I was writing onboarding emails for my SaaS. 6 hours. 12 drafts. Mediocre result.
So I built a system:
3 prompts → strategy → copy → design brief.
45 minutes. First draft = final draft.
The psychology:
Each email readable in 60 seconds. CTAs escalate progressively.
If you want the full system (all 7 emails + Python automation), it's $27: https://khanfalah.gumroad.com/l/wjebq
But the strategy discussed above is enough to build your own if you prefer.
What's your biggest email sequence challenge?
This is such a familiar problem.
What surprised me when working on onboarding flows is that most of the time the problem isn’t writing the emails — it’s figuring out what signal should trigger them.
The best-performing sequences I’ve seen were tied to user behavior (first key action, inactivity, partial setup), not just time delays.
Curious — is your system behavior-based or mostly time-based sequences?
Great point. You're absolutely right.
The best sequences are behavior-based. Time-based is just the fallback.
My system actually starts with behavior mapping:
The strategy prompt asks you to define behavioral triggers first, then time-based fallbacks. Most people skip this and wonder why their sequences underperform.
What signals are you tracking for your onboarding?
Nice — that’s actually a pretty mature setup.
I like that you start from behavior mapping instead of timelines. A lot of onboarding sequences fail exactly because they’re purely time-based.
One pattern I’ve seen work well is defining a single “activation moment” first and designing the whole sequence around pushing users toward that event.
What counts as activation in your case?