--- name: email-welcome-sequence-therapy description: "Create CRPO-compliant welcome email sequences for therapy practices that build trust and reduce no-show rates. Use when new leads fill out contact form but before first appointment. Creates 5-7 email nurture sequence that educates, builds connection, and gently encourages booking. Triggers on: create welcome sequence, nurture new leads, reduce no-shows, warm up cold leads. Outputs education-focused sequence with NO high-pressure tactics, NO outcome promises, and proper CRPO compliance." --- # Welcome Email Sequence for Therapy Practice Convert contact form submissions into booked appointments through trust-building, not pressure tactics. --- ## The Problem This Solves **Current Flow (Broken):** 1. Person fills out contact form 2. You email back: "When can you meet?" 3. They ghost or take weeks to respond 4. No relationship built during decision phase **Why They Ghost:** - Anxiety about starting therapy - Not sure if virtual therapy works - Don't know what to expect - Worried about cost/insurance - Comparing other therapists **Welcome Sequence Flow (Fixed):** 1. Person fills out contact form 2. **Immediate automated welcome email** (you'll respond within 24h) 3. **Over next 7-10 days:** Educational emails that build trust 4. By the time you follow up, they feel like they know you 5. **Higher show-up rate** for first session --- ## CRPO Compliance for Email Sequences ### Mandatory Rules **✅ ALLOWED:** - Educational content about therapy - Information about your approach - Your story and why you became a therapist - Logistics (scheduling, insurance, what to expect) - Gentle reminder to book **❌ PROHIBITED:** - Urgency tactics ("Only 3 spots left!") - Scarcity tactics ("Price going up tomorrow!") - Outcome promises ("You'll feel better in 8 weeks!") - Testimonials or client success stories - Aggressive sales language - Multiple CTAs per email (keep it simple) **Tone:** Educational, warm, patient. Never pushy. --- ## The 5-Email Welcome Sequence ### Email 1: Immediate Confirmation (Sent Immediately) **Purpose:** Reduce anxiety, set expectations **Subject:** "Got your message - I'll respond within 24 hours" **Body Structure:** ``` [Warm acknowledgment] Thanks for reaching out to NextStep Therapy. I know taking this step isn't easy. [Set expectations] I'll personally respond to you within the next 24 hours to discuss how I can support you. [Reduce anxiety about therapy] In the meantime, I wanted to share a few things about how therapy works here: - All sessions are confidential - We'll move at your pace - Virtual sessions are just as effective as in-person - Insurance receipts provided [No pressure] Take your time. There's no rush to respond right away. Jesse Cynamon, RP (CRPO #10979) NextStep Therapy ``` **CRPO Compliance:** ✅ Informational, no pressure, factual --- ### Email 2: What to Expect (Day 2) **Purpose:** Demystify therapy process **Subject:** "What happens in a first session?" **Body Structure:** ``` [Empathetic opener] Starting therapy can feel a bit mysterious. What actually happens in that first session? [Structure breakdown] Here's how the first session usually goes: **Getting to Know You (20-25 min)** - What brought you here? - What's been going on lately? - What are you hoping therapy might help with? **My Role (5-10 min)** - I'll share how I work (person-centered, ACT-informed) - We'll discuss confidentiality and logistics - You can ask any questions **Next Steps (5-10 min)** - If it feels like a good fit, we'll schedule ongoing sessions - If not, I can suggest other resources - No pressure either way [Reassurance] The first session is as much for you to get a sense of me as it is for me to understand how I can help. [Soft CTA] If you have questions before we meet, just reply to this email. Jesse ``` **CRPO Compliance:** ✅ Educational, process-focused, no outcomes promised --- ### Email 3: Your Story (Day 4) **Purpose:** Build connection and trust **Subject:** "Why I became a therapist" **Body Structure:** ``` [Personal opener] I thought it might be helpful if you knew a bit about me and why I do this work. [Your story - authentic, vulnerable] I became a therapist because [authentic reason - can reference Jesse's actual story]: - Struggled with anxiety in my 20s - Found therapy helpful but also frustrating at times - Wanted to practice therapy differently than what I experienced - Person-centered, not prescriptive [What you learned] What I learned from my own experience: - Feeling understood matters more than getting advice - Therapy works best when it's a collaboration - You're the expert in your own life [Connection back to them] If you've been dealing with anxiety, burnout, or feeling stuck—I get it because I've been there too. [No CTA - just connection] More soon. Jesse ``` **CRPO Compliance:** ✅ Personal disclosure appropriate for building rapport, no outcome claims --- ### Email 4: Common Questions (Day 6) **Purpose:** Remove logistical barriers **Subject:** "Your therapy questions, answered" **Body Structure:** ``` [Frame it] Here are the questions I hear most often from new clients: **"Does virtual therapy actually work?"