Email you send

Active template

Use the active template for normal sending. Expand only when you need to switch.

Change template

Classic — sample first

Explains the concept, preview block, no obligation — strongest default for most local businesses.

Ultra short

Fewest lines; link early, optional tailoring line at the end.

Soft / curious

Low-pressure question; good when you want a softer, curiosity-led open.

Direct CTA

Link and one clear offer to customize and ship a real site.

Active

From: Pedro <Section.inc2018@gmail.com>

Reply-To: Section.inc2018@gmail.com

Subject line

Sample website concept for [Company Name]

Email body

Hi [Name], I put together a sample website concept for [Company Name]: [Preview link] [North Dakota only: a brief UND / local ND line is added between the preview link and the closing offer.] If you’re open to it, I’d be happy to customize it and turn it into a real site for your business. Best, Pedro Schmidt Section LLC https://sectionllc.com/en Section.inc2018@gmail.com
North Dakota: For ND leads, a brief line about UND / supporting North Dakota businesses is inserted between the preview link and the closing offer.
  • [Name] → contact first name (drafts use “Hi,” until you add it)
  • [Company Name] → real business name
  • [Preview link] → live preview URL

Follow-up email

Follow-up copy

Reference copy after the first outreach. Not tied to automation yet — copy from here when you follow up manually.

Suggested sequence & timing

  • Classic — about 3–4 days after the first email.
  • Soft / curious — about a week after that.
  • Ultra short — about 7–10 days later.
  • Direct CTA — optional: use when you want a clearer ask before you stop.
  • Final check-in — last email: close the loop without sounding like you are chasing forever.

Automation does not send these yet — use as a playbook when you schedule manually. Swap steps if a lead’s context fits a different tone.

Browse follow-up templates

Classic follow-up

Best default for follow-up 1 (~3–4 days). Calm, clear, and credible.

Soft / curious follow-up

Lower pressure, more human — good for follow-up 2 (~1 week later).

Ultra short follow-up

Busy inboxes — often follow-up 3 (~7–10 days after step 2).

Direct CTA follow-up

Straightforward ask — use when you want a clear next step before stopping.

Final check-in

Last email: close the loop without sounding like you are chasing forever.

From: Pedro <Section.inc2018@gmail.com>

Reply-To: Section.inc2018@gmail.com

Subject line

Following up — website sample for [Company Name]

Email body

Hi [Name], I wanted to follow up in case my earlier email got buried. I had put together a sample website concept for [Company Name] and wanted to resend the preview here: [Preview link] I made it using publicly available information just as an example of what your business could look like online with a more polished website. [North Dakota only: a brief UND / local ND line is added after the “polished website” paragraph.] No pressure at all — I just thought it might be helpful to share. If it is something you would like to explore, I’d be happy to adjust it to better match your business. Best, Pedro Schmidt Section LLC https://sectionllc.com/en Section.inc2018@gmail.com
North Dakota: For ND leads: “I’m a former UND athlete, and I still like supporting North Dakota businesses when I can.”. For ND leads, that sentence is added on its own line after the paragraph about public information and polished websites.
  • [Name] → contact first name (drafts use “Hi,” until you add it)
  • [Company Name] → real business name
  • [Preview link] → live preview URL

Outreach pipeline

Track send status by stage. Open details only when you need to change template copy.

Nothing in this stage yet.