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The 6 emails every SaaS company needs in their onboarding sequence

The 6-email onboarding sequence we've refined across 14 SaaS clients — what each one says, when to send it, and why most companies get email 3 catastrophically wrong.

The 6-email onboarding sequence we've refined across 14 SaaS clients — what each one says, when to send it, and why most companies get email 3 catastrophically wrong.

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Process

The 6 emails every SaaS company needs in their onboarding sequence.

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Most SaaS onboarding sequences send the wrong six emails. Here are the six that actually move free-trial users to paid — in the order we’ve seen work across 14 clients.

The standard SaaS onboarding sequence is: welcome, feature one, feature two, feature three, “you’re running out of time”, upgrade. Same emails every product. Almost all of them ignore the actual moment of decision. Here’s the sequence that does better.

Email 1: The welcome (sent immediately)

Confirm the signup, set expectations for the trial, and answer the question they’re actually asking: “what should I do first?” One clear next action. No marketing copy, no “thanks for joining the family.” Subject line: “Your trial: where to start”

Email 2: The first-win prompt (day 1)

Most users haven’t logged in again by day 1. This email gives them the smallest possible first win — the 90-second task that proves the product works. If you don’t know what that task is, you don’t know your product well enough yet. Find it before writing anything else.

Email 3: The “show, don’t tell” case study (day 3)

This is the one most companies get wrong. They send a feature tour. Send a customer story instead — one short case from a company that’s similar to the reader’s. Specific industry, specific outcome, specific numbers. This email does more conversion work than any other.

Email 4: The objection-handler (day 5)

By day 5 your trial users have decided whether they want this. They haven’t decided whether they can afford it / get it past procurement / explain it to their team. Pick the single biggest objection in your customer interviews and answer it.

Email 5: The “what would change?” question (day 9)

This one is counterintuitive. Don’t pitch. Ask. “What would have to be true for this to become a yes?” Short, personal, signed from a real human. The replies are gold — both for closing this user and for fixing the next ten.

Email 6: The honest upgrade prompt (day 13)

Most trials end with a panic email — “act now or lose access!” That’s the worst time to write copy that sounds nervous. Calm down. Recap what they’ve done in the trial (use behaviour data), state the price clearly, offer one alternative (longer trial / lower plan), and stop.

What’s missing

You’ll notice this sequence doesn’t include “tips and tricks”, “user spotlight”, “new feature launches”, or the standard “did you know…” emails. Those belong elsewhere — probably in the lifecycle for paid users, not in a free trial. The trial has one job: turn a sign-up into a customer. Six emails, properly written, do that better than twelve generic ones.

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