I used to think automation was just for big companies with teams and fancy software.
You know, the kind of setup where someone in a crisp blazer sips coffee while a sleek dashboard does all the work. Definitely not for me—just a solo business owner who spent more time figuring out Canva than actually sending emails.
But that all changed one Sunday night.
I’d just finished packing the week’s orders and realized I hadn’t sent any follow-up emails. No thank-you notes. No order confirmation sequences. Nothing to bring those new buyers back. My inbox was a mess. My open rates? Let’s not even go there.
That’s when I decided to give email marketing automation a serious shot.
And let me tell yo, it changed everything.
The First Time I Tried Automation (And Messed It Up)
So I signed up for MailerLite because it was cheap and honestly looked less scary than the others. I created my first welcome email… then promptly forgot to turn the automation on.
Yep, my first five subscribers got absolutely nothing.
Lesson learned: even automation needs a human to press “start.”
Once I fixed that, though, it was like magic. Every new subscriber got a friendly, branded welcome email the moment they joined. It introduced them to my brand, recommended a few products, and included a small discount code. I didn’t have to lift a finger, and my conversion rate from email went up 40% within two weeks.
Building My First Workflow (And Why You Should Start Simple)
Here’s what I did next—and what I recommend if you’re just starting:
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Set up a welcome series. I made it 3 emails long:
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Email 1: “Hey there, welcome!” with a short story and brand intro
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Email 2 (day 2): A few of my most-loved products
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Email 3 (day 4): A behind-the-scenes peek at how things are made
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Cart abandonment email. This one hurt to set up because I had to confront how many people were almost buying. But once I added this automation, I recovered about 10–15% of abandoned carts. That’s free money, folks.
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Post-purchase follow-up. A simple “Thanks for your order” email went out, followed by one asking for a review or a photo share. Those emails? They started feeding my social proof like crazy.
Keeping It Personal (Because Nobody Likes Robot Emails)
Now let me be clear, automation should never feel robotic.
The key to not sounding like an emotionless algorithm is writing like you talk. I use people’s first names, toss in jokes, and always keep the tone casual and friendly. No “Dear Valued Customer” nonsense.
Another trick? Dynamic content. It lets me change parts of the email based on what someone clicked or bought. So if someone’s into candles, they don’t get emails about planners. Way more relevant, way more conversions.
One more thing I learned the hard way: don’t overdo it. Sending daily emails because you “set it and forget it” is a fast track to getting unsubscribed. I space mine out every few days depending on the sequence.
The Tools That Actually Made My Life Easier
MailerLite worked great when I was starting out, but I eventually moved to ConvertKit when I needed more advanced automations. It integrates nicely with my shop and lets me tag customers based on behavior—like who clicks a sale link or who hasn’t opened an email in 60 days.
Some of my small business friends use Brevo (used to be Sendinblue) because it offers generous free plans. Whatever tool you use, make sure it has a visual workflow builder, seeing how things flow makes it so much easier.
Also: make sure your email tool talks to your ecommerce platform. Otherwise, you’re stuck manually importing customer info, and that’s just a headache you don’t need.
Watching the Numbers (Because Data Doesn’t Lie)
I used to ignore analytics because, well, numbers stress me out. But now? I check my email reports weekly.
Here’s what I track:
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Open rates (above 30% = solid)
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Click-through rates (aim for 3–5%)
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Revenue per email
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Unsubscribe rate (if it’s spiking, something’s off)
If a welcome sequence isn’t performing, I’ll tweak the subject line or move the discount offer earlier. Small edits can make a huge difference.
Final Thoughts: Automation = Your 24/7 Assistant
Here’s the real talk: automation won’t replace your personality or your hustle—but it will let you be in ten places at once. It’s like cloning yourself without the creepy sci-fi side effects.
Start small. Write like a human. Track what’s working. And whatever you do, don’t forget to hit “activate” on that workflow.
Trust me, your future self will thank you when a sale rolls in while you’re on a walk… or asleep.







