In tech, the purchase is just the beginning. When you download an app or sign up for a platform, the real work starts. Onboarding flows guide you through features. Habit loops keep you coming back. Engagement rituals turn casual users into power users. The product team obsesses over day-one retention, weekly active users, and the subtle friction points that cause drop-off.
In commerce, the sale is treated as the finish line.
This fundamental difference explains why tech companies build billion-dollar valuations with smaller customer bases while consumer brands struggle to retain customers despite massive marketing budgets. Tech has always understood that activation, not acquisition, determines success.
Commerce is just starting to figure this out.
Consider the difference in how a tech company and a consumer brand approach a new customer.
When someone downloads Duolingo, they enter a carefully designed experience. The first lesson is short and rewarding. Notifications encourage daily streaks. Leaderboards create friendly competition. Achievements unlock new content. Every element is engineered to build a habit.
When someone buys a water bottle, they get a water bottle. Maybe a thank-you email. Maybe a discount code for the next purchase. But no onboarding. No engagement ritual. No reason to think about the brand until they need another water bottle.
One approach treats the customer as a user to activate. The other treats them as a transaction to complete.
The results speak for themselves. Tech companies achieve retention rates that most consumer brands can only dream of. Not because their products are inherently more engaging, but because they’ve built the software layer that makes engagement possible.
Consumer brands have always focused on the physical product. Materials, design, manufacturing, distribution. These are core competencies. But they’ve largely ignored the digital experience that happens after purchase.
There’s no onboarding flow to help customers get the most value from the product. No engagement rituals to build habits around usage. No feedback loops to understand how and when customers interact with what they bought. The relationship is analog in a digital world.
Tapp was built to close this gap.
As Ishita Agrawal, founder of Tapp, explained in San Francisco Post, her “fresh take on post-purchase marketing” applies the engagement principles of tech to the world of physical products.
Tapp functions as the missing software layer for consumer brands. Smart tags embedded in products create a direct connection between the physical item and a digital experience platform. This unlocks capabilities that have always been standard in tech but absent in commerce.
Onboarding flows: When a customer taps their new product, they can access guided tutorials, setup instructions, or recommended usage patterns. The brand can actively help customers extract maximum value from their purchase.
Habit loops: Brands can create daily check-ins, weekly challenges, or usage streaks that encourage regular interaction. Just like apps use push notifications, products can prompt engagement through contextual moments.
Engagement rituals: Exclusive content, community features, or gamified experiences turn one-time buyers into active participants. The product becomes a touchpoint for ongoing interaction.
Data feedback loops: Brands gain visibility into how customers actually use their products. What content resonates? When do customers engage? What drives repeat purchases? This data informs everything from product development to marketing strategy.
The infrastructure exists. Most brands just haven’t had access to it.
A supplement brand using Tapp doesn’t just ship vitamins. Each bottle includes an onboarding experience that explains optimal timing, tracks daily intake, and sends reminders. Customers build a habit around the product, not just consumption of it. Retention improves because usage becomes routine.
A yoga brand doesn’t just sell mats. Each mat unlocks a progressive series of practices, from beginner flows to advanced sequences. Customers advance through levels, earn badges, and share progress with the community. The product becomes a platform for growth.
A meal kit company doesn’t just deliver ingredients. Each box connects to cooking tutorials, wine pairings, and a live Q&A with chefs. Customers develop cooking skills and confidence, making them more likely to continue rather than churn.
These aren’t marketing tactics. They’re product experiences. And they require the same software infrastructure that tech companies have been building for years.
The numbers validate the approach. Brands using Tapp see 40 percent engagement rates, far beyond what traditional marketing channels achieve. More importantly, they see retention improvements that compound over time.
When customers are actively engaged with a brand between purchases, they’re far more likely to return. The relationship doesn’t go cold. The brand stays present without being intrusive. And when it’s time to repurchase, the decision is easy because the connection is strong.
As Business Insider Markets reported, Agrawal is “transforming one-time buyers into loyal brand communities” by giving brands the engagement tools that tech companies have always had.
The shift requires a change in mindset. Commerce brands need to start thinking like product teams. The sale isn’t the goal. Activation is the goal. Long-term engagement is the goal. Turning customers into active users is the goal.
This doesn’t mean abandoning the physical product. It means recognizing that the product is only part of the experience. The software layer, the engagement layer, the relationship layer are just as important.
Tech companies learned this decades ago. Commerce is learning it now.
As USA Wire documented, brands must “recreate the customer journey” by extending it far beyond the moment of purchase.
For years, consumer brands have lacked the infrastructure to build these experiences. The technology was prohibitively expensive. The expertise didn’t exist in-house. The return on investment was unclear.
Tapp provides the solution. It’s the software layer for commerce that simply didn’t exist before. Brands get access to the engagement tools, data infrastructure, and customer connection capabilities that tech companies have always had, without needing to build any of it themselves.
The result is a new category of consumer brand. One that treats the sale as the starting point, not the finish line. One that builds habits, not just transactions. One that thinks like tech, but sells physical products.
This is the future of commerce. And it starts with recognizing that every brand needs a software layer.
Learn more about building the software layer for your brand at thetapp.io.










