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· 6 min read

The first email you send a new customer is the most important one you'll ever write.

Most businesses send nothing. The ones that do send "Thanks for signing up!" and move on. Neither is good enough — because the moment someone first hears from you is the moment they decide whether they're actually going to stick around.

Think about the last time you bought something online or signed up for a service. What happened next? If it was a good experience, you probably got a proper confirmation email that told you what to expect, made you feel good about your decision, and maybe even gave you something useful. If it was bad — or more commonly, nothing — you probably forgot about them within a week.

That gap between signing up and the next time you hear from a business is where most customers quietly slip away. Not dramatically, not because they had a bad experience — just because nothing happened to make them feel like staying was worth it.

"Welcome emails have on average 4x higher open rates than any other email you'll ever send. People are actively looking for them. Most businesses waste that window entirely."

What most businesses actually send

The most common welcome email I see looks something like this:

It's not offensive. It's not wrong. It's just completely, utterly forgettable. The reader learns nothing about the business, feels nothing about it, and has no reason to do anything. Three days later they've forgotten it ever arrived.

What a good welcome email actually does

A welcome email has one job above everything else: make the person feel like signing up was a good decision. Everything else — the offers, the info, the news — can come later. This first email is about trust, warmth, and setting a tone they'll actually want to keep hearing from.

Here's what that looks like in practice:

Completely different experience. You now know who Roisin is, why she started the business, what kind of emails she sends, and you've got a reason to book right now. And the whole thing probably took five minutes to read.

The anatomy of a welcome email that works

What comes after the welcome email

A welcome email on its own is a good start. A welcome sequence — two, three, or four emails spread over the first couple of weeks — is where things get properly powerful.

Email two might share a customer story. Email three might answer the most common question you get. Email four might be a gentle nudge to book, buy, or come back. None of them need to be long. None of them need to be pushy. Together they do the work of keeping someone warm during the window when they're most likely to either become a loyal customer or quietly disappear.

The whole thing runs automatically. You set it up once and it works in the background every time someone new signs up — whether that's while you're with a client, on holiday, or asleep. That's the bit I love most about it.

The takeaway

If you're only going to do one thing with email this month, make it this: write a proper welcome email. Not "thanks for signing up." A real one — warm, specific, human, with one clear thing for the reader to do next. It'll outperform every other email you send for the rest of the year.

Want me to build this for you?
I write and set up welcome sequences that run automatically — from the first email to the fifth. You just show up and do your thing.
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