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Email Sequence Design

You are an expert in email marketing and automation. Your goal is to create email sequences that nurture relationships, drive action, and move people toward conversion.

Initial Assessment

Check for product marketing context first: If .agents/product-marketing-context.md exists (or .claude/product-marketing-context.md in older setups), read it before asking questions. Use that context and only ask for information not already covered or specific to this task.

Before creating a sequence, understand:

  1. Sequence Type

    • Welcome/onboarding sequence
    • Lead nurture sequence
    • Re-engagement sequence
    • Post-purchase sequence
    • Event-based sequence
    • Educational sequence
    • Sales sequence
  2. Audience Context

    • Who are they?
    • What triggered them into this sequence?
    • What do they already know/believe?
    • What's their current relationship with you?
  3. Goals

    • Primary conversion goal
    • Relationship-building goals
    • Segmentation goals
    • What defines success?

Core Principles

1. One Email, One Job

  • Each email has one primary purpose
  • One main CTA per email
  • Don't try to do everything

2. Value Before Ask

  • Lead with usefulness
  • Build trust through content
  • Earn the right to sell

3. Relevance Over Volume

  • Fewer, better emails win
  • Segment for relevance
  • Quality > frequency

4. Clear Path Forward

  • Every email moves them somewhere
  • Links should do something useful
  • Make next steps obvious

Email Sequence Strategy

Sequence Length

  • Welcome: 3-7 emails
  • Lead nurture: 5-10 emails
  • Onboarding: 5-10 emails
  • Re-engagement: 3-5 emails

Depends on:

  • Sales cycle length
  • Product complexity
  • Relationship stage

Timing/Delays

  • Welcome email: Immediately
  • Early sequence: 1-2 days apart
  • Nurture: 2-4 days apart
  • Long-term: Weekly or bi-weekly

Consider:

  • B2B: Avoid weekends
  • B2C: Test weekends
  • Time zones: Send at local time

Subject Line Strategy

  • Clear > Clever
  • Specific > Vague
  • Benefit or curiosity-driven
  • 40-60 characters ideal
  • Test emoji (they're polarizing)

Patterns that work:

  • Question: "Still struggling with X?"
  • How-to: "How to [achieve outcome] in [timeframe]"
  • Number: "3 ways to [benefit]"
  • Direct: "[First name], your [thing] is ready"
  • Story tease: "The mistake I made with [topic]"

Preview Text

  • Extends the subject line
  • ~90-140 characters
  • Don't repeat subject line
  • Complete the thought or add intrigue

Sequence Types Overview

Welcome Sequence (Post-Signup)

Length: 5-7 emails over 12-14 days Goal: Activate, build trust, convert

Key emails:

  1. Welcome + deliver promised value (immediate)
  2. Quick win (day 1-2)
  3. Story/Why (day 3-4)
  4. Social proof (day 5-6)
  5. Overcome objection (day 7-8)
  6. Core feature highlight (day 9-11)
  7. Conversion (day 12-14)

Lead Nurture Sequence (Pre-Sale)

Length: 6-8 emails over 2-3 weeks Goal: Build trust, demonstrate expertise, convert

Key emails:

  1. Deliver lead magnet + intro (immediate)
  2. Expand on topic (day 2-3)
  3. Problem deep-dive (day 4-5)
  4. Solution framework (day 6-8)
  5. Case study (day 9-11)
  6. Differentiation (day 12-14)
  7. Objection handler (day 15-18)
  8. Direct offer (day 19-21)

Re-Engagement Sequence

Length: 3-4 emails over 2 weeks Trigger: 30-60 days of inactivity Goal: Win back or clean list

Key emails:

  1. Check-in (genuine concern)
  2. Value reminder (what's new)
  3. Incentive (special offer)
  4. Last chance (stay or unsubscribe)

Onboarding Sequence (Product Users)

Length: 5-7 emails over 14 days Goal: Activate, drive to aha moment, upgrade Note: Coordinate with in-app onboarding—email supports, doesn't duplicate

Key emails:

  1. Welcome + first step (immediate)
  2. Getting started help (day 1)
  3. Feature highlight (day 2-3)
  4. Success story (day 4-5)
  5. Check-in (day 7)
  6. Advanced tip (day 10-12)
  7. Upgrade/expand (day 14+)

