Co-Founder Taliferro
I thought sending an email campaign was easy. Write a message. Click send. Watch results.
Wrong.
The first time I did it, I forgot half my audience. Misspelled names. Sent follow-ups to the wrong people. Wrote copy that didn't connect. Then I had no idea who to follow up with or when. And the data? A mess—duplicates, missing info, bad email addresses. Total chaos.
Email campaigns aren't hard because of the writing. They're hard because of the work. The admin. The prep. The tracking.
Lessons I learned the hard way
- Timing matters more than tone
- Good contact data is everything
- Tracking replies is only half the battle
- You need to know who to follow up with—and how
- You lose credibility fast with messy or repeated outreach
Even when the email looked good, I was still behind. Late follow-ups, forgotten warm leads, no easy way to connect what I sent with what came next.
The turning point: I stopped doing it all myself
Eventually, I hit a wall. I couldn't keep running campaigns and still find time to actually talk to people. So I started using TODD.
Now, campaigns aren't a big event. They're just a rhythm. TODD handles the parts I used to dread.
TODD fixed every one of those problems
When I run a campaign now:
- TODD drafts every email based on tone, context, and where we left off
- Validates every contact so I don't waste sends
- Tracks opens, replies, and click-throughs
- Recommends what to do next with each contact—without me asking
- Even catches bounced emails and flags bad domains
Campaigns aren't about writing anymore. They're about momentum. And TODD keeps that momentum going, even when I'm off the clock.
Common mistakes if you're just starting out
- Don't use unclean data—scrub it first or let your system do it
- Don't blast everyone—segment by stage or type
- Don't forget context—generic follow-ups get ignored
- Don't stop after one email—the value is in consistent contact
Final thought
Every missed follow-up is a missed chance. Every bad send chips away at your brand. And every delay costs you attention.
If you're serious about outreach, get serious about systems. TODD made that shift easy for me.