← Back to Skills Marketplace
jk-0001

Email Marketing

by Jatin Khatri · GitHub ↗ · v0.1.0
cross-platform ✓ Security Clean
1005
Downloads
0
Stars
1
Active Installs
1
Versions
Install in OpenClaw
/install email-marketing-2
Description
Build and execute email marketing campaigns for a solopreneur business. Use when building an email list, writing email sequences (welcome, nurture, sales), designing broadcast campaigns, improving open and click rates, or setting up email automation. Covers list building, segmentation, email copywriting, sequence design, deliverability, and metrics. Trigger on "email marketing", "email campaign", "email sequence", "email list", "newsletter", "email automation", "improve email open rates", "nurture emails", "welcome email".
README (SKILL.md)

Email Marketing

Overview

Email is the highest-ROI marketing channel for solopreneurs — you own the list, the engagement is direct, and the cost is near zero. But most solopreneur email marketing fails because it's either too salesy (instant unsubscribes) or too timid (no conversions). This playbook builds an email system that nurtures relationships and drives revenue.


Step 1: Build Your Email List

You can't do email marketing without subscribers. List building is priority #1.

Where to capture emails:

Source How Conversion Tip
Website (lead magnet) Offer something valuable (checklist, template, guide) in exchange for email Make the lead magnet hyper-specific to your ICP's #1 pain
Blog posts Inline or end-of-post signup form Offer a content upgrade related to the post topic
Landing pages Dedicated page for a specific offer Single focus — no navigation, one CTA only
Social media bio Link to signup page in bio Tease the value in your bio copy
Webinars or events Registration form captures email Deliver value on the webinar, follow up with email sequence
Gated content Require email to access resource Only gate high-value content (not every blog post)

Lead magnet ideas (choose based on your ICP):

  • Checklist (quick win, actionable)
  • Template (saves time, immediately useful)
  • Guide or ebook (educational, positions you as expert)
  • Swipe file (examples or case studies)
  • Calculator or tool (interactive, high perceived value)
  • Mini-course (5 days of lessons via email)

Rule: The more specific the lead magnet, the higher the conversion AND the more qualified the subscriber. "Free marketing guide" is generic. "Cold email template that gets 20%+ reply rates for SaaS founders" is specific.


Step 2: Choose Your Email Platform

Start simple. Pick a tool that handles the basics well and doesn't overcomplicate.

Recommended for solopreneurs (ranked by simplicity):

  1. ConvertKit (best for creators, simple automation, clean design)
  2. Mailchimp (free tier, beginner-friendly, good templates)
  3. Beehiiv (great for newsletters, built-in monetization, fast growth features)
  4. MailerLite (affordable, solid automation, decent UI)

Features you need: Automation (sequences), segmentation (tags or lists), deliverability tracking, and basic analytics (opens, clicks). Avoid tools with complex enterprise features you'll never use.


Step 3: Design Your Core Email Sequences

Automated sequences do the heavy lifting. Set them up once, they run forever.

Sequence 1: Welcome Sequence (5-7 emails over 7-10 days)

Goal: Introduce yourself, deliver value, build trust, set expectations.

EMAIL 1 (Day 0): Deliver the lead magnet + set expectations
  - Give them what they signed up for
  - Tell them what to expect (frequency, topics)
  - One small ask: reply and tell me what you're working on

EMAIL 2 (Day 2): Deliver unexpected value
  - Share a tip, insight, or resource they didn't ask for
  - Build goodwill before you ask for anything

EMAIL 3 (Day 4): Tell your story (briefly)
  - Why you built this business
  - What problem you solve and for whom
  - Keep it short — 3-4 paragraphs max

EMAIL 4 (Day 6): Social proof
  - Share a case study or testimonial
  - Or: share a relevant win or result

EMAIL 5 (Day 8): Soft CTA
  - Invite them to take the next step (book a call, try the product, read a key resource)
  - Low-pressure: "If you're interested, here's how we can work together."

(Optional) EMAIL 6-7: Answer top 2 objections or FAQs

Key rule: Don't sell hard in the welcome sequence. Build trust first, sell later.

Sequence 2: Nurture Sequence (ongoing, every 7-14 days)

Goal: Stay top of mind, provide ongoing value, occasionally pitch.

Structure: 80% value, 20% pitch. For every 5 emails, 4 are purely educational/helpful, 1 is a pitch or CTA.

