Install
openclaw skills install bookforge-content-and-email-marketingDesign content marketing and email lifecycle programs that work together as an acquisition engine. Use whenever a founder or marketer is planning a blog, new...
openclaw skills install bookforge-content-and-email-marketingThe startup needs a content strategy, an email strategy, or both integrated. Use this skill when:
Content and email are tightly coupled — content builds the email list, email converts the list. This skill covers both as one system.
Product description and target audience → Check prompt for: product name, category, ideal customer → If missing, ask: "What does your product do, and who's the target audience?"
Activation definition: what action defines an "activated" user → Check prompt for: "active user", "first upload", "created project" → If missing, ask: "What's the first valuable action a user takes? For Dropbox it's uploading a file, for Twitter it's following 5 people. What's yours?"
SUFFICIENT: product + audience + activation definition known
PROCEED WITH DEFAULTS: product + audience known, use "first valuable action" as activation proxy
MUST ASK: product is unknown
Use TodoWrite:
ACTION: Identify the specific action that defines an "activated" user. This must be:
Examples: Twitter — follow 5 people. Dropbox — upload 1 file. Facebook — friend 7 people in 10 days. Slack — send 2,000 messages. These are the actual activation thresholds from real products.
Write the threshold to activation-definition.md.
WHY: Without a clear activation threshold, email sequences can't target drop-offs. "Send onboarding emails" without knowing the activation event produces generic welcome emails that don't move the needle. The threshold is the foundation for the entire activation email strategy.
IF retention data doesn't exist → pick a reasonable first-value action as a hypothesis. Measure and refine.
ACTION: Design content topics that attract the target audience, especially BEFORE they're ready to buy. Content marketing is list-building as much as it is brand-building.
Topics by type:
Every content piece should have a lead magnet — a free resource (checklist, template, mini-ebook) that captures the email in exchange. This is how content becomes an email list.
WHY: Content without a capture mechanism builds awareness but doesn't build a list. The list is the asset. A blog post with 10,000 views and no email captures is 10,000 visits wasted. The lead magnet is what converts anonymous traffic into named leads you can nurture.
IF no content capacity exists → budget for 2-4 freelance articles per month as a baseline.
ACTION: For each step from signup to activation, identify potential drop-off points. Create an email triggered when a user fails to complete each step within N days.
Colin Nederkoorn's (Customer.io founder) pattern:
Example sequence for a Dropbox-like product:
WHY: Users don't churn because they disliked the product — they churn because they never got to the valuable moment. Activation emails close the gap between signup and value. Each drop-off point has a specific email that addresses that specific reason.
ACTION: For infrequent-use products (the most common case), retention emails keep the product top-of-mind:
Write the retention sequence to retention-emails.md.
WHY: Retention is about presence. Products the user loves but forgets about cease to exist in their life. Retention emails are not about selling — they're about reminding. Mint's weekly summary isn't pitched as retention, it's pitched as value. The retention effect is a byproduct.
ACTION: For users who are activated and retained, design sequences that drive expansion revenue:
These are typically 3-7 email sequences triggered by specific behavior (not time).
WHY: Users who are retained but not expanding are leaving revenue on the table. Upsell sequences capture the willing-to-pay tier that wouldn't upgrade without a prompt. Referral emails turn happy users into new-user acquisition. These are pure expansion revenue that wouldn't exist without the email.
ACTION: Document the email marketing anti-patterns:
Never buy email lists. "Some companies will buy email lists and send people unsolicited email. That is the very definition of spam. Spam makes recipients angry, hurts future email deliverability efforts, and harms your company in the long run."
Other spam patterns:
WHY: Email deliverability is a reputation asset built over years. One spam complaint rate over 0.3% can cause deliverability issues that take months to recover from. Buying lists is the fastest way to destroy the asset you're trying to build.
Five markdown files:
activation-definition.md — Specific activation thresholdcontent-plan.md — Content topics by funnel stage + lead magnetsactivation-emails.md — Triggered sequences per drop-off pointretention-emails.md — Value summaries, re-engagement, memory-anchoredrevenue-emails.md — Referral, upsell, cart recovery, feature gatesThe list is the asset, not the blog. Content without email capture wastes traffic. WHY: Traffic is ephemeral; email is compounding. Without a capture mechanism, every blog post leaves the audience one step removed from the relationship.
Activation defines the email target. Without a threshold, sequences are generic welcomes. WHY: Activation is the handoff from "signup" to "customer." Every email either moves users toward activation or moves them away from churn.
Retention emails reinforce value, not sell. Mint's weekly summary is valuable; a "we miss you" email is annoying. WHY: Users who love the product but forget it churn. Retention emails exist to remind, not convince.
Behavioral triggers beat schedule blasts. Email when users do (or don't do) something, not on Tuesday morning. WHY: Relevance is the single biggest factor in open rates. Behavior-triggered emails are inherently relevant.
CEO email 30 minutes after signup. One personal email opens communication more than 5 automated ones. WHY: Users expect automation. A human email is unexpected and memorable. Colin Nederkoorn's 17% reply rate proves this.
Never buy lists. Deliverability is a multi-year reputation asset. WHY: One spam complaint surge can destroy deliverability for months. Organic list-building is slower but compounds; bought lists are fast and destructive.
Scenario: SaaS with high signup, low activation
Trigger: "We get 500 signups per month to our project management tool but only 50 actually create a project. Help."
Process: (1) Activation threshold: "create first project with 2+ tasks." (2) Content plan: 2 articles/month on project management best practices → lead magnets with templates → activation follow-through. (3) Activation sequence: Day 0 CEO email, Day 1 "create your first project in 2 minutes" video, Day 3 "5 project templates to copy", Day 5 "need help? Book a 10min call". (4) Retention: weekly team summary emails. (5) Revenue: upsell to paid when team hits 10 users.
Output: Full lifecycle plan with drop-off-triggered emails.
Scenario: Blog with no email capture
Trigger: "Our blog gets 50k visits/month but we only have 200 email subscribers. Ratio is terrible."
Process: (1) Diagnosis: no lead magnets. 50k visits × 2% capture = 1,000 new subs/month achievable. (2) Lead magnet plan: 3 downloadable resources (checklist, template, mini-guide) placed on the top 5 articles. (3) Activation emails for new subscribers: welcome sequence with value, not pitches. (4) Retention: weekly newsletter with curated industry content. (5) Revenue: after 4 weeks of nurture, introduce product.
Output: Content-to-email capture strategy with specific lead magnets and follow-through.
Scenario: Retention problem for infrequent-use product
Trigger: "Our expense tracking app has good ratings but users sign up and then forget about it. How do we fix retention?"
Process: (1) Retention is the core problem — infrequent-use product. (2) Weekly value summary: "Here's what you spent this week." Even users who haven't used the app for 2 weeks get reminded of the value. (3) Memory-anchored: "A month ago you saved $47 by noticing your subscription charges." (4) Re-engagement: "You have 3 new transactions to categorize." (5) CEO email on signup + milestone emails ("You've tracked $1,000 in expenses!").
Output: Retention-first email plan that reinforces product value without sales pressure.
This skill is licensed under CC-BY-SA-4.0. Source: BookForge — Traction: A Startup Guide to Getting Customers by Gabriel Weinberg and Justin Mares.
Install related skills from ClawhHub:
clawhub install bookforge-bullseye-channel-selection — Select content/email via Bullseyeclawhub install bookforge-seo-channel-strategy — SEO and content are tightly coupledclawhub install bookforge-viral-growth-loop-design — Referral emails are part of viral loopsOr install the full book set from GitHub: bookforge-skills