Don't use the same formula (e.g., personalization-problem-solution) for every email in a sequence. Mix in different structures, such as a short value-add email, a two-sentence direct ask, or a problem-social proof format, to keep the prospect engaged and avoid predictability.

Related Insights

A great cold email is judged on three criteria: 1) Packaging (subject line and preview text), 2) Body (personalization, problem/solution language, and social proof), and 3) Style (personal flair, formatting, and length). Mastering all three is key to getting replies.

Sales reps shouldn't feel pressured to invent a new reason to reach out in every step of a sequence. If your core value proposition is strong and solves a real problem, it remains relevant. Persistently and politely reiterating that value demonstrates conviction and is often more effective than finding weaker, new angles.

Don't rely solely on automated sequences. Sending occasional, manually written, one-off emails to the same audience—without pausing the automation—can dramatically improve results. This "over the top" approach breaks the pattern and re-engages users who have become accustomed to the automated flow, waking them up.

Stop trying to convert customers directly within an email. An email's primary function is to provide enough evidence and intrigue to earn a click through to a dedicated sales page. The sales page, not the email, is responsible for the final conversion. This shift makes copy more conversational and less pushy.

Sending all your automated emails at a predictable time, like 9 AM, trains your audience to ignore them, turning them into "wallpaper." To break this pattern and make automations feel less robotic, vary the send times significantly, even using unconventional hours like 8 PM.

Prospects have minimal attention spans. To capture their interest, marketing copy in emails or social posts must be 75 words or less and contained in a single paragraph. Reserve longer, more detailed content (100-150 words) for your existing customer base, as they are already invested and more willing to read.

The 'thoughts?' bump email is a relic of time-constrained manual prospecting, not a best practice for conversions. Every touchpoint is an opportunity. Instead of a lazy bump, offer a tiny piece of value, like a relevant case study link, to re-engage the prospect's interest.

Most salespeople give up after two attempts. A sophisticated, long-term sequence across multiple channels isn't about annoying prospects; it's about leveraging statistical probability. This strategy creates multiple opportunities to deliver the right message through the right channel at the exact moment the buyer is ready to engage.

Instead of relying solely on automated sequences, send sporadic, manually written emails to the same audience without pausing the automation. This unexpected, human touch can "wake up" subscribers, leading to significantly higher engagement and business results compared to pure automation.

Asking for a prospect's time or interest is less effective than giving them something valuable. Emails that include a tangible offer (e.g., a benchmark, an audit, a unique insight) see a 28% higher reply rate. You get their time by not asking for it directly.