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Performance Marketing Knowledge Module

Performance Marketing Email Sequences — Knowledge Module Reference

Performance Marketing knowledge module — UI selectors, data model, and page states documenting Email Sequences.

Available free v1.0.0 LLM
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Verified
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42%
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Pack
Performance Marketing
Domain
marketing

Email Sequences

Performance marketing email sequences — automated emails triggered by ad-driven conversions, form submissions, and behavioral events. Covers welcome sequences, abandoned cart recovery, lead nurture, post-purchase, and re-engagement. Scoped to performance email only (sequences that directly support paid acquisition ROI), not general CRM/lifecycle email.

This module is platform-agnostic. It works with any ESP (Klaviyo, HubSpot, Mailchimp, ActiveCampaign, Customer.io). Account-specific details come from media-context.md.

Content Structure

Email sequences follow a trigger → sequence → branch architecture:

Trigger Event (form submit, purchase, cart abandon, etc.)
└── Sequence (ordered emails with timing delays)
    ├── Email 1 (immediate or short delay)
    ├── Wait (hours/days)
    ├── Branch (did they open? click? convert?)
    │   ├── Yes → next sequence or exit
    │   └── No → alternative path or reminder
    ├── Email 2
    └── ... (3-7 emails typical)

Key Concepts

Sequence Types

TypeTriggerGoalTypical LengthTiming
Welcome (sales-led)Form submit, signupBuild trust, educate, drive demo/trial3-5 emailsDay 0, 1, 3, 5, 7
Welcome (PLG)Product signupActivate user (first value moment), invite team, upgrade3-5 emailsDay 0, 1, 3, 5, 7
Abandoned cartCart add without purchaseRecover purchase3 emails1h, 24h, 72h
Lead nurtureLead form submit (B2B)Educate, qualify, move to sales5-7 emailsDay 0, 2, 5, 8, 12, 16, 21
Post-purchasePurchase completedOnboard, cross-sell, review4-5 emailsDay 0, 3, 7, 14, 30
Re-engagement60-90 days inactiveWin back or clean list3 emailsDay 0, 5, 10
Browse abandonmentProduct view without cartNudge toward purchase2 emails4h, 24h

Cadence by business model:

Business ModelMax FrequencyInterval Between EmailsTotal Sequence Length
PLG (Notion, Slack)Daily first week, then 2x/week1-3 days7-14 days
Sales-led B2B (Deel)2x/week max during nurture3-5 days21-60 days
B2C ecommerceDaily for cart recovery, 2-3x/week otherwise1-4 days7-30 days
B2B enterprise (long cycle)Weekly5-7 days30-90 days

PLG sequences optimize for activation speed (get user to value fast). B2B sequences optimize for qualification depth (educate over weeks). Applying B2C cadence to B2B causes unsubscribes.

Email Copy Framework

Subject lines (28-39 characters optimal for mobile):

  • Personalized: +26% open rate (Experian). Formula: [Name], [curiosity hook]
  • Numbers: +15-20% open rate. Formula: [Number] [adjective] [noun] [promise]
  • Questions: +10-15% open rate (B2B). Formula: Are you [making this mistake]?
  • Urgency: +22% open rate, but fatigues after 3 sends. Use sparingly.

Preheader: 40-100 characters. Complement the subject line, don't repeat it. Adding a preheader lifts open rates ~7% (Litmus).

Body (optimal length by type):

TypeWordsKey Rule
Welcome100-200One clear next step
Promotional50-150Single CTA
Newsletter200-500Value-dense content
Re-engagement25-75Ultra-short, direct
Transactional<100Task completion focus

Critical rule: Single CTA per email. Multiple CTAs = +371% fewer clicks (WordStream). Every email has one job.

Segmentation Strategy

Segment by acquisition source and behavior, not just demographics:

Segment DimensionHowWhy
Acquisition sourceUTM source/medium from paid campaignDifferent channels = different intent levels
Funnel stageForm type, page visited, content consumedTailor message to awareness level
Engagement levelOpens, clicks, site visits in last 30 daysActive vs dormant = different cadence
Purchase behaviorFirst purchase, repeat, high-value (RFM)Cross-sell vs upsell vs loyalty
Lead scoreEngagement + fit scoring (if available)Prioritize sales-ready leads

Deliverability Checklist

Technical requirements before sending any sequence:

CheckWhatStatus
SPFDNS TXT record authorizing your sending IPRequired
DKIMDNS TXT record for email signature verificationRequired
DMARCDNS TXT record specifying authentication policyRequired
Warm-upGradually increase send volume over 2-4 weeks for new domains/IPsRequired for new senders
List hygieneRemove bounces, unsubscribes, and inactive (6mo+) before every campaignRequired
Double opt-inConfirm subscription via email linkRecommended (required in some regions)
Unsubscribe linkOne-click unsubscribe in email header (RFC 8058)Required by law

Warm-up schedule (new domain/IP, Infobip methodology):

DayVolumeTarget Audience
1-3500-1,000Most engaged (opened/clicked last 30d)
4-71,400-4,000Engaged last 30 days
8-105,600-11,200Broaden to last 60 days
11-1416,000-50,000Active last 60 days
Week 3-4+Increase 40%/dayExclude 90+ day inactive

After 14 days, increase 40% daily based on previous day's delivered volume. First 45 days: exclude users inactive 90+ days. Monitor bounce rate (<2%), spam complaint rate (<0.1%), and inbox placement throughout.

