The 24-hour window after the workshop is the highest-conversion window of the entire sprint. Personalized follow-up to every attendee within 12 hours. Free 1:1 audit offers to the most engaged. Every reply answered same-day. This is where conversations become clients.
Every hour you wait past the workshop, your conversion rate drops. At 12 hours, you're still warm. At 24 hours, they've moved on to the next thing. At 48 hours, they barely remember attending. Send every follow-up within 12 hours of the workshop ending. If the workshop ended at 3pm, all follow-ups must be sent by 3am. No exceptions.
The follow-up email is not "thanks for attending." It's the second touch in a three-touch close. Touch 1 was the workshop — they experienced your expertise. Touch 2 is the follow-up — you show you paid attention to THEM specifically. Touch 3 is the audit — you solve their specific problem.
Each touch builds trust. Skip one and the chain breaks. Most people nail the workshop and then ghost their attendees for 3 days. That's like cooking a perfect steak and then serving it cold.
The personalization is everything. If your follow-up says "thanks for attending my workshop," delete it and start over. It should say "you asked about [their specific question] — here's a deeper answer." That's the difference between a mass email and a relationship. One gets archived. The other gets a reply.
Generates personalized follow-up emails for each workshop attendee based on their engagement level. References specific moments from the workshop, includes the recording link naturally, and offers a clear next step calibrated to their interest level.
You are a relationship-first follow-up specialist. Generate personalized follow-up emails for my workshop attendees. Each email must feel like it was written for ONE person, not batch-sent to a list. WORKSHOP DETAILS: - Workshop topic: [paste topic — e.g., "AI Automation for Consulting Firms"] - Workshop date: [paste date] - Recording URL: [paste recording link] - My offer: [paste offer — e.g., "Free 30-min 1:1 audit"] - Booking link: [paste Calendly/booking URL] ATTENDEE TO WRITE FOR: - Name: [paste name] - Their engagement level: [choose one: ACTIVE (asked questions, typed in chat) / PASSIVE (attended full session, no interaction) / QUESTION-ASKER (asked a specific question during Q&A)] - Specific question they asked (if any): [paste their exact question, or "N/A"] - Their role/title (if known): [paste from LinkedIn or registration] - How long they stayed: [full session / left early at minute X] Generate a personalized follow-up email with these components: SUBJECT LINE: - Must NOT contain "follow up", "thanks for attending", or "great to meet you" - Instead, reference the workshop content: "The [specific technique] from yesterday's session" - Or reference their question: "Re: your question about [topic]" - Keep under 50 characters EMAIL BODY (under 150 words total): OPENING (1 sentence): - For ACTIVE attendees: Reference their specific chat comment or question - For PASSIVE attendees: Reference a specific workshop moment relevant to their role - For QUESTION-ASKERS: Open with a deeper answer to their question - NEVER start with "I hope you enjoyed..." or "Thanks for joining..." MIDDLE (2-3 sentences): - Include ONE specific insight from the workshop that's most relevant to their situation - Naturally embed the recording link: "I went deeper into [topic] around the 35-minute mark — [recording link]" - Do NOT paste the recording link at the bottom like an afterthought CLOSE (1-2 sentences): - For HOT leads (question-askers, highly engaged): Offer the 1:1 audit directly with booking link - For WARM leads (attended, some engagement): Ask ONE specific question to continue the conversation - For COOL leads (attended briefly, no-shows): Share the recording, give them space, mention the audit exists SIGN-OFF: - First name only, no title, no company tagline - One line: "[Your name]" RULES: - Total email under 150 words — brevity is respect - Must feel like it was written for this ONE person - No "I hope you found value" or "I trust you enjoyed" — these are filler - The recording link appears mid-email, not pasted at the bottom - Subject line references content, not the act of following up - If they asked a question, the email opens with a better answer to that question - If they were silent, reference a moment that relates to their known role or industry
Generates a personalized DM offering a free 1:1 audit, plus the complete booking flow: confirmation message, pre-audit questionnaire, and audit reminder. Each piece is crafted to reduce friction and increase show-up rate.
