Onboarding
The enemy of onboarding is overwhelm. Every additional ask in an onboarding email reduces the probability that the reader does any of them. Each onboarding email covers one job, not two.
- One action per email. Give them one thing to do, make it easy to understand, and end the email. The next email covers the next thing.
- Behavior-triggered, not just time-triggered. If they've already completed the action this email is about, suppress it. If they haven't opened the product at all, send a different email than if they opened it but didn't complete setup.
- Make the value visible before the action. Tell them what they'll be able to do once they complete this step, not what the feature is called. "Set up your first project" is less motivating than "Once you've created a project, all your client files, moodboards, and feedback live in one place."
Functional and specific. What does this email help them do?
Hi [name],
We're so excited to have you on board! Visualist is packed with features to help you streamline your workflow, from moodboards and proposals to invoicing and client communication.
Here are five things to try this week: set up your profile, create your first project, invite a client, explore the template library, and check out Vai, your AI assistant.
Don't hesitate to reach out if you need anything. We're here for you!
The Visualist Team
Hi Priya,
Creating your first project in Visualist takes about two minutes. Once it's set up, your moodboards, files, and client feedback all live in one place.
Create your first project: [link]
That's the only thing on this email's agenda.
Sofia
Day 0 (immediately on sign-up) → Day 1 → Day 3 → Day 7 → Day 14. Gaps widen as the user moves through setup. Trigger on behavior where possible. If they go quiet, flag for re-engagement rather than continuing to send onboarding emails they are not reading.