Value emails:

  • Tips, how-tos, frameworks
  • Case studies or customer stories
  • Industry insights or trends
  • Curated resources

Pitch emails:

  • Product launch or feature announcement
  • Limited-time offer or discount
  • "Here's how we can help you with [specific problem]"

Sequence 3: Sales Sequence (5-7 emails over 10 days after a specific action)

Goal: Convert warm leads (trial signups, demo requests, proposal sent) into customers.

Triggered when someone takes a high-intent action (starts trial, downloads pricing, books a call).

EMAIL 1 (Day 0): Confirm the action, set expectations
EMAIL 2 (Day 2): Deliver a quick win (show them how to get value fast)
EMAIL 3 (Day 4): Handle objection #1 (usually price or "will this work for me?")
EMAIL 4 (Day 6): Social proof (testimonial or case study)
EMAIL 5 (Day 8): Handle objection #2 (usually implementation time or complexity)
EMAIL 6 (Day 10): Urgency (trial ending, offer expiring, limited availability)

Key rule: Each email should accomplish ONE thing. Don't cram multiple messages into one email.


Step 4: Write Email Copy That Converts

Email copy is different from landing page copy — it's more personal, more conversational, and shorter.

Email structure:

SUBJECT LINE:   Get them to open (curiosity, value, or urgency)
PREVIEW TEXT:   First line of email — hook them further
BODY:           Short paragraphs (2-3 sentences max), one idea per email
CTA:            One clear action (click, reply, book, buy)
SIGNATURE:      Your name, your role, your business
P.S.:           Restate the CTA or add a bonus (P.S. lines get read more than body copy)

Subject line formulas:

Type Example
Curiosity "The one metric that predicted our best customers"
Value "5-min read: how to automate client reporting"
Personalization "Hey [Name], quick question for you"
Urgency "Ending tonight: [offer]"
Question "Still struggling with [pain point]?"

Body copy rules:

  • Start with a hook (first sentence must grab them)
  • Write like you're talking to one person (use "you" and "I", not "we" and "our users")
  • Keep it scannable (short paragraphs, bold key phrases, use line breaks generously)
  • One CTA per email (multiple CTAs split attention and kill conversions)
  • End with a P.S. (seriously, it works — restate your offer or add urgency)

Step 5: Segment Your List

Sending the same email to everyone is lazy and ineffective. Segmented emails get 3x higher engagement.

How to segment:

Segment By Example Why It Matters
Behavior Opened last 3 emails vs didn't Send re-engagement campaigns to cold subscribers
Stage in funnel Subscriber vs trial user vs customer Different messages for different stages
Interest / topic Tagged based on lead magnet they downloaded Send relevant content only
Purchase history Bought Product A, hasn't bought Product B Targeted upsell/cross-sell
Engagement level High engagers vs low engagers VIP content for high engagers, win-back campaigns for low

Rule: Start simple with 2-3 segments. Don't over-complicate. "Engaged subscribers" and "cold subscribers" is a good starting point.


Step 6: Improve Deliverability

If your emails land in spam, nothing else matters. Deliverability is hygiene — get it right or your metrics will tank.

Deliverability checklist:

  • Use a custom domain for sending (not @gmail.com). Set up SPF, DKIM, and DMARC records.
  • Warm up your domain (don't send to 10,000 people on day 1 — start small, ramp up gradually).
  • Clean your list regularly. Remove bounces and unengaged subscribers every 3-6 months.
  • Avoid spam trigger words in subject lines ("FREE!!!", "ACT NOW", "LIMITED TIME OFFER!!!").
  • Make it easy to unsubscribe. Hiding the unsubscribe link gets you marked as spam.
  • Monitor your sender reputation (tools: Google Postmaster, Sender Score).

If your open rates suddenly drop: Check spam. Send a test email to yourself at Gmail, Outlook, and Yahoo. If it lands in spam, you have a deliverability problem.


Step 7: Measure Performance and Iterate

Track these metrics monthly:

Metric What It Means Healthy Range
Open rate % of recipients who opened the email 15-25% (varies by industry)
Click rate % of recipients who clicked a link 2-5%
Unsubscribe rate % who unsubscribed \x3C 0.5% per email
Bounce rate % of emails that didn't deliver \x3C 2%
Conversion rate % who took the desired action (signup, purchase, etc.) Varies by offer

What to do with the data:

  • Low open rates? Test subject lines (A/B test 2-3 variations). Check deliverability (landing in spam?). Clean your list (remove unengaged subscribers).
  • Low click rates? Weak CTA or irrelevant content. Test CTA placement and wording. Segment better (send more targeted emails).
  • High unsubscribe rates? Sending too often, content isn't relevant, or tone is off. Survey unsubscribers to understand why.

