ActiveCampaign is my go-to because it lets me segment homeowners by behavior, such as estimates requested, past jobs completed, service type, and seasonality. I switched after hitting a wall with basic newsletters that sent the same message to everyone. After I built automation tied to our CRM, I triggered emails three days after a completed job, six months after a system install, or right before peak season. That change increased our repeat bookings by 22% in the first year because we timed outreach to real service cycles rather than guessing. Last spring I ran a targeted "pre-season check" campaign for customers who had installed systems three to five years earlier. Instead of sending a generic promotion, I referenced the install year, reminded them of typical lifespan milestones, and offered a priority scheduling window before demand increased. The email used a direct subject line, "Beat the Rush, Priority Tune-Ups for 2020 Installs." There was no filler. The message included a clear deadline. It included one call-to-action button linked to our booking page. We sent it to 1,842 contacts. The open rate reached 48 percent. The click-through rate reached 19 percent. We booked 137 jobs in 10 days. That single campaign generated just over $41,000 in scheduled work before peak season began. The campaign worked because I stayed disciplined. I wrote the copy myself. I kept it under 150 words, used one offer, and removed distractions. I reviewed the data each week and quickly cut underperforming segments. Email works when you send the right message at the right maintenance interval, not when you focus on clever design. ActiveCampaign provides control over that timing, which translates directly into booked jobs and predictable revenue.
I've been in the trenches with email campaigns for years at EMRG Media, and honestly, we use multiple platforms depending on the campaign goal. For The Event Planner Expo specifically, we lean heavily on **HubSpot** because it integrates seamlessly with our CRM and lets us track every touchpoint from first email to actual ticket purchase--that data is gold when you're trying to prove ROI to stakeholders. Our most successful campaign was actually a nurture sequence we ran six weeks before one of our flagship expos. We sent a five-email series that started with "Save the Date" messaging, then introduced our keynote speakers one by one--we were bringing in Daymond John and Gary Vaynerchuk that year. Each email featured a short video clip from their previous talks plus a countdown timer showing when early-bird pricing expired. That campaign alone drove 847 registrations and a 41% open rate across the sequence. The breakthrough wasn't just the celebrity names--it was creating FOMO through tiered pricing that actually increased with each email. We made people feel like they were missing out on both the speakers AND the savings if they didn't act fast. We also A/B tested subject lines religiously; "Daymond John wants to meet you" outperformed "Keynote speaker announcement" by 19% in opens. My biggest lesson: automate the sequence but make it feel personal. We segmented by whether someone attended before, their job title, and what sessions they clicked on in previous years. A corporate planner from Google doesn't care about the same things as someone planning fundraisers for a nonprofit, so why send them identical emails?
Over the years, I've worked with just about every major email platform you can think of, but my preference has consistently leaned toward **HubSpot** when the goal is reaching a defined audience with relevance, not just volume. Not because it's flashy, but because it forces discipline around context, segmentation, and follow-through. While building NerDAI, I saw firsthand how easy it is for email to become noise. Early on, we ran campaigns that looked good on paper but underperformed because they treated subscribers like a list instead of people at different stages of awareness. The shift happened when we stopped asking, "What do we want to say?" and started asking, "What does this specific reader need right now?" One campaign that stands out was for a professional services client targeting mid-market decision-makers. Instead of a promotional blast, we designed a short three-email sequence centered around a single tension their audience was facing. The first email shared a brief observation drawn from real client data, no pitch. The second followed with a short story about a company that addressed that issue incorrectly and what it cost them. The third offered a practical framework they could apply immediately, with a soft invitation to continue the conversation. The results were telling. Open rates increased by over 30% compared to their previous campaigns, replies jumped significantly, and the sales team reported warmer, more informed conversations. What mattered most wasn't the platform itself, but the ability to connect behavior, timing, and message in one place. From an entrepreneurial perspective, the lesson was simple. The best email marketing doesn't feel like marketing. It feels like relevance delivered at the right moment. Any tool that helps you listen before you speak will outperform one that just helps you send faster.
