From rmbc-skills
Generate a 3-5 email reengagement sequence for inactive subscribers — from "we miss you" through exclusive offer to sunset warning using RMBC principles.
npx claudepluginhub coleschaffer/copywritingskills-rmbcThis skill uses the workspace's default tool permissions.
Generate a reengagement email sequence (3-5 emails) that reactivates inactive subscribers or cleanly removes them from the list. Inactive subscribers hurt deliverability, inflate costs, and drag down open rates — but many are recoverable with the right approach. This sequence gives them compelling reasons to re-engage, escalates with an exclusive offer, and ends with a clear sunset warning that...
Designs email sequences for drip campaigns, welcome series, lead nurture, re-engagement, and lifecycle programs with timing, subject lines, and best practices.
Creates email marketing sequences for welcome/onboarding, lead nurture, re-engagement, post-purchase, and sales, with guidelines on timing, subject lines, and CTAs.
Generate retention/nurture email sequences (5-7 emails) to reduce churn, reinforce purchase decisions, and increase customer lifetime value using RMBC principles.
Share bugs, ideas, or general feedback.
Generate a reengagement email sequence (3-5 emails) that reactivates inactive subscribers or cleanly removes them from the list. Inactive subscribers hurt deliverability, inflate costs, and drag down open rates — but many are recoverable with the right approach. This sequence gives them compelling reasons to re-engage, escalates with an exclusive offer, and ends with a clear sunset warning that either wakes them up or lets you remove them cleanly. RMBC applies as re-persuasion architecture: Research identifies why they disengaged, Mechanism reminds them what makes you different, Brief structures the win-back arc, Copy executes with honesty and value.
| Input | Required | Description |
|---|---|---|
brand_name | Yes | Brand or sender name they originally subscribed to |
target_audience | Yes | Who the subscriber was — demographics, original interest, likely pain points |
key_value_prop | Yes | The core reason they subscribed — what value they were expecting |
win_back_offer | Yes | Exclusive offer for re-engagement — discount, free resource, or special access |
sequence_length | No | Number of emails: 3, 4, or 5 (default: 4) |
inactivity_threshold | No | How long they've been inactive — used for copy calibration (default: 90 days) |
Read rmbc-context/SKILL.md to load RMBC framework definitions. Reengagement sequences re-deploy RMBC against a cooled audience — these subscribers once found you valuable enough to opt in. The job is reminding them why, delivering fresh value, and forcing a decision: re-engage or unsubscribe.
| Role | Emotional Lever | Approach | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 — "We Miss You" | Acknowledge absence, re-introduce value | Nostalgia + curiosity | Warm, personal, non-pushy. Remind them why they subscribed. Show what they've missed. |
| 2 — Value Reminder | Deliver a high-value piece of content | Proof you're still worth their attention | Best recent content, tip, or insight — demonstrate value immediately |
| 3 — Exclusive Offer | Present the win-back incentive | Feeling special, exclusive access | Offer available only to returning subscribers — make them feel valued, not desperate |
| 4 — "Last Chance" | Final nudge with clear consequences | Loss aversion + clarity | "We don't want to see you go, but we only want to email people who want to hear from us" |
| 5 — Sunset Warning | Administrative: unsubscribe notice | Clean break | "We're removing you from our list in 48 hours unless you click below to stay" |
For 3-email sequences: combine 1+2 (miss you + value), keep 3 (offer), combine 4+5 (last chance + sunset). For 4-email sequences: combine 4+5 into one final email.
Before writing, identify likely reasons for inactivity:
| Reason | Signal | Sequence Adjustment |
|---|---|---|
| Inbox overwhelm | High volume sender | Lead with "we've improved" — less frequent, more valuable |
| Content mismatch | Subscribed for X, got Y | Re-qualify: "What are you most interested in?" |
| Got what they needed | Lead magnet download, no further need | Show new value they haven't seen |
| Forgot who you are | Long gap between emails | Reintroduce the brand — "Quick reminder: I'm [name] and I..." |
| Switched to competitor | Market shift | Differentiate — deploy mechanism to show what's unique |
Email 1 should address the most likely disengagement reason for this audience.
For each email, produce:
Rules:
Check that the sequence addresses:
If any stage is missing, revise.
## Reengagement Sequence: [Brand Name]
**Sequence Length:** [3-5] emails
**Send Schedule:** Day 1, 3, 5, 7, 10
**Audience:** [target audience — inactive segment]
**Inactivity Threshold:** [90 days | 120 days | etc.]
**Win-Back Offer:** [summary of exclusive offer]
---
### Email 1: "We Miss You" — Day 1
**Subject:** [subject line]
**Preview:** [preview text]
[Full email body]
[CTA — reply, click to re-engage, or preference center]
---
### Email 2: [Role Label] — Day [X]
[...continue for each email...]
---
## Reengagement Strategy Notes
- **Likely disengagement reason:** [identified reason and how email 1 addresses it]
- **Win-back offer placement:** Email [3] — exclusive to returning subscribers
- **Sunset deadline:** Email [4/5] — [48-72 hour] window to act
- **List hygiene:** Non-openers after full sequence → suppress or unsubscribe
- **Success metrics:** [reactivation rate, open rate recovery, list size reduction, deliverability improvement]
- **Re-engaged subscribers:** Move to [welcome-back flow or main broadcast list]
"We miss you" email must feel personal, not automated — use specific references to their original interest
Value email must deliver genuinely useful content — not a dressed-up pitch
Exclusive offer must feel exclusive — not the same discount everyone gets
Sunset warning must be clear and honest — state exactly what will happen and when
No guilt-tripping or desperation language — respect their right to leave
Subject lines must break through inbox blindness — these subscribers have been ignoring you
Sequence must lead to a clean binary outcome: re-engaged or removed
Non-responders after the full sequence must be suppressed — never keep emailing inactive subscribers
Specificity gate: Every claim in the copy must include a number, name, or timeframe — no "get results" or "improve your business"
Mechanism quantification: When referencing the mechanism, include at least one specific data point (number, timeframe, study reference)
Audience journey: The copy must reference where the reader IS (what they've tried, what's failing) — not just who they are demographically
Proof diversity: Use at least 2 different proof types (testimonial, statistical, authority, case study) — do not rely on a single proof mode
Objection handling: The copy must address at least 2 likely objections with concrete responses (ROI math, proof of similar result, risk reversal)
/welcome-sequence for re-engaged subscribers returning to active status/broadcast-email for ongoing engagement after reactivation/hook-battery for subject lines that break through inbox blindness/email-promo for promotional offers to the reactivated segment/rmbc-copy-auditGenerated using RMBC framework by Stefan Georgi. Learn more: copyaccelerator.com/join