A/B Testing

Test priority (highest impact first):

  1. Subject line (10-40% open rate variance)
  2. From name/address (10-30% variance)
  3. Send time/day (5-20% variance)
  4. CTA copy + placement (10-30% CTR variance)
  5. Email length/format (5-20% CTR variance)

Minimum sample sizes (95% confidence, 80% power):

BaselineMDEMin Per Variant
20% open rate5pp lift~700
3% CTR1pp lift~3,600
1% conversion0.5pp lift~5,200

Rule of thumb: minimum 1,000 per variant for subject line tests, 5,000 for CTR tests. Run for at least 24 hours to capture timezone variation.

Benchmarks by Email Type

TypeOpen RateCTRConversion Rate
Welcome50-60%8-15%Highest (first impression)
Abandoned cart40-50%5-10%5-10% recovery rate
Lead nurture20-30%2-5%Varies by offer
Post-purchase40-50%5-8%Cross-sell dependent
Re-engagement10-20%1-3%List cleaning purpose
Promotional15-25%2-4%Industry average

Inputs & Outputs

Inputs:

  • Trigger event definitions (from ad campaigns, forms, ecommerce events)
  • Audience segments (from media-context.md)
  • Product/offer details
  • Brand voice guidelines
  • ESP platform and capabilities

Outputs:

  • Sequence architecture (trigger → emails → branches → timing)
  • Email copy per sequence (subject, preheader, body, CTA)
  • Segmentation rules
  • A/B test plan for sequence optimization
  • Performance monitoring setup (open rate, CTR, conversion, unsubscribe)

Modes

ModeWhat You're Doing
BuildCreating new sequences from scratch
AuditReviewing existing sequence performance, deliverability health
OptimizeA/B testing subject lines, timing, copy; improving conversion
ExpandAdding new sequences for additional triggers or segments

Common Tasks

  1. Build welcome sequence — 3-5 emails triggered by form submission:

    • Email 1 (immediate): Deliver promised asset + set expectations
    • Email 2 (Day 1): Introduce brand/value, single helpful resource
    • Email 3 (Day 3): Social proof (testimonial, case study, user count)
    • Email 4 (Day 5): Address top objection
    • Email 5 (Day 7): Primary CTA (demo, trial, purchase)
    • Branch after email 3: if clicked → accelerate to CTA. If no opens → switch to re-engagement.
  2. Build abandoned cart sequence — 3 emails recovering purchases:

    • Email 1 (1 hour): Reminder with product image. No discount. Subject: "[Name], you left something behind"
    • Email 2 (24 hours): Add social proof or scarcity. Subject: "Still thinking about [product]?"
    • Email 3 (72 hours): Offer incentive if margin allows (10% off, free shipping). Subject: "Last chance + [incentive]"
    • Exit on purchase at any point (suppression trigger).
  3. Build B2B lead nurture — 5-7 emails qualifying leads for sales:

    • Email 1 (Day 0): Welcome + link to high-value content piece
    • Email 2 (Day 2): Educational content matching their pain point
    • Email 3 (Day 5): Case study relevant to their industry/role
    • Email 4 (Day 8): Comparison or ROI calculator
    • Email 5 (Day 12): Invite to demo/webinar
    • Email 6 (Day 16): Direct ask — "Ready to talk?"
    • Email 7 (Day 21): Soft close or park in newsletter
    • Branch: If demo booked at any point → exit to sales sequence.
  4. Deliverability audit — Check sending infrastructure:

    • Verify SPF, DKIM, DMARC records
    • Check sender reputation (Google Postmaster Tools, Microsoft SNDS)
    • Review bounce rate trend (target <2%)
    • Review spam complaint rate (target <0.1%)
    • Check list hygiene (% inactive, last engagement date)

Tips

  • The welcome email is your highest-performing email. It gets 50-60% open rates. Don't waste it on "thanks for signing up" — deliver real value immediately.
  • Abandoned cart email 1 should NOT include a discount. Most cart abandoners just got distracted. Remind first, discount last.
  • Subject line and preheader are 80% of the open decision. Test these relentlessly.
  • Single CTA per email. Multiple options = decision paralysis = no clicks.
  • Segment by acquisition source. A lead from a Google Ads demo request needs different nurture than one from a Facebook lead form.
  • Email-to-landing-page message match matters here too. The CTA text should match the landing page headline exactly.

Gotchas

  • Over-mailing new subscribers — Sending daily during week 1 causes unsubscribes. Space welcome sequences 1-3 days apart.
  • No suppression triggers — If someone purchases, they must exit the cart abandonment sequence immediately. Missing suppression = sending "come back" emails to paying customers.
  • Ignoring deliverability — Sending to a cold list on a new domain = spam folder. Always warm up.
  • Generic from name — "[email protected]" kills trust. Use a real person's name or a branded name that matches the ad experience.
  • Testing too many things — One variable per test. Changing subject line AND send time simultaneously makes results unreadable.
  • Letting sequences run forever — Audit performance monthly. Sequences that worked at launch may fatigue after 6 months as the audience composition shifts.

References

  • references/sequence-templates.md — complete email sequence blueprints with timing, copy frameworks, and branching logic for all 6 sequence types

Related Modules

  • landing-pages — email-to-landing-page message match, form optimization for email capture
  • paid-search / paid-social — acquisition campaigns that feed email sequences
  • analytics — email attribution, cross-channel measurement of email's role in conversion path