email-marketing

Email Marketing Specialist

Safety Notice

This listing is imported from skills.sh public index metadata. Review upstream SKILL.md and repository scripts before running.

Copy this and send it to your AI assistant to learn

Install skill "email-marketing" with this command: npx skills add dmend3z/tribo-skills/dmend3z-tribo-skills-email-marketing

Email Marketing Specialist

Overview

This skill provides a comprehensive framework for email marketing mastery based on the methodologies of Andre Chaperon (AutoResponder Madness, Soap Opera Sequences) and Frank Kern (Behavioral Dynamic Response, Mass Control). It goes beyond basic email tactics to teach story-driven engagement, behavioral sequencing, and the psychology of building genuine relationships through email.

Keywords: email marketing, Andre Chaperon, Soap Opera Sequence, Frank Kern, Behavioral Dynamic Response, autoresponder, email automation, open loops, Seinfeld emails, story-driven email, email segmentation, list building, email deliverability, nurture sequence, indoctrination sequence

Discovery & Planning Questions

Before crafting your email strategy, please answer these questions to ensure the campaign is perfectly tailored to your needs:

  • What is the primary goal of this email campaign? (e.g., sell a specific product, nurture new leads, onboard new customers, re-engage a cold list, announce a launch)

  • Who is the target audience for these emails? Please describe them in detail. (e.g., their biggest pain points, desires, level of awareness about your solution, what they've already tried)

  • What specific product or service are we promoting? Please provide a name, a brief description, and the price.

  • What is the "Epiphany Bridge" story for this offer? (i.e., The backstory of struggle, the moment of discovery, and the solution you created). This is crucial for the Soap Opera Sequence.

  • What is the specific Call to Action (CTA)? What is the one thing you want the reader to do after reading the email(s)? (e.g., click a link to a sales page, reply to the email, watch a video)

  • What is the context for the reader? How did they get onto this email list? (e.g., downloaded a specific lead magnet, signed up for a webinar, purchased a previous product)

  • What is your brand's tone and voice? (e.g., funny and irreverent, professional and authoritative, empathetic and caring, like a trusted friend)

  • Are there any specific topics, phrases, or angles we absolutely must include or avoid?

Core Frameworks

Soap Opera Sequence (Andre Chaperon)

A 5-7 email story-driven sequence that creates emotional connection and naturally leads to a sale:

  • Email 1: Set the Stage - Introduce yourself and create intrigue with an open loop

  • Email 2: High Drama / Backstory - Share your struggle and the wall you hit

  • Email 3: Epiphany - Reveal the breakthrough moment

  • Email 4: Hidden Benefits - Show unexpected advantages of the solution

  • Email 5: Urgency & CTA - Create urgency and make the offer

  • Email 6-7: Future Pacing - Paint the picture of life after transformation

Open Loop Technique (Andre Chaperon)

Create curiosity by opening a story or idea and not closing it until a later email. This keeps readers opening every email to get resolution.

Seinfeld Emails (Russell Brunson)

Daily emails that entertain and build relationship without always selling. Like the TV show, they're "about nothing" but always engaging. Use personal stories, observations, and lessons that connect to your core message.

Behavioral Dynamic Response (Frank Kern)

Change what emails people receive based on what they DO, not just who they are:

  • Click a link about Topic A → Get more content about Topic A

  • Watch 75% of a video → Get the next video in the series

  • Visit sales page but don't buy → Get objection-handling sequence

  • Buy a product → Get onboarding sequence, not more sales emails

The 4-Day Cash Machine (Frank Kern)

A rapid-fire promotion sequence:

  • Day 1: Announce the offer with a story

  • Day 2: Case study or proof

  • Day 3: FAQ and objection handling

  • Day 4: Final call with urgency

Indoctrination Sequence

The first emails after opt-in that set expectations and build the relationship:

  • Deliver what was promised (lead magnet)

  • Tell your origin story

  • Set expectations for future emails

  • Introduce your worldview/philosophy

  • Create the first open loop

S-Tier Tactics (Must-Do)

Use the Soap Opera Sequence for All New Subscribers: Don't just deliver a lead magnet and start pitching. Tell a connected story over 5-7 emails that builds relationship and belief before making an offer.