** Yes. Research shows virtual therapy is just as effective as in-person for anxiety, depression, and most concerns. You get the same connection, just from home. **"How much does it cost?"** $[rate] per session. I provide insurance receipts that you can submit to your provider. Most Ontario insurance plans cover psychotherapy. **"How often do we meet?"** Usually weekly, at least at the start. As things stabilize, we might shift to bi-weekly. It's flexible based on what you need. **"What if I don't feel like it's a good fit?"** That's completely okay. Fit matters more than credentials. If it doesn't feel right after a session or two, I can suggest other therapists. **"How long does therapy take?"** It varies. Some people work with me for a few months, others for a year+. We'll check in regularly about whether it's still helpful. [Soft CTA] Have other questions? Just reply—I'm happy to answer. Jesse ``` **CRPO Compliance:** ✅ All factual, addresses objections, no pressure --- ### Email 5: Gentle Reminder (Day 8) **Purpose:** Prompt action without pressure **Subject:** "Ready when you are" **Body Structure:** ``` [Acknowledge time passed] It's been about a week since you first reached out. I wanted to check in. [No pressure frame] Starting therapy is a big step, and it's okay if you're still deciding. There's no rush. [Simple CTA] If you'd like to book a first session, you can: - Reply to this email with your availability - [Link to booking calendar if you have one] Same-week appointments are usually available. [Alternative action for hesitant] If you're still on the fence, feel free to reply with any questions. Happy to chat before you commit to a session. Take care, Jesse ``` **CRPO Compliance:** ✅ No urgency, patient, respects autonomy --- ## Optional Email 6-7 (If They Still Haven't Booked) ### Email 6: Resource Gift (Day 12) **Purpose:** Provide value even if they don't book **Subject:** "A resource for managing anxiety (free)" **Body Structure:** ``` [Acknowledge inaction, no judgment] I haven't heard back from you yet, and that's completely okay. Sometimes the timing just isn't right. [Value without expectation] In the meantime, I wanted to share something that might be helpful: [Educational resource - NOT a lead magnet that requires opt-in] - Link to a blog post about managing anxiety - Link to a simple grounding technique - Link to understanding ACT principles [No strings attached] No sign-up required. Just wanted to share something useful. [Final soft CTA] If you ever want to connect, my door is open. Jesse ``` **CRPO Compliance:** ✅ Genuinely helpful, no manipulation --- ### Email 7: Final Check-In (Day 15) **Purpose:** Close the loop gracefully **Subject:** "One last note" **Body Structure:** ``` [Graceful close] This will be my last email unless I hear from you. [Normalize not booking] It's completely normal to reach out and then decide the timing isn't right. No judgment at all. [Door stays open] If you ever want to book a session in the future—whether that's next month or next year—just email me. I'll still be here. [Genuine well-wish] I hope you find the support you're looking for, whether that's with me or someone else. Take care of yourself, Jesse Cynamon, RP NextStep Therapy ``` **CRPO Compliance:** ✅ Respectful closure, no guilt trip --- ## Email Sequence Variations ### For Urgent Leads (Mentioned "crisis" or "urgent") **Shorten sequence to 3 emails:** 1. Immediate response (offer call within 24h) 2. What to expect in first session (Day 1) 3. Booking reminder (Day 3) **Add crisis resources:** Include crisis line numbers, ER info if applicable --- ### For Students (From students/ pages) **Adjust Email 3 (Your Story):** - Mention university experience - Reference academic pressure, social anxiety - Adjust tone to be peer-like, not parental **Add to Email 4 (FAQs):** - "Can I schedule around classes?" (Yes, flexible scheduling) - "What if I need to cancel for exams?" (Flexible cancellation policy) --- ### For Professionals (From professionals/ pages) **Adjust Email 3 (Your Story):** - Mention professional burnout/imposter syndrome - Reference work-life balance