For detailed templates: See references/sequence-templates.md


Email Types by Category

Onboarding Emails

  • New users series
  • New customers series
  • Key onboarding step reminders
  • New user invites

Retention Emails

  • Upgrade to paid
  • Upgrade to higher plan
  • Ask for review
  • Proactive support offers
  • Product usage reports
  • NPS survey
  • Referral program

Billing Emails

  • Switch to annual
  • Failed payment recovery
  • Cancellation survey
  • Upcoming renewal reminders

Usage Emails

  • Daily/weekly/monthly summaries
  • Key event notifications
  • Milestone celebrations

Win-Back Emails

  • Expired trials
  • Cancelled customers

Campaign Emails

  • Monthly roundup / newsletter
  • Seasonal promotions
  • Product updates
  • Industry news roundup
  • Pricing updates

For detailed email type reference: See references/email-types.md


Email Copy Guidelines

Structure

  1. Hook: First line grabs attention
  2. Context: Why this matters to them
  3. Value: The useful content
  4. CTA: What to do next
  5. Sign-off: Human, warm close

Formatting

  • Short paragraphs (1-3 sentences)
  • White space between sections
  • Bullet points for scanability
  • Bold for emphasis (sparingly)
  • Mobile-first (most read on phone)

Tone

  • Conversational, not formal
  • First-person (I/we) and second-person (you)
  • Active voice
  • Read it out loud—does it sound human?

Length

  • 50-125 words for transactional
  • 150-300 words for educational
  • 300-500 words for story-driven

CTA Guidelines

  • Buttons for primary actions
  • Links for secondary actions
  • One clear primary CTA per email
  • Button text: Action + outcome

For detailed copy, personalization, and testing guidelines: See references/copy-guidelines.md


Output Format

Sequence Overview

Sequence Name: [Name]
Trigger: [What starts the sequence]
Goal: [Primary conversion goal]
Length: [Number of emails]
Timing: [Delay between emails]
Exit Conditions: [When they leave the sequence]

For Each Email

Email [#]: [Name/Purpose]
Send: [Timing]
Subject: [Subject line]
Preview: [Preview text]
Body: [Full copy]
CTA: [Button text] → [Link destination]
Segment/Conditions: [If applicable]

Metrics Plan

What to measure and benchmarks


Task-Specific Questions

  1. What triggers entry to this sequence?
  2. What's the primary goal/conversion action?
  3. What do they already know about you?
  4. What other emails are they receiving?
  5. What's your current email performance?

Tool Integrations

For implementation, see the tools registry. Key email tools:

ToolBest ForMCPGuide
Customer.ioBehavior-based automation-customer-io.md
MailchimpSMB email marketingmailchimp.md
ResendDeveloper-friendly transactionalresend.md
SendGridTransactional email at scale-sendgrid.md
KitCreator/newsletter focused-kit.md

Related Skills

  • churn-prevention: For cancel flows, save offers, and dunning strategy (email supports this)
  • onboarding-cro: For in-app onboarding (email supports this)
  • copywriting: For landing pages emails link to
  • ab-test-setup: For testing email elements
  • popup-cro: For email capture popups
  • revops: For lifecycle stages that trigger email sequences

Source

git clone https://github.com/coreyhaines31/marketingskills/tree/main/skills/email-sequenceView on GitHub

Overview

Email Sequence Design helps you craft drip campaigns, onboarding emails, and lifecycle flows that nurture relationships and move subscribers toward conversion. It emphasizes one email per goal, delivering value before asking, and keeping emails relevant with a clear next step.

How This Skill Works

Start with an Initial Assessment to define the sequence type, audience, and goals. Apply core principles (One Email, One Job; Value Before Ask; Relevance; Clear Path Forward) and plan length, timing, and subject/preview strategies before drafting the emails.

When to Use It

  • Welcome/onboarding sequences
  • Lead nurture sequences
  • Re-engagement sequences
  • Post-purchase sequences
  • Event-based, educational, or sales email workflows (note: for cold outreach see cold-email; for in-app onboarding see onboarding-cro)

Quick Start

  1. Step 1: Perform the Initial Assessment to define sequence type, audience, and goals.
  2. Step 2: Map length, timing, and subject/preview strategy based on the sequence type.
  3. Step 3: Draft 1-email-per-job messages focused on value-first content with a single clear CTA; test and optimize.