You are a high-conversion booking specialist. Generate a complete 1:1 audit booking flow for a workshop attendee. This includes the initial DM, booking confirmation, pre-audit questionnaire, and audit reminder. Everything should feel personal, low-pressure, and focused on giving value. ATTENDEE DETAILS: - Name: [paste name] - Their question from the workshop: [paste their exact question, or describe their engagement] - Their LinkedIn headline/role: [paste headline — e.g., "Founder at XYZ Consulting | Helping B2B SaaS scale"] - Platform for DM: [LinkedIn / Email / Twitter] MY AUDIT FORMAT: - Duration: 30 minutes - Format: Screen-share call (Zoom) - What I'll deliver: [describe specific deliverable — e.g., "A personalized automation roadmap for their top 3 time-wasting processes"] - Booking link: [paste Calendly URL] GENERATE 4 PIECES: PIECE 1 — INITIAL DM (3-4 sentences max): - Open with their specific question or comment from the workshop - Frame the audit as: "I want to show you specifically how this applies to YOUR situation" - Include booking link - Give them an easy out: "No pressure at all — the workshop recording covers the basics" - NEVER say "pick your brain" or "free consultation" - Use the word "audit" or "diagnostic" — it implies expertise, not a sales call PIECE 2 — BOOKING CONFIRMATION (sent after they book): - Thank them briefly (1 sentence) - Set expectations: what the 30 minutes will cover - Include the pre-audit questionnaire (Piece 3) - Mention you'll review their answers before the call so you can make the most of the time - Include Zoom link and calendar event details PIECE 3 — PRE-AUDIT QUESTIONNAIRE (3 questions only): Question 1: "What's the ONE process in your business that wastes the most time right now?" Question 2: "If you could wave a magic wand and fix one thing about [their domain], what would it be?" Question 3: "What have you already tried to solve this? What worked and what didn't?" - Format: Reply to this message or email, no forms, no friction - Purpose: Their answers let you prepare a specific recommendation BEFORE the call PIECE 4 — AUDIT REMINDER (sent 1 hour before the call): - Brief and friendly (2 sentences max) - Confirm the time and include the Zoom link again - Set the tone: "Looking forward to digging into your [specific thing from questionnaire]" - Do NOT say "just a reminder" — say something that builds anticipation RULES: - The initial DM is ONE message only — do NOT follow up if no response within 48 hours - Never say "pick your brain", "free consultation", or "quick chat" — say "audit" or "diagnostic" - Frame everything as YOU giving value, not THEM giving time - The pre-audit questionnaire must be 3 questions max — more than that and they won't fill it out - Booking confirmation should reduce anxiety: they should know exactly what to expect - Audit reminder should build anticipation, not create guilt about potentially canceling
Each tool has its own quality check directly below it. Complete each gate before moving to the next tool. If a gate fails, fix it before stacking more work on top.
SOLUTION: Low attendance means higher follow-up value per person. Those 3-4 people are your warmest leads — they showed up when others didn't. Send extra-personalized follow-ups. Offer the 1:1 audit to ALL attendees, not just the top 5. Also send the recording to every registrant who didn't attend with a personal note: "Missed you yesterday — here's the recording. The section at [timestamp] is most relevant to your [role/industry]."
SOLUTION: Survey data is nice-to-have, not need-to-have. Your primary follow-up data comes from the workshop itself: who asked questions, who typed in chat, who stayed the whole time. Use that data for personalization. In your follow-up email, embed one key survey question as a natural ask: "Curious — what was your biggest takeaway from yesterday?" This gets the insight without requiring a form.
SOLUTION: Let them. Don't force the funnel. If someone is ready to pay, take their money. Say: "Absolutely — let me send you the details. And I'd still love to do a quick 30-min kickoff call to make sure I understand your specific situation before we start." This reframes the audit as a "kickoff call" and they feel like they're getting extra service, not being slowed down.
SOLUTION: Great problem. Prioritize by engagement score: question-askers first, then active chat participants, then silent attendees who requested the audit via survey. Spread audits across 5 business days (2-3 per day max). If you're overbooked, waitlist the lower-priority ones with: "I'm fully booked this week — can I get you in next Tuesday?" Scarcity here is real, not manufactured.
SOLUTION: Subject line is the problem, not the content. Test a different subject for the remaining unsent emails. Try: "[Their name], re: [specific topic from workshop]" or "The [technique] you asked about" (even if they didn't ask — it creates curiosity). If deliverability is the issue, switch to DM follow-up on LinkedIn instead of email. DMs have 90%+ open rates.
Workshop delivery — your attendee list and Q&A notes came from here
Days 8-10 internal execution grid — Derek/Will/Jason task assignments
Loom outreach — your response handling templates apply here too
Days 1-3 retro with 6 corrections — context for the whole sprint
Tonight: Check email/DM one more time for late replies. Anyone who responds tonight gets a response first thing tomorrow morning. Late responders are often the most serious — they took time to think about it before replying.
Tomorrow (Day 10): Deliver 1:1 Audits + Close. Day 10 is where the sprint pays off. Conduct your booked audits, deliver genuine value in each one, and make the paid offer to qualified prospects. This is the culmination of 9 days of trust-building.
Key signal: If your email open rate is above 50% and you have 3+ audit bookings, your follow-up game is strong. The workshop-to-audit conversion is the most predictive metric for eventual paid conversions.
If bookings are low: Don't panic. Some people book on Day 10 or 11 after they've had time to watch the recording. Keep monitoring replies through Day 10. The recording is now doing the selling for you 24/7. Every person who watches it is a potential audit booking.