Implement Open Loops in Every Email: End each email with a teaser for the next. "Tomorrow I'll tell you about the one mistake that cost me $50,000..." This dramatically increases open rates.

Segment by Behavior, Not Just Demographics: Tag subscribers based on what they click, watch, and buy. Serve different content based on demonstrated interest, not assumed interest.

Build a Permission-Based List with Double Opt-In: Quality over quantity. A smaller engaged list outperforms a large unengaged one every time.

Implement Behavioral Triggers: When someone takes an action (clicks, watches, visits), automatically adjust what emails they receive. Intent signals are gold.

Tell Stories, Don't Just Inform: Every email should have a narrative element. Facts tell, stories sell. Use the Epiphany Bridge structure in your emails.

Set Up Proper Authentication: SPF, DKIM, and DMARC are non-negotiable. Without them, your emails go to spam.

A-Tier Tactics (Highly Effective)

Send Seinfeld-Style Daily Emails: After the Soap Opera Sequence, send daily emails that entertain and build relationship. Not every email needs to sell.

Create Branch Logic Based on Clicks: If someone clicks a link about "beginner tips," send them beginner content. If they click "advanced strategies," send advanced content.

Use the "Feel, Felt, Found" Formula for Objections: "I know you might feel [objection]. I felt the same way. But here's what I found..."

Implement Re-Engagement Sequences: When subscribers go cold (no opens for 30-60 days), send a specific sequence to win them back or clean them off your list.

Create Buyer vs. Non-Buyer Sequences: Once someone buys, they should get different emails than those who haven't. Buyers want value and upsells, not the same pitch.

Use Curiosity-Driven Subject Lines: The only job of the subject line is to get the email opened. Use curiosity, specificity, or pattern interrupts.

Write Like You Talk: Email is personal. Write like you're emailing a friend, not a corporation. Use "you" and "I" liberally.

B-Tier Tactics (Good to Have)

A/B Test Subject Lines: Test two subject lines with a small segment, then send the winner to the rest.

Optimize Send Times: Test different days and times to find when your audience is most engaged.

Use Plain Text or Minimal Design: Fancy HTML emails often perform worse than simple text emails. They feel more personal.

Add a P.S. Line: Many people skim to the P.S. Use it for your main CTA or a curiosity hook.

Create a Sunset Policy: If someone hasn't engaged in 90+ days, remove them. This protects your deliverability.

Common Mistakes to Avoid (D-Tier)

Buying or Renting Email Lists: This destroys your sender reputation and violates anti-spam laws. Never do this.

Sending Generic Broadcasts to Everyone: One-size-fits-all emails show you don't understand your audience. Segment and personalize.

Pitching Too Early: Don't sell in the first email. Build relationship first with your Soap Opera Sequence.

Ignoring Unsubscribes and Complaints: High complaint rates tank your deliverability. Make unsubscribing easy and respect it.

Using Deceptive Subject Lines: Clickbait erodes trust. Your subject line should match your email content.

Sending Only When You Want Something: If you only email when you're selling, people tune out. Provide value consistently.

Neglecting List Hygiene: Dead subscribers hurt your deliverability. Regularly clean your list of non-openers.

Email Sequence Types

Sequence Type Purpose Length When to Use

Indoctrination Build relationship 3-5 emails After opt-in

Soap Opera Create belief + sell 5-7 emails After indoctrination

Seinfeld Maintain relationship Ongoing daily After Soap Opera

Launch Promote new offer 10-15 emails Product launches

Cart Abandonment Recover sales 3-5 emails After cart abandon

Re-Engagement Win back cold subs 3-5 emails After 30-60 days inactive

Onboarding Deliver value to buyers 5-7 emails After purchase

Ascension Upsell to next offer 5-7 emails After onboarding

Step-by-Step Workflow

Set Up Authentication: Configure SPF, DKIM, and DMARC before sending any emails.

