→ Email marketing & deliverability secrets you need to know (scroll)
→ Let’s talk about email journeys and flows (scroll)
Heya, how've you been?
I'll be pretty honest with you, this is me right now:
And that got even worse when I was forwarded this email (take a look below):
So I need your help with this:
Please head to this LinkedIn post here and engage in any way you can. Because what’s happening is actually disgusting, and it needs attention. I've also done a video verdict on it here if you need a Beth rant.
Got an email that deserves a trial in your personal or work inbox? Upload it to me (confidentially) and I’ll give it the RE:markable treatment in the next video verdicts.
The B2B Deliverability Masterclass sold out! The B2C/D2C ones are about to. I’m running more, so tell me if you want me to email you the second new ones that go live below.
Let’s talk about email journeys and flows (it's a long one)
If there’s one question that fills my inbox more than “what’s a good open rate?”, it’s this: “How do I build an email journey that actually works?”
Sorry to disappoint you, but there’s no perfect formula for this
Journeys aren’t one-size-fits-all, because people aren’t one-size-fits-all!!
But here’s what I can give you, the principles that make every journey work, no matter what you sell or who you’re sending to.
1. Start with the destination, not the steps
Ask: What’s the outcome I want from this journey? Is it a conversion? Activation? Retention? Education? Downloads? Once you know that, every email has a purpose (and you’ll stop sending filler).
2. Map emotion, not just logic
Journeys aren’t email sequences, they’re stories. Ask yourself what the reader is thinking, feeling, and doing at each stage. You’re guiding their mindset, objections and feelings, not just their mouse.
3. Stop obsessing over timing
There’s no magical “48-hour rule” or “3-day spacing” that guarantees success. Instead, think about context. If the next email helps them take the next step faster, send it sooner. If it’s nurturing trust, give them breathing space.
Then test, observe, and adapt.
4. Don’t automate chaos
Automation doesn’t fix a bad strategy, it multiplies it. Before you switch anything on, make sure your logic is watertight: → Clear start and end triggers → Defined exclusions (who shouldn’t get it at the start and during) → A reason for every step
Otherwise, you’ll end up with Frankenstein’s funnel, and yes, I’ve seen that movie.
5. Learn, don’t guess
You won’t get it right the first time, and that’s the point. Start small, measure impact, and refine based on actual behaviour. Your first journey is just your beta version. Every improvement compounds over time.
6. Build for scale, not speed
Short-term wins are great. But the best automations build momentum long-term. That means: → Segment by behaviour, motivation and personas → Use logic over volume → Keep your automations visible and regularly reviewed (no more “set and forget”)
How to map out your email journey
(without overbuilding it)
You want the right message at the right time. That starts with understanding your customer’s journey, then aligning content, timing, and triggers to it.
1) Do you even need a journey?
Don’t auto-build flows for every idea. First ask:
Goal – What outcome do we want? Audience – Who is this for? (segment, behaviour, intent, new vs remarketing) Message scope – Can this live in one email, or does it need repeating/splitting up? Resources – Do we have the capacity to maintain it?
2) Set SMART goals
Tie the journey to clear KPIs and a timeframe. Example: “Increase trial→activation from 18% to 24% in 90 days.”
3) Know your people
Segment by behaviour + stage first, demographics second. Helpful fields: source, last action, content/topic interest, product/category affinity, role/industry (B2B), past purchase, engagement recency.
Tip: Resist cramming multiple aims into one email. One goal, one CTA.
6) Automate with intent
Trigger on real signals: joined list, viewed X pages, started trial, purchased, hit usage milestone, lapsed N days. Add exclusions (recent buyers, open tickets, fatigue caps) so you don’t work against yourself.