We use HubSpot. Nothing fancy. Our list is small by design because we're reaching founders who are actively raising capital. Sending to all 2,000 contacts was getting us 18% open rates. Sending the same email to the 400 who'd engaged in the past 60 days jumped it to 47%. The campaign that worked best wasn't a promotion. We sent a breakdown of 5 mistakes founders make when cold emailing investors, pulled from patterns we kept seeing in our own matchmaking work. Open rate hit 52%. More importantly 11 founders replied directly asking follow-up questions. That never happened with our old "here's what we offer" emails. The lesson was embarrassingly simple. Stop emailing people who aren't reading. Stop writing about yourself. Write something useful to a smaller group.
Our preferred email marketing service is ActiveCampaign, mainly because of how flexible its automation builder is. We don't use it to send prettier newsletters. We use it to respond to specific behaviors. One campaign that worked especially well was for a B2B software client whose webinar registrations were high, but post-webinar sales were almost zero. Instead of sending a generic replay email to everyone, we built a follow-up sequence based on watch time. If someone watched more than 50% of the webinar, they received a short email addressing the exact objection discussed at the 30-minute mark. If they dropped off early, they received a two-minute summary and one clear next step. Within a month, their post-webinar conversions nearly doubled without increasing ad spend. The improvement didn't come from better copy. It came from aligning the follow-up with how people actually engaged, instead of treating the entire list the same.
I changed my email strategy after watching my open rates stall at a lackluster 18%. I realized that sending "one-size-fits-all" blasts resulted in budget waste because we reached an uninterested group. I migrated to Brevo to leverage smart segmentation, tagging users based on real-time behavior like cart abandonment, rather than just static demographics. I launched a "Lost Cart Rescue" series that bypassed the noise with extreme personalization: "Hey [Name], your [Item] awaits!" paired with a frictionless one-click checkout. I turned cold leads back into active buyers through my timing activities which reached their peak at 48 hours after the abandonment period. My open rates reached 42% within 30 days while recovery sales increased by 29% which resulted in $14,000 revenue from 3,000 abandoned carts. I demonstrated that precise measurement methods produce better results than mass measurement methods because personal connections with your audience lead to better outcomes than broadcasting to all people.
As an E-commerce CMO who has tested five major platforms, my preferred service for reaching a modern audience is Omnisend. While many people default to Klaviyo, I've found that Omnisend offers the same power for 40% to 60% less cost, especially when managing a list of around 50,000 contacts. It works on the "Omnichannel" Triple Threat approach. The secret isn't just sending more emails, but it's using email, SMS, and push notifications together in one flow. This catches the customer wherever they are without being "spammy." The perfect example of that is the "Abandoned Cart" campaign. We used a three-step sequence to win back shoppers who left the site. It consists of a simple email reminder with a picture of the product they liked 5 minutes later. 1 Hour later, a quick text with a 10% discount code as SMS gets much higher open rates for urgent deals. The next day, a push notification saying "Still interested?" appears on their browser or phone. The result was that we won back 32% of people who almost walked away. Our SMS click-through rate hit 28%, proving that the "right message at the right time" works.
Using Behavior-Based Email Automation to Drive Qualified Leads My preferred email marketing platform is ActiveCampaign because of its advanced segmentation and behavior-based automation capabilities. For service-based and local businesses, the ability to trigger emails based on page visits, form interactions, or lead scores makes a significant difference. Rather than blasting the same message to everyone, I can segment audiences by intent—for example, separating users who downloaded a local SEO guide from those who requested a consultation. One engaging campaign that generated strong results was a 5-email educational sequence for small business owners who signed up for a free local visibility audit. Instead of pitching services immediately, the emails walked them through common mistakes—like inconsistent NAP details or unoptimized Google Business Profiles—using short case examples. The final email offered a strategy call tied directly to the issues discussed. That campaign achieved a 42% average open rate and converted 18% of subscribers into booked consultations within 30 days. What made it work wasn't design or frequency—it was relevance. When emails are built around user behavior and real pain points, engagement and conversions follow naturally.
I've mostly used Mailchimp for email marketing because it's easy for me to build clean templates, segment lists, and see what people click. I've also used Klaviyo for ecommerce brands when we needed deeper tracking tied to purchases, but for a lot of general audience work Mailchimp has been my default. In my experience, the most engaging campaign has been a short welcome series for new subscribers. The first email sets expectations and offers one useful resource, the second shares a quick story and a few links based on what they're interested in, and the third makes a clear offer with a simple deadline. I don't have exact numbers I can share, but this type of sequence has given me higher opens and more replies than one-off newsletters, and it's led to more enquiries from people who were a good fit.
