email-sequences
Creates automated email sequences for every stage of the customer journey including welcome, nurture, conversion, and launch flows. This skill should be used when building automated email flows, launching products, improving email-driven conversions, or onboarding new customers.
When & Why to Use This Skill
This Claude skill automates the creation of strategic email sequences across the entire customer journey. It enables users to build high-converting automated flows—including welcome, nurture, launch, and onboarding series—designed to move prospects from initial contact to loyal advocacy while maintaining a consistent brand voice and reducing manual effort.
Use Cases
- Welcome & Lead Delivery: Automatically greet new subscribers and deliver lead magnets while setting brand expectations and building immediate rapport.
- Product Launch Orchestration: Execute multi-phase email campaigns (pre-launch, launch week, and post-launch) to build anticipation and maximize sales during promotional windows.
- Customer Onboarding: Guide new buyers through their first 30 days with progressive feature introductions to ensure product success and reduce churn.
- Conversion Optimization: Deploy targeted sequences triggered by specific interest signals to handle objections, share social proof, and drive immediate purchases.
- Subscriber Re-engagement: Automatically identify and win back inactive subscribers with value-driven 'we miss you' sequences to improve list health and deliverability.
| name | email-sequences |
|---|---|
| description | Creates automated email sequences for every stage of the customer journey including welcome, nurture, conversion, and launch flows. This skill should be used when building automated email flows, launching products, improving email-driven conversions, or onboarding new customers. |
Email Sequences
This skill creates automated email sequences that move subscribers through the customer journey - from stranger to subscriber to customer to advocate.
Objective
Build email sequences that deliver the right message at the right time, nurturing relationships and driving conversions without manual effort.
Intake Questions
Before creating email sequences, gather context:
- Entry point: How do people join this sequence? (Lead magnet, purchase, signup)
- Desired outcome: What should they do after the sequence? (Buy, book, engage)
- Product/Offer: What are you eventually selling or promoting?
- Timeline: Over what period should the sequence run?
- Audience knowledge: How familiar are they with you/your solution?
- Objections: What prevents people from taking the desired action?
- Existing sequences: What automation already exists?
The 6 Sequence Types
1. Welcome Sequence
Trigger: New subscriber (lead magnet, newsletter signup) Goal: Build relationship, set expectations, introduce brand Length: 3-7 emails over 1-2 weeks
Email structure:
- Email 1 (Immediate): Deliver promised content + set expectations
- Email 2 (Day 1-2): Share your story/origin
- Email 3 (Day 3-4): Deliver unexpected value (bonus content)
- Email 4 (Day 5-7): Social proof + best content
- Email 5 (Day 7-10): Soft intro to paid offer (optional)
Key principles:
- Deliver on lead magnet promise immediately
- Set email frequency expectations
- Show personality and build connection
- Don't hard sell too early
2. Nurture Sequence
Trigger: After welcome sequence ends Goal: Stay top of mind, continue providing value Length: Ongoing, 1-4 emails per week
Content rotation:
- Educational content
- Case studies and examples
- Behind-the-scenes
- Curated resources
- Occasional promotional content (20% max)
Key principles:
- Maintain consistent schedule
- 80/20 rule: 80% value, 20% promotional
- Segment based on engagement
- Re-engage inactive subscribers
3. Conversion Sequence
Trigger: Interest signal (page visit, link click, webinar signup) Goal: Convert interest to purchase Length: 4-7 emails over 5-10 days
Email structure:
- Email 1: Acknowledge interest, expand on benefits
- Email 2: Handle main objection #1
- Email 3: Case study/success story
