Flip a discount on. The inbox blast, the counter flyer, the window poster, and the bud-bar callout draft themselves. You review, you ship. Nobody opens a graphic design app.
A customer reads an inbox differently than a window poster, and a window poster differently than the bag stuffer at checkout. So we draft each one in its own voice, off the same shelf.

The customer's morning ritual. Composed at six, in the inbox by seven, sounding like the shop -- not a generic mailshot.

Weekly sale flyer for the counter, the window, the bag stuffer. Vendor-grouped, strikethroughs loud, ready before doors open.

Move-it-now SKUs in big red letters. For the wall by the door when the freezer's full and the boss wants it cleared.

Intentionally not modern. Grid-heavy print-shop energy for shops that lean into the paper-on-the-counter ritual.
Same shelf, four different reads. Pick the look that fits the floor.
Deals, new arrivals, the jar that's almost gone. The whole inbox piece pulls together while you're still on your first cup, and it sounds like the shop -- not a marketing tool.
Flip a discount on in your point of sale the way you already do. Half off chocolates, $25 eighths, vendor day -- whatever the move is.
Inbox blast, counter flyer, bud-bar callout. Drafted. Wait for your eyes. Tweak the copy if you want. Ship.
Email at seven. Window poster by open. Counter handout before the lunch rush. The deal arrives in their head three different ways.
Counter flyer, window poster, vendor-day broadsheet. Prints on the office laser, ready before doors open, sized to read from six feet.
The customer who sees the deal three times is the customer who buys it. We put it on three surfaces by default. The katana stays sheathed -- the work is already done. -- The Marketing Studio