HubSpot is what I use when I need to make sure that marketing and sales are working together. It links email behavior to CRM records, so you can see who opened an email, clicked on a link, or went back to a page. So the follow up doesn't seem random but rather right on time. We ran a campaign for people who got a technical guide but never set up a meeting. We sent a short case summary with one good metric and a client quote instead of a long pitch. After that, we provided a link to make an appointment. That was it. Requests for demos went up by 31% from the previous quarter. Sales got in touch with people while they were still interested because they could see real-time involvement. This helped move more deals forward.
For reaching a highly engaged audience, my preferred email marketing service is Mailchimp, not because it's the most expensive or hyped, but because it balances powerful automation, robust segmentation, and reliable deliverability across industries. With advanced workflow capabilities and drag-and-drop editors, it allows teams to tailor messages to specific audience behaviors without complex tech stacks. That said, the service platform is only as effective as the strategy you build on it. For example, one standout campaign that illustrates this approach comes from the hospitality sector: a boutique hotel used data-backed segmentation to send personalized offers based on past guest preferences. Guests who previously booked ocean-view rooms received curated seaside upgrade options, while spa-focused customers were sent exclusive wellness package deals. This level of relevance boosted open rates by ~25% compared to generic blasts and drove a 40% increase in direct bookings during the campaign period. Another compelling example comes from an e-commerce brand using Mailchimp's automation tools to nurture leads with a welcome series that follows the Learn > Like > Trust > Buy principle: introductory emails familiarized subscribers with the brand story, followed by product insights and a final discount offer. This educational sequence achieved over 50% conversion across the series, showing how structured messaging paired with automation can significantly uplift sales performance. In both cases, the keys were Segmentation: Sending the right message to the right group at the right time. Personalization: Tailoring content based on user behavior and history. Automation: Reducing manual effort while maintaining consistency. Choosing a platform like Mailchimp or similar tools that support these pillars makes email marketing not just a broadcast channel but also a strategic growth engine.
We prefer Klaviyo for e-commerce and Customer.io for SaaS, because they unify data, segmentation, and testing. We choose based on event tracking depth, deliverability controls, and straightforward workflow ownership. We insist every email ties to a measurable funnel step and a revenue hypothesis. We also connect AI-assisted copy variations to strict brand rules and human review. One campaign that consistently wins is a post-trial "activation sprint" for SaaS with four emails over seven days. Email one confirms the setup milestone, then offers a two-minute checklist and a single CTA. Email two triggers from a missed key action, and we include a short loom-style tutorial plus social proof. Email three offers a limited concierge session, and the final email highlights a simple ROI calculator for decision makers. This flow lifted trial-to-paid conversions by 18 percent and reduced churn risk within 30 days.
The email marketing provider we prefer will vary depending on a company's business model; however, we tend to prefer Klaviyo for e-commerce brands and HubSpot for B-to-B brands due to both their excellent segmentation capabilities, automation capabilities, and reporting capabilities. A campaign that seems to consistently generate positive results is the post-purchase education and cross-sell campaign. After a customer place an order, we send them a thank you email. We then sent two emails regarding how to set up their product, how to use their product with other products, and how to set up their product with other products. Subsequently, we sent a personalized recommendation email, with a recommendation of what other product items could complement their recent purchase. With one of our retail clients, using this set of emails increased their repeat purchase rate and increased the revenue per recipient because it reduced their customers' hesitation to purchase again and made them feel that their offers were relevant to their natural purchase cycle. The most important elements to enable this type of campaign were having clean data, ensuring that the timing was tight between messages, and creating useful, non-promotional messaging within each message sent.
It is not about brand name but about the level of integration preference. Here, we will give priority to a platform that will help to tie directly to CRM data, segmentation rules and compliance documentation over a platform that was developed to do visual campaigns. At A-S Medication Solutions our audience is restricted to clinic administrators, practice managers and healthcare operators that will be found relevant rather than frequent. We are utilizing a service to do dynamic segmentation using engagement history, service line interest and regional regulatory updates. The value is reflected in the specificity. At a clinic in Texas, messaging is done in accordance with the considerations of the state level whereas in Florida, a clinic is given content based on other operational considerations. Open rates on segmented campaigns are 27 percent on average compared to 14 percent on broad sends that we had previously. Communication in healthcare is regulatory in nature, and thus the audit trail and consent management also persuade our decision. To us, an email service with the ability to handle data in a secure manner and report is more valuable than fancy design options. Accuracy in hitting the target helps safeguard their credibility as well as decreasing exhaustion among busy people in the healthcare field.