- Email 4: Handle main objection #2
- Email 5: FAQ compilation
- Email 6: Urgency/scarcity (if real)
- Email 7: Last chance + final push
Key principles:
- One email, one focus
- Address objections directly
- Use social proof strategically
- Create urgency without being sleazy
4. Launch Sequence
Trigger: Product launch or promotion period Goal: Maximize sales during limited window Length: 7-14 emails over launch period
Three phases:
Pre-Launch (3-5 emails):
- Build anticipation
- Warm up to the offer
- Share relevant content
- Hint at what's coming
Launch Week (4-7 emails):
- Doors open + full details
- Deep dive on specific benefit
- Case study/proof
- FAQ + objection handling
- Bonuses (if applicable)
- Urgency: limited time/spots
- Final hours + cart close
Post-Launch (2-3 emails):
- Thank buyers, onboard them
- Waitlist for non-buyers
- Reset expectations
5. Onboarding Sequence
Trigger: New purchase/signup Goal: Help customers succeed and reduce churn Length: 5-10 emails over first 30 days
Email structure:
- Email 1 (Immediate): Welcome + quick start guide
- Email 2 (Day 1): First milestone to complete
- Email 3 (Day 3): Common mistake to avoid
- Email 4 (Day 5): Success story inspiration
- Email 5 (Day 7): Check-in + support offer
- Emails 6-10: Progressive feature introduction
Key principles:
- Focus on one action per email
- Celebrate early wins
- Anticipate confusion points
- Make support easy to access
6. Re-engagement Sequence
Trigger: Inactive subscriber (30-90 days no opens) Goal: Win back or clean list Length: 3-5 emails over 1-2 weeks
Email structure:
- Email 1: "We miss you" + best content
- Email 2: "What's changed" + new value
- Email 3: Incentive or exclusive offer
- Email 4: "Last chance before we part ways"
- Email 5: Goodbye + unsubscribe
Key principles:
- Acknowledge the gap honestly
- Lead with value, not guilt
- Give a real reason to re-engage
- Clean list if no response
Email Structure Template
Each email should follow this structure:
Subject Line
- See newsletter skill for formulas
- Test curiosity vs. clarity
Preview Text
- First 40-90 characters
- Complement (don't repeat) subject line
Opening Hook (First 1-3 lines)
- Pattern interrupt
- Story hook
- Surprising statement
- Direct question
Body
- One main idea
- Conversational tone
- Short paragraphs (1-3 sentences)
- Use "you" more than "I"
Call to Action
- Single, clear CTA
- Benefit-focused button text
- Link multiple times if needed
P.S.
- Second CTA or curiosity hook
- High readership area - use it
Timing & Spacing Guidelines
| Sequence Type | Spacing | Best Send Times |
|---|---|---|
| Welcome | Days 0, 1, 3, 5, 7 | Immediate + morning |
| Nurture | 2-3x per week | Tue/Wed/Thu morning |
| Conversion | Daily during push | 10am or 7pm |
| Launch | Daily + urgency stacks | 10am + 5pm on close |
| Onboarding | Days 0, 1, 3, 5, 7, 14, 21, 30 | Matches product usage |
| Re-engagement | Days 0, 3, 7, 10, 14 | Morning, mid-week |
Personalization Triggers
Advanced automation based on behavior:
| Trigger | Action |
|---|---|
| Opened 5+ emails | Move to engaged segment |
| Clicked pricing page | Start conversion sequence |
| Abandoned cart | Cart recovery sequence |
| Purchased | Onboarding sequence |
| No opens in 30 days | Re-engagement sequence |
| Clicked specific topic | Topic-specific content |
Output Format
When creating email sequences, deliver:
- Sequence Map: Visual flow showing triggers and emails
- Email Briefs: For each email - goal, subject options, key points
- Full Email Copy: Complete copy for each email in sequence
- Timing Schedule: When each email sends
- Success Metrics: What to track (opens, clicks, conversions)
- Segmentation Recommendations: How to split audiences
Cross-References
- Apply
brand-voicefor consistent tone across all emails - Use
lead-magnetto inform welcome sequence delivery direct-response-copytechniques apply to conversion emailsnewsletterhandles broadcast vs. automated (this skill)- Launch sequences may promote offers from
lead-magnet orchestratorroutes here for email marketing projects