struggles **Add to Email 4 (FAQs):** - "Can I do sessions during lunch?" (Yes, 45-50 min sessions fit) - "Evening/weekend available?" (Yes) --- ## Technical Setup ### Automation Tools **Option 1: ConvertKit (Kit)** - Create form on website - Set up automated sequence - Tag subscribers by source (students/professionals/general) **Option 2: Mailchimp** - Similar setup - Free tier might suffice initially **Option 3: Manual (Start Here)** - Template each email in Gmail drafts - When someone fills form, manually send Email 1 - Set calendar reminders for Days 2, 4, 6, 8, etc. - Copy/paste and personalize **Recommended:** Start manual, automate once you have 10+ leads/month --- ## Copy Guidelines ### Tone for Therapy Emails **DO:** - Write like you're emailing a friend who's going through something - Use "I" and "you" freely - Be warm but professional - Acknowledge difficulty of reaching out - Normalize hesitation **DON'T:** - Sound corporate or clinical - Use jargon without explanation - Be overly casual (avoid "Hey buddy!") - Create false urgency - Guilt trip for not responding ### Subject Line Rules **Good (specific, calm):** - "What happens in a first session?" - "Your therapy questions, answered" - "Why I became a therapist" **Bad (vague, pushy):** - "Don't miss this!" - "Still interested?" - "Last chance to book" --- ## Measuring Success ### Track These Metrics **Baseline (before sequence):** - Contact form submissions: X/month - Booking rate: Y% (people who book / people who inquire) - No-show rate: Z% **After implementing sequence:** - Booking rate should increase 10-25% - No-show rate should decrease 5-15% - Open rates: 40-60% is healthy for therapy - Reply rate: 10-20% replying with questions is good **What to test:** - Email 3 variations (different stories) - Subject lines - Day spacing (maybe Day 1, 3, 5, 7 instead of 2, 4, 6, 8) --- ## Common Questions ### "Won't this feel impersonal?" **No, because:** - You still personally reply to initial inquiry - The sequence fills the silence while they decide - Each email builds your voice and approach - More personal than silence ### "What if they book before Email 5?" **Perfect!** - Remove them from sequence immediately - Send different "looking forward to meeting" email ### "Should I include pricing in Email 1?" **Depends:** - If price is a common objection: Yes, mention in Email 1 - If you want to build connection first: Wait until Email 4 - Test both and see what converts better ### "Can I use this for existing clients?" **No.** - This is specifically for NEW leads who haven't booked - Don't add existing clients to this sequence --- ## Implementation Checklist **Before launching:** - [ ] Write all 5-7 emails - [ ] Get someone to proofread for tone - [ ] Check CRPO compliance (no outcomes, testimonials, pressure) - [ ] Set up automation OR create manual system - [ ] Create tracking spreadsheet (date contacted, emails sent, booked Y/N) - [ ] Test emails by sending to yourself - [ ] Verify all links work - [ ] Set up "unsubscribe" option (required by law) **After launching:** - [ ] Track open rates weekly - [ ] Track booking rate monthly - [ ] Read replies and adjust copy based on common questions - [ ] A/B test subject lines after 20+ sends - [ ] Refine based on data --- ## CRPO Compliance Checklist Before sending any email in sequence: - [ ] No outcome guarantees ("you'll feel better") - [ ] No testimonials or client stories - [ ] No urgency tactics ("only 3 spots") - [ ] No scarcity tactics ("price increasing") - [ ] Factual information only - [ ] Professional tone maintained - [ ] Credentials properly displayed (RP, CRPO #10979) - [ ] Option to unsubscribe clearly visible - [ ] No false claims --- ## Sources **Email Marketing for Healthcare:** - [Healthcare Email Best Practices](https://www.healthcaresuccess.com/blog/healthcare-marketing/email-marketing-best-practices.html) - [Therapy Practice Email Sequences](https://www.rachelannreid.com/blogarchive/email-nurture-therapy-practice) **CRPO Compliance:** - [CRPO Advertising Standards](https://crpo.ca/practice-standards/business-practices/advertising/) - [Email Marketing Legal Requirements (CASL)](https://crtc.gc.ca/eng/com500/faq500.htm) --- ## The Test Before launching your sequence, ask: 1. **Would I feel comfortable if a client forwarded this to CRPO?** (If no, revise) 2. **Does this sound like me talking?** (If no, adjust voice) 3. **Would I want to receive this email?** (If no, rethink) 4. **Does it respect their autonomy?** (No pressure, no manipulation) 5. **Does it provide value even if they never book?** (Educational, helpful) If all answers are yes, you're ready to launch.