Not Take
Subject: Thought this might help—no strings
When: Quarterly or after client pain point
Just shared this with another client and thought of you too.
It’s a [checklist/resource] that’s helped them [solve specific problem].
Might save you a few hours this month.
5. The Goodbye Trigger
Subject: Okay to close this thread?
When: 3+ months of silence
Looks like things have gone quiet—totally fine if we’re not needed right now.
But if there’s anything hanging, I’d rather support than assume.
6. The Win Congratulator
Subject: Saw this—congrats
When: After spotting client news online
Just saw your [launch/announcement/hire]—congrats.
That’s a sharp move. Hope it’s landing well internally.
7. The Booking Prompt
Subject: Booking deadline for [X] period
When: 2–3 weeks before peak periods
Just a heads up—chef availability for [month/event] is filling fast.
If you’ve got shifts or projects coming up, now’s the moment.
3. Real Triggers That Match Each Email
| Client Moment | Email Type to Send |
|---|---|
| No contact since last shift | No-Pitch Check-In |
| Past job went well | Past Win Reminder |
| Launching a new service or blog | Honest Ask |
| They mentioned a challenge | Give, Not Take |
| You’ve heard nothing in 90 days | Goodbye Trigger |
| You saw their news on LinkedIn | Win Congratulator |
| Peak season approaching | Booking Prompt |
4. Chef Roster Check-In (New Addition)
Subject: Still up for shifts this season?
When: Quarterly or before busy periods
Just refreshing our internal roster.
If you’re still keen on freelance gigs this quarter, let us know your latest availability.
No pressure—just keeping things updated.
This one keeps your supply side engaged.
5. What Strong Emails Look Like (Example)
Subject: Quick check-in – no ask, just here
Hi Jess,
Noticed we haven’t caught up in a bit—just flagging I’m here.
No agenda, but if something is getting messy shift-wise, shout.
—Tom
Plain. Tight. Personal. You’re not their newsletter—you’re their operator.
6. Timing, Tracking & Personalisation
- Log “last touched” date in your CRM
- Use templates, but customise first lines
- Personalisation = 10 seconds per email, max
- Avoid graphics—plain text feels more real
Every 60 days, run a report: who hasn’t heard from you? Send 1 email. That’s retention.
7. What to Avoid
- Long, passive newsletters
- “Hope you’re well” with no point
- Cold re-pitches disguised as check-ins
- Emails that serve you, not them
Conclusion
You don’t have a loyalty problem. You have a visibility gap. These emails bridge it—quietly, respectfully, and effectively.
Go schedule three of these right now. In 15 minutes, your agency retention system will be better than most.
Click here to access more tools, templates and other resources.
What are the best retention emails for hospitality agencies?
The best retention emails include check-ins, past win reminders, opinion asks, value shares, booking nudges, and roster updates—timed to key client moments.
How often should hospitality agencies send client retention emails?
Send a check-in every 4–6 weeks, trigger-based messages as events occur, and roster updates quarterly. Consistency matters more than frequency.
Do retention emails really help keep hospitality clients?
Yes. Regular, relevant emails keep agencies visible, build trust, and reduce client churn—especially in seasonal or fast-moving hospitality settings.
