Upgrade prompt
Ask intensity is 4, so the email must work harder to earn the ask before making it. The psychology is aspiration, not pressure. The reader should finish this email thinking about what becomes possible, not feeling pushed toward a checkout.
- Reference what they've already done. "You've created four projects" is more persuasive than any generic benefit claim, because it proves you've been paying attention.
- Name the constraint, then the unlock. What have they hit, or are about to hit, that the upgrade resolves? "When you're ready to add a second team member" is more relevant than "Unlock collaboration features."
- Let aspiration do the work, not urgency. Manufactured urgency reads as pressure. Real aspiration reads as a genuine invitation. Our ICP responds to the latter.
Hi [name],
You've been using Visualist and we'd love to help you get even more out of it. Our Pro plan unlocks advanced features designed to streamline your workflow and take your studio to the next level.
Upgrade today and get access to unlimited projects, team collaboration, priority support, and so much more!
Don't miss out. Upgrade now!
The Visualist Team
Hi Priya,
Four projects completed in Visualist. At that pace, you're probably starting to feel the limits of working alone.
The Studio plan lets you bring in a second person: a studio manager, an assistant, whoever takes the coordination off your plate. They get full access; you stay in control.
See what's included: [link]
Sofia
Behavior-triggered, not calendar-based. Fire when a user hits a meaningful threshold: completing their nth project, inviting someone who can't join on their current plan, or reaching a feature limit. Don't send upgrade prompts on a schedule.