The motivation of preference is less brand name-related and more control of segmentation and compliance motivated. In Mano Santa, our platform provides tagging of loans at a detailed level according to the stage of loan, type of inquiry and history of previous interaction. When one downloaded a guide on consolidating debts and never had an application, he/she gets a different order than someone who has already been a past borrower and is looking at their refinancing options. Such a high degree of segmentation lowered the rate of unsubscribing by 2.8 percent to 1.6 percent within two quarters. The tools of deliverability are also important. Financial messages should be placed in the primary inbox, and not the promotional folder, and authentication such as SPF and DKIM should not be compromised. Automation can be applied, but we do not go overboard in triggering impersonal triggers. Educational mailers with a single focus per month are always more effective than weekly mixed messages. The service per se is indirect. Results are derived through data hygiene and clarity of the message. Once emailing is matched to actual borrower action, response rate and quality will be improved without adding volume.
We prioritize using an email service that values consent and list hygiene as primary features. For our audience, building inbox trust is crucial for growth so we seek tools with automated suppression, engagement scoring, and simple preference centers. We also want detailed reporting that differentiates human behavior from bot activity to ensure accurate decision-making. One of our most successful campaigns was a skill gap pulse series spread over three weeks. In week one, we asked readers to choose a challenge they were facing. Week two provided a short playbook tailored to their selected challenge and week three shared a peer benchmark snapshot. The campaign led to higher open rates, more replies and reduced unsubscribes by allowing readers to switch topics instead of opting out.
I prefer MailerLite for its simplicity and flexibility. One effective campaign was a short, narrative-driven sequence that unpacked a common founder tension, being visible but not clearly positioned. Instead of selling, each email offered one insight and one reflection prompt. The result wasn't massive volume, but high-quality replies and inbound inquiries from aligned founders who felt understood before being pitched.
At Japantastic, we use Klaviyo to send our decor crowd an email about a limited-edition Sakura bento set. We included a simple packing guide with it, and that email became our highest performing of the season. People responded to the practical tips. It showed us something important. If you give people helpful advice instead of just a promotion, they're much more likely to open it and click. If you have any questions, feel free to reach out to my personal email
For my local SEO clients, Mailchimp works best. I ran a monthly feature showcasing clients whose rankings went up with our help. Mixing their personal stories with some practical SEO tips worked really well. The open rates were high and people actually clicked around. It seems showing real results gets more attention than anything else I've tried. If you have any questions, feel free to reach out to my personal email
Preferred Email Marketing Service Characteristics As an email marketing specialist at an IT consulting firm, I prioritize services that offer deep integration between CRM data and automation workflows. For reaching a technical B2B audience, the preferred service must support advanced behavioural segmentation and lead scoring. This allows us to move beyond basic demographics and target users based on their specific stage in the product development lifecycle or their interaction with specialized content like whitepapers on AI and IoT. The ideal service for our target audience is one that functions as a comprehensive marketing engine rather than just a newsletter tool. Key requirements include: 1. Deep CRM Integration: Syncing real-time lead data to trigger personalized follow-ups. 2. Behavioural Triggers: The ability to send automated sequences based on specific website actions, such as visiting a service page multiple times or downloading a technical case study. 3. AI-Driven Analytics: Utilizing predictive insights to determine the best send times and subject line performance for high-level decision-makers. Engaging Campaign Example We recently executed a campaign designed for early-stage enterprise leads. Instead of a standard sales pitch, the campaign used a multi-stage drip sequence focused on solving specific technical bottlenecks: 1. The Hook: An initial email offering a high-value technical guide relevant to the user's recent browsing history. 2. The Value-Add: A follow-up three days later featuring a "deep dive" checklist, establishing authority without asking for a meeting yet. 3. The Interactive Element: A third email featuring a short, a question poll regarding their biggest current technical challenge. 4. The Conversion: Based on the poll response, a final tailored invitation for a consultation specifically addressing the challenge they identified. By focusing on education and segmented problem-solving rather than broad promotion, the campaign saw significantly higher open rates and meaningful inquiries compared to standard outbound efforts.