email-sequences

Email Sequences Skill

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Install skill "email-sequences" with this command: npx skills add sanky369/vibe-building-skills/sanky369-vibe-building-skills-email-sequences

Email Sequences Skill

Overview

Email Sequences are automated emails sent over time with a specific purpose. This skill teaches you to create sequences that convert.

Keywords: email sequences, email automation, email marketing, welcome sequence, nurture sequence, sales sequence, launch sequence

Core Methodology

There are 4 main types of email sequences:

  • Welcome Sequence — Sent immediately after subscription (3-5 emails over 7 days)

  • Nurture Sequence — Sent regularly to engaged subscribers (ongoing)

  • Conversion Sequence — Sent when you have a specific offer (5-7 emails over 2 weeks)

  • Launch Sequence — Sent when launching something new (7-10 emails over 3 weeks)

Each email in a sequence should stand alone AND work together as a journey.

Sequence 1: Welcome Sequence

Purpose: Set expectations, build trust, deliver on lead magnet promise

Timing: Days 1, 2, 4, 6, 7

Email 1 (Day 1): Welcome + Lead Magnet Delivery

  • Welcome them warmly

  • Deliver the lead magnet

  • Set expectations for future emails

Email 2 (Day 2): Value + Story

  • Share a story or insight

  • Provide actionable value

  • Build connection

Email 3 (Day 4): Social Proof + Case Study

  • Share a customer success story

  • Show proof your approach works

  • Build credibility

Email 4 (Day 6): Soft Offer

  • Introduce your main offer

  • Explain the benefit

  • No pressure

Email 5 (Day 7): Engagement Check

  • Ask for feedback

  • Invite replies

  • Build relationship

Sequence 2: Nurture Sequence

Purpose: Provide value, stay top-of-mind, build relationship

Timing: One email per week (ongoing)

Pattern: Alternate between value-focused and soft-offer emails

Week 1: Story + Lesson

Week 2: Framework or Tool

Week 3: Case Study or Social Proof

Week 4: Soft Offer

Week 5: Question or Engagement

Week 6: Repeat

Sequence 3: Conversion Sequence

Purpose: Persuade someone to buy your offer

Timing: Days 1, 3, 5, 7, 10, 12, 14

Email 1 (Day 1): Problem + Curiosity

  • Identify the problem

  • Create curiosity about the solution

Email 2 (Day 3): Mechanism/Insight

  • Explain your unique approach

  • Show why common approaches don't work

Email 3 (Day 5): Your Solution

  • Present your offer

  • Explain specific benefits

  • Include CTA

Email 4 (Day 7): Social Proof

  • Share customer testimonials

  • Show proof it works

Email 5 (Day 10): Objection Handling

  • Address common concerns

  • Answer frequently asked questions

Email 6 (Day 12): Urgency/Scarcity

  • Create urgency without being pushy

  • Limited spots, deadline, price increase

Email 7 (Day 14): Final Call

  • Last chance messaging

  • Strong CTA

  • Clear deadline

Sequence 4: Launch Sequence

Purpose: Create buzz and drive sales for a new offer

Timing: Days 1, 3, 5, 7, 10, 14, 17

Email 1 (Day 1): Announcement + Curiosity

  • Announce something new is coming

  • Build anticipation

Email 2 (Day 3): Problem + Mechanism

  • Explain why you created this

  • Show your unique approach

Email 3 (Day 5): Full Reveal + Benefits

  • Reveal the offer

  • List specific benefits

  • Early pricing

Email 4 (Day 7): Social Proof

  • Share early customer feedback

  • Build credibility

Email 5 (Day 10): Objection Handling

  • Address common concerns

Email 6 (Day 14): Urgency

  • Limited spots or time remaining

  • Price increasing soon

Email 7 (Day 17): Final Call

  • Last chance

  • Strong CTA

Email Components

Subject Line

Your subject line determines if they open.

Formulas:

  • Curiosity: "The one thing [type] gets wrong about [topic]"

  • Specificity: "How I [result] in [timeframe]"

  • Benefit: "[Benefit] without [drawback]"

  • Question: "Are you [situation]?"

  • Urgency: "[Deadline] to [action]"

Preview Text

The first 40-50 characters of your email. Make it count.

Opening

Start with their name and something personal.

Formula: "[Name] + [Personal observation]"

Hook

First few sentences must make them want to keep reading.

Types:

  • Story: "Last Tuesday, I was..."

  • Question: "Are you struggling with...?"

  • Curiosity: "I discovered something this week..."

Body

Provide value or make your case.

For Value: Share a lesson, story, framework, or answer

For Sales: Explain problem, show your solution, address objections

Call-to-Action

End with a clear, specific action.

Formulas:

  • Simple: "Click here to [action]"

  • Benefit: "Get [benefit] now"

  • Curiosity: "See how this works"

  • Low-friction: "Reply and let me know"

Signature

End with your name and a personal touch.

Formula: "[Name] + [P.S. with relevant insight]"

How to Use This Skill

  • Choose Your Sequence Type — Welcome, nurture, conversion, or launch?

  • Map Out Your Sequence — Create a simple outline

  • Write Your Emails — Use the formulas and structures above

  • Set Up Automation — Configure timing in your email platform

  • Test — Send test emails to yourself

  • Launch — Activate the sequence

  • Monitor — Track open rates, click rates, conversions

Integration with Other Skills

Email Sequences works with:

  • Brand Voice — Your voice makes emails personal

  • Direct Response Copy — Your copy structure applies to emails

  • Lead Magnet — Your welcome sequence delivers on the promise

  • Newsletter — Your newsletter feeds your nurture sequence

Common Pitfalls

Too Salesy — People unsubscribe from all-sales sequences.

Too Long — Keep emails to 100-200 words.

No Clear CTA — Make it obvious what you want them to do.

Ignoring Objections — Address the main thing stopping them.

Wrong Timing — Space emails so they don't feel overwhelming.

Next Steps

Once you've created your email sequences, move to Skill 09: Content Atomizer to repurpose your content across platforms.

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