Feature of Daniel Throssell – Email Copywriting Compendium
Here’s a selection of the 101 rules you will find inside the Compendium:
- The most important word in copywriting (and it’s not “you”, or “free”, or “entertainment”, or “consistency”, or anything trite — I promise it actually will enlighten you) (Rule #1)
- A list I made — for my own personal use — of the 10 elements of must-read email lists (Rule #2)
- One question to ask before EVERY email you send (Rule #3)
- The ideal email length — and yes, I give a word count (Rule #9)
- The THREE hurdles to getting your email read (getting it opened is just the first one — but I’ve never heard anyone teach the other two!) AND how to overcome them (Rules #12, #13 and #14)
- Why telling your sales message in an email is a BAD idea in 2022 (Rule #15)
- A specific numerical rule for how often to sell in your emails, and how hard to do it (Rules #17 and #18)
- The 8 words Australia’s bestselling author taught me about writing emails people want to stay subscribed to for years (Rule #20)
- Why “being your true self” is BAD advice for emails (Rule #22)
- A creepy trick for psychologically abusing your readers into revering you — admittedly, I’m not sure if this will work for anyone other than me, but if you’re on my list you’ve definitely seen ME do this to you, and it’s why you are reading this sales page now … (Rule #24)
- The most incredible technique in the history of storytelling — I use it almost every day (Rule #25)
- Why it’s okay to make up “untrue” stories for your emails, and how to do it (Rule #26)
- How to pull story ideas from your day-to-day life (hint: you’re looking in the wrong place!) (Rule #27)
- Ever felt like your sales email ‘feels’ wrong … but can’t figure out why? I almost guarantee it’s because your email’s lead is missing one of the three things in Rule #28…
- What to do if you’re writing for a client and can’t get personal stories out of them (Rule #29), and …
Here are more of the mind-bending copywriting insights you’ll find inside the Compendium …
- How to balance telling ‘me-focused’ stories with ‘you, you, you’ writing about the reader — I have a solution for this that I have NEVER seen taught anywhere else (Rule #31)
- If you write emails for a client, I’ll give you a model for mentally “picturing” the EXACT topics to write about, and what to say (Rule #32)
- Why you should write your emails backwards — literally! (Rule #33)
- Why “write like you’re writing to a friend” is NOT the best advice for emails — and what (not who!) I actually imagine writing for instead of a “friend” (Hint: It’s NOT human. Rule #34)
- Why you should NEVER use questions in a sales email — like “Do you struggle with nagging belly fat?” — and what you should do instead (this rule will change your ENTIRE copywriting paradigm) (Rule #35)
- Ever read other (even famous) copywriters’ emails and felt like the stories they used for “StOrYseLLinG” were … well … kinda boring? I’ll show you why you felt that way — and how to pick stories that ACTUALLY sell (Rule #36)
- 4 ways to never run out of email ideas again — this alone could make the entire purchase worth it for you, if you need to write a lot of emails for clients (Rules #37-#40)
- My favourite way to use stories you find during your market research in your emails (Rule #41)
- The single most persuasive email tactic in the world (hint: it is a ‘genre’ more than a ‘tactic’) (Rule #43)
- Why you must NEVER write an email while sad! (Rule #47)
- The single best way to whip up a frenzy of attention and engagement in your emails. (This technique is “free” in a monetary sense, but be warned that it WILL cost you some of your best subscribers — you’ll have to decide if it’s worth using) (Rule #48)
- Why you should ignore David Ogilvy’s advice for subject lines (Rule #55
- My unique “question-setup” approach to writing subject lines — and why it’s better than the typical “curiosity gap” theory most people teach (Rules #56 and #57)
- Whether you should use long vs. short subject lines (Rule #58)
- Two “quick-fix” ways to urgently punch up a bad subject line if you’re under the pump (Rule #59)
- A sneaky (and quick) way to use somebody else’s mailing list to test your subject line’s open rates … BEFORE you send your email! (I discovered how to do this one day almost by accident, and I’ve used it constantly ever since — if you do this the way I teach you, I’m pretty sure that legally you don’t even need to ask “permission”) (Rule #61)
- When to use someone’s name in a subject line — and when not to (Rule #62)
- Why technically “good” subject lines can make even your best subscribers angry — and how to avoid this (Rule #64)
- Why studying emails from certain top email copywriters is risky at best, and downright stupid at worst (Rule #67)
- The ideal length of a welcome series, and no, it is not zero or one (Rule #69)
- Why you should never ASK people to whitelist your emails, but TRICK them into doing it instead (and how to do it) (Rule #70)
- How to stop people getting angry when you sell to them (Rule #71) … and, building on this …
- A very “politically incorrect” strategy for making even your most hostile enemies accept your ideologies without blinking! (Rule #72)
Here are even MORE of the incredible copywriting secrets you will find inside the Compendium, should you choose to buy it …
- Why you should NOT segment out buyers from getting emails for things they’ve already bought! (Rule #73)
- How to sell luxury goods … wine … and even ART using emails (Rules #74, #75 and #76)
- Should you assume people have read your previous emails? (Rule #77)
- How often to email your list (Rule #78)
- The maximum time it should take you to write an email — if it takes you longer, here’s what to do (and no, it’s not “use a timer”) (Rule #79)
- Why you should almost never use bullets in a sales email (Rule #85)
- How to write a better ‘cart abandonment’ sequence (Rule #86)
- The ideal length of an email sale — yes, I give an exact number of days (Rule #87)
- Why you should deliberately NOT send your best sales pitches during an email sale (Rule #89)
- Two emails (which you’re probably including in every sales funnel you write) that are a terrible idea (Rules #94 and #97)
- How long before the cart closes to send your final email reminder about a sale (Rule #98)
- A simple 14-word mantra so powerful, you can potentially overwrite a lifetime’s worth of “inner conditioning” against writing sales emails … by saying it just ONCE! Relax though, it’s not nearly as woo-woo as it sounds. (You’ll find it in the last line of Rule #100)
- The single most important thing to keep in mind when you make a mistake, like blasting an email with the wrong name to hundreds of thousands of people (Rule #101)