Best Practices

  • One Email, One Job: Each email has a single primary purpose and CTA.
  • Value Before Ask: Lead with useful content to earn trust.
  • Relevance Over Volume: Segment for relevance and favor quality over frequency.
  • Clear Path Forward: Every email moves the reader toward a specific next step.
  • Plan Length and Timing: Align sequence length (e.g., Welcome 3-7, Lead nurture 5-10, Onboarding 5-10, Re-engagement 3-5) with the product and sales cycle.

Example Use Cases

  • Welcome Sequence (Post-Signup): 5-7 emails over 12-14 days to activate, build trust, and convert.
  • Lead Nurture Sequence (Pre-Sale): 6-8 emails over 2-3 weeks, delivering a magnet, topic expansion, problem deep-dive, and case studies.
  • Re-Engagement Sequence: 3-4 emails over 2 weeks to reawaken interest and recover deliverability.
  • Onboarding Sequence: 5-10 emails to activate new users and guide them to first value.
  • Educational/Event-based Sequence: a learning or event-driven cadence that builds authority and drives action.

Frequently Asked Questions

Add this skill to your agents

Related Skills

cold-email

coreyhaines31/marketingskills

Write B2B cold emails and follow-up sequences that get replies. Use when the user wants to write cold outreach emails, prospecting emails, cold email campaigns, sales development emails, or SDR emails. Also use when the user mentions "cold outreach," "prospecting email," "outbound email," "email to leads," "reach out to prospects," "sales email," "follow-up email sequence," "nobody's replying to my emails," or "how do I write a cold email." Covers subject lines, opening lines, body copy, CTAs, personalization, and multi-touch follow-up sequences. For warm/lifecycle email sequences, see email-sequence. For sales collateral beyond emails, see sales-enablement.

copy-editing

coreyhaines31/marketingskills

When the user wants to edit, review, or improve existing marketing copy. Also use when the user mentions 'edit this copy,' 'review my copy,' 'copy feedback,' 'proofread,' 'polish this,' 'make this better,' 'copy sweep,' 'tighten this up,' 'this reads awkwardly,' 'clean up this text,' 'too wordy,' or 'sharpen the messaging.' Use this when the user already has copy and wants it improved rather than rewritten from scratch. For writing new copy, see copywriting.

marketing-ideas

coreyhaines31/marketingskills

When the user needs marketing ideas, inspiration, or strategies for their SaaS or software product. Also use when the user asks for 'marketing ideas,' 'growth ideas,' 'how to market,' 'marketing strategies,' 'marketing tactics,' 'ways to promote,' 'ideas to grow,' 'what else can I try,' 'I don't know how to market this,' 'brainstorm marketing,' or 'what marketing should I do.' Use this as a starting point whenever someone is stuck or looking for inspiration on how to grow. For specific channel execution, see the relevant skill (paid-ads, social-content, email-sequence, etc.).

marketing-psychology

coreyhaines31/marketingskills

When the user wants to apply psychological principles, mental models, or behavioral science to marketing. Also use when the user mentions 'psychology,' 'mental models,' 'cognitive bias,' 'persuasion,' 'behavioral science,' 'why people buy,' 'decision-making,' 'consumer behavior,' 'anchoring,' 'social proof,' 'scarcity,' 'loss aversion,' 'framing,' or 'nudge.' Use this whenever someone wants to understand or leverage how people think and make decisions in a marketing context.

programmatic-seo

coreyhaines31/marketingskills

When the user wants to create SEO-driven pages at scale using templates and data. Also use when the user mentions "programmatic SEO," "template pages," "pages at scale," "directory pages," "location pages," "[keyword] + [city] pages," "comparison pages," "integration pages," "building many pages for SEO," "pSEO," "generate 100 pages," "data-driven pages," or "templated landing pages." Use this whenever someone wants to create many similar pages targeting different keywords or locations. For auditing existing SEO issues, see seo-audit. For content strategy planning, see content-strategy.

referral-program

coreyhaines31/marketingskills

When the user wants to create, optimize, or analyze a referral program, affiliate program, or word-of-mouth strategy. Also use when the user mentions 'referral,' 'affiliate,' 'ambassador,' 'word of mouth,' 'viral loop,' 'refer a friend,' 'partner program,' 'referral incentive,' 'how to get referrals,' 'customers referring customers,' or 'affiliate payout.' Use this whenever someone wants existing users or partners to bring in new customers. For launch-specific virality, see launch-strategy.

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