Create Your Lead Magnet: Develop a valuable free resource that attracts your ideal customer.

Write Your Indoctrination Sequence: 3-5 emails that deliver the lead magnet, tell your story, and set expectations.

Develop Your Soap Opera Sequence: 5-7 story-driven emails that build belief and lead to your core offer.

Plan Your Seinfeld Emails: Create a content calendar for ongoing daily or weekly emails that entertain and engage.

Set Up Behavioral Triggers: Implement tags and automations that respond to subscriber actions.

Create Segment-Specific Sequences: Build different paths for different interests and behaviors.

Implement Re-Engagement and Sunset Policies: Automate the process of winning back or removing cold subscribers.

Monitor and Optimize: Track open rates, click rates, and conversions. Continuously improve based on data.

Templates

Soap Opera Sequence Template

Email 1: Set the Stage

  • Hook with a bold statement or question

  • Introduce yourself briefly

  • Hint at the transformation you'll share

  • Open loop: "Tomorrow I'll tell you about..."

Email 2: High Drama

  • Share your backstory

  • Describe the struggle and the wall you hit

  • Create empathy and connection

  • Open loop for the epiphany

Email 3: The Epiphany

  • Reveal the breakthrough moment

  • Explain the new belief or discovery

  • Start connecting it to your solution

  • Open loop for the benefits

Email 4: Hidden Benefits

  • Share unexpected advantages

  • Provide social proof

  • Handle a common objection

  • Tease the offer

Email 5: Urgency + CTA

  • Recap the journey

  • Present the offer

  • Create urgency

  • Clear call to action

Behavioral Trigger Map

Trigger Event Action Sequence

Clicks link about Topic A Add tag "Interest: Topic A" Send Topic A deep-dive sequence

Watches 75%+ of video Add tag "Engaged: Video" Send next video in series

Visits sales page Add tag "Sales Interest" Send objection-handling sequence

Abandons cart Add tag "Cart Abandoner" Send cart recovery sequence

Purchases product Add tag "Customer" Remove from sales sequence, add to onboarding

No opens for 30 days Add tag "Cold" Send re-engagement sequence

Examples

Example 1: Course Creator Soap Opera

  • Email 1: "I almost gave up on my dream..." (hook + open loop)

  • Email 2: "The day I hit rock bottom" (backstory + struggle)

  • Email 3: "Then I discovered this one thing..." (epiphany)

  • Email 4: "The unexpected side effect" (hidden benefits)

  • Email 5: "Your turn (but only until Friday)" (offer + urgency)

Example 2: E-commerce Behavioral Sequence

  • Customer browses running shoes → Tag "Interest: Running"

  • Send email: "5 mistakes new runners make"

  • Customer clicks → Send "Best running shoes for beginners"

  • Customer visits product page → Send "Why runners love [Product]"

  • Customer adds to cart but leaves → Send cart recovery sequence

Pro Tips from the Experts

Andre Chaperon: "Email is not about broadcasting. It's about creating a one-to-one conversation at scale. Write like you're writing to one person, because you are."

Frank Kern: "The money is in the behavior. When someone raises their hand and says 'I'm interested in X,' give them more of X. Stop guessing what people want and start responding to what they show you."

Russell Brunson: "The Soap Opera Sequence is how you build a relationship in 5 days that would normally take months. It's the fastest way to create true fans who buy everything you sell."

Source Transparency

This detail page is rendered from real SKILL.md content. Trust labels are metadata-based hints, not a safety guarantee.

Related Skills

Related by shared tags or category signals.

General

sales-funnels

No summary provided by upstream source.

Repository SourceNeeds Review
General

direct-response-advertising

No summary provided by upstream source.

Repository SourceNeeds Review
General

search-engine-optimization-seo

No summary provided by upstream source.

Repository SourceNeeds Review
General

upsell-downsell-scripting

No summary provided by upstream source.

Repository SourceNeeds Review