Iteration rule: Test one variable at a time. Subject line one week, CTA placement the next. Measure, learn, repeat.


Email Marketing Mistakes to Avoid

  • Not sending consistently. If you email once a quarter, people forget who you are. Aim for at least monthly.
  • Selling in every email. You'll burn out your list. 80% value, 20% pitch is the rule.
  • Not segmenting. Sending the same message to everyone means it's relevant to no one.
  • Ignoring unengaged subscribers. They drag down your metrics and hurt deliverability. Remove or re-engage them.
  • Not having a welcome sequence. The first 7 days after signup are the highest-engagement window. Use it.
  • Writing generic subject lines. "Newsletter #47" gets ignored. Make every subject line earn the open.
Usage Guidance
This skill is a text-only playbook and appears coherent for its stated purpose. Before using: (1) Do not paste sensitive credentials (SMTP/API keys) into the chat unless you trust and expect the skill to need them — the SKILL.md does not require any keys. (2) Follow privacy and anti-spam laws when building lists (consent, unsubscribe handling, GDPR/CAN-SPAM compliance). (3) Be cautious if the skill later asks to perform actions on external accounts — verify the exact API/credential usage and prefer creating limited-scope API keys. Overall, the skill is instruction-only and low-risk, but exercise normal care around credential sharing and regulatory compliance.
Capability Analysis
Type: OpenClaw Skill Name: email-marketing-2 Version: 0.1.0 The OpenClaw skill bundle contains a `_meta.json` file with standard metadata and a `SKILL.md` file providing a comprehensive guide on email marketing. The markdown content is purely informational and advisory, offering strategies, best practices, and recommendations for building and executing email campaigns. There are no executable commands, instructions for data exfiltration, attempts at prompt injection against the AI agent, or any other indicators of malicious or suspicious behavior. The content is entirely aligned with its stated purpose.
Capability Assessment
Purpose & Capability
The name/description (email campaign design, sequences, deliverability, copywriting) matches the SKILL.md content. There are no unrelated requirements (no cloud credentials, binaries, or platform-specific config) that would be unexpected for this kind of guide.
Instruction Scope
The instructions are a step-by-step marketing playbook (list building, sequence design, platform recommendations, copy guidance). They do not instruct the agent to read local files, access environment variables, call external endpoints, or exfiltrate data. They remain within the stated scope.
Install Mechanism
There is no install spec and no code to write to disk — lowest-risk model for a skill. Nothing is downloaded or executed by the skill itself.
Credentials
The skill does not request environment variables, keys, or config paths. That is proportional to an instruction-only marketing guide. (If later prompts request API keys or SMTP credentials from the user, that would be an interaction to treat cautiously.)
Persistence & Privilege
always is false and the skill is user-invocable; it does not request persistent elevated privileges or attempt to alter other skills. Autonomous invocation is allowed (platform default) but there are no other privilege requests.
How to Use
  1. Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
  2. Run the install command in chat: /install email-marketing-2
  3. After installation, invoke the skill by name or use /email-marketing-2
  4. Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
Version History
v0.1.0
Initial release of “email-marketing” skill. - Provides a step-by-step playbook to build and execute email marketing campaigns for solopreneurs. - Covers list building, choosing an email platform, creating core sequences (welcome, nurture, sales), and writing effective copy. - Offers segmentation strategies and deliverability tips to maximize open and click rates. - Includes actionable templates, rules, and best practices for email marketing automation.
Metadata
Slug email-marketing-2
Version 0.1.0
License
All-time Installs 1
Active Installs 1
Total Versions 1
Frequently Asked Questions

What is Email Marketing?

Build and execute email marketing campaigns for a solopreneur business. Use when building an email list, writing email sequences (welcome, nurture, sales), designing broadcast campaigns, improving open and click rates, or setting up email automation. Covers list building, segmentation, email copywriting, sequence design, deliverability, and metrics. Trigger on "email marketing", "email campaign", "email sequence", "email list", "newsletter", "email automation", "improve email open rates", "nurture emails", "welcome email". It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 1005 downloads so far.

How do I install Email Marketing?

Run "/install email-marketing-2" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.

Is Email Marketing free?

Yes, Email Marketing is completely free (open-source). You can download, install and use it at no cost.

Which platforms does Email Marketing support?

Email Marketing is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).

Who created Email Marketing?

It is built and maintained by Jatin Khatri (@jk-0001); the current version is v0.1.0.

💬 Comments