Tested automation workflows with trigger conditions, action sequences, timing, and expected outcomes. These are the exact workflows we build for clients at ScaleGrowth.Digital, adapted for any marketing automation platform.
Last updated: March 2026 · Reading time: 16 min
An effective marketing automation workflow has four parts: a clear trigger (what starts it), smart conditions (who qualifies), specific actions (what happens), and measured outcomes (how you know it worked). The 14 workflows below cover the full customer lifecycle, from first touch through retention and re-engagement. Each one includes the trigger, logic, timing, and the conversion benchmarks you should aim for.
A marketing automation workflow is a pre-programmed sequence of emails, CRM updates, notifications, or other actions that fires automatically when a specific trigger condition is met.
According to Nucleus Research (2024), marketing automation delivers an average ROI of $5.44 for every $1 spent. Omnisend’s 2024 report found that automated emails generate 320% more revenue than non-automated emails. The gap between companies using automation and those still sending manual campaigns grows wider every quarter.
We selected these 14 workflows based on three criteria:
The workflows are grouped by lifecycle stage: acquisition (4), nurture (3), conversion (2), retention (3), and operations (2).
Acquisition workflows handle the first 7-14 days after someone enters your system.
| Element | Details |
|---|---|
| Trigger | New email subscriber (blog, newsletter, or list signup) |
| Conditions | Not already a customer; valid email (no bounces); not on suppression list |
| Actions | Email 1 (immediate): Welcome + best content piece. Email 2 (Day 3): Problem/solution story + social proof. Email 3 (Day 7): Resource or tool offer. Email 4 (Day 10): Soft CTA to book call or start trial. |
| Timing | 4 emails over 10 days |
| Expected Outcome | 35-50% open rate on Email 1, 2-5% click rate on CTA email. Industry benchmark: welcome emails get 4x more opens than regular campaigns (GetResponse, 2024). |
| Exit Condition | Lead converts (books call, starts trial) or completes sequence |
The welcome series is your highest-ROI workflow because it fires at peak attention. The subscriber just gave you their email. They’re paying attention right now. Every hour you wait to send that first email, engagement drops. Send Email 1 within 5 minutes of signup.
| Element | Details |
|---|---|
| Trigger | Lead downloads a gated resource (ebook, template, whitepaper) |
| Conditions | First download (don’t re-trigger for repeat downloaders unless different asset category) |
| Actions | Email 1 (immediate): Deliver asset + one key insight from it. Email 2 (Day 2): Related blog post or case study. Email 3 (Day 5): “Here’s how companies apply this” + soft CTA. Update lead score: +10 points. Tag lead with asset category for segmentation. |
| Timing | 3 emails over 5 days |
| Expected Outcome | 40-55% open rate on delivery email. 8-12% click on follow-up content. 1-3% book a call from email 3. |
| Exit Condition | Lead enters nurture sequence or books a call |
| Element | Details |
|---|---|
| Trigger | Attended live webinar OR watched replay (50%+) |
| Conditions | Branch: attended live vs. replay only. Branch: asked question during Q&A (higher intent). |
| Actions | Email 1 (same day): Recording + slides + key takeaways summary. Email 2 (Day 2): Related resource based on webinar topic. Email 3 (Day 4): For Q&A participants, personal reply to their question + CTA. For non-Q&A, case study + CTA. Update lead score: +20 for attended, +12 for replay only, +5 bonus for Q&A. |
| Timing | 3 emails over 4 days |
| Expected Outcome | 45-60% open rate. Q&A participants convert to meetings at 8-15%. ON24’s 2024 Webinar Benchmark report shows webinar attendees are 73% more likely to become MQLs. |
| Exit Condition | Books meeting or enters main nurture track |
| Element | Details |
|---|---|
| Trigger | Starts free trial / creates account |
| Conditions | Branch by activation status: completed setup vs. incomplete. Branch by usage: active (3+ logins in first week) vs. dormant. |
| Actions | Email 1 (immediate): Welcome + 3-step quick start. Email 2 (Day 1): Video tutorial for core feature. Email 3 (Day 3): If not activated, “Need help?” with support link. If activated, “Next steps” with advanced features. Email 4 (Day 7): Case study showing results from users like them. Email 5 (Day 10): Trial midpoint reminder with usage stats. Email 6 (Day 12): CTA to upgrade / schedule onboarding call. |
| Timing | 6 emails over 12 days (for 14-day trial) |
| Expected Outcome | Trial-to-paid conversion of 15-25% (B2B SaaS benchmark per Totango, 2024). |
| Exit Condition | Converts to paid or trial expires (trigger win-back if expired) |
Nurture workflows keep leads engaged during the consideration phase. These workflows run for weeks or months, dripping content that builds trust and moves leads closer to a decision. The key: match content to funnel stage, don’t just blast everything at everyone.
| Element | Details |
|---|---|
| Trigger | Lead completes welcome series without converting |
| Conditions | Segment by lead score band: Low (0-30) = TOFU content. Medium (31-60) = MOFU content. High (61+) = BOFU content. |
| Actions | TOFU track: educational blog posts, industry reports, infographics (1 email/week for 8 weeks). MOFU track: case studies, comparison guides, webinar invites (1 email/week for 6 weeks). BOFU track: pricing guides, ROI calculators, demo invites (1 email/5 days for 4 weeks). Auto-move leads between tracks as score changes. |
| Timing | 4-8 weeks depending on track |
| Expected Outcome | 15-20% of MOFU leads move to BOFU within 60 days. 5-10% of BOFU leads request demo or call. |
| Exit Condition | Lead converts, enters sales pipeline, or exhausts all track content |
| Element | Details |
|---|---|
| Trigger | Lead score crosses MQL threshold (e.g., 80 points) |
| Conditions | Verify: demographic grade is A or B (not just high behavioral). Verify: not already in sales pipeline. Verify: valid contact info (email deliverable, phone present). |
| Actions | Create CRM deal/opportunity. Assign to sales rep (round-robin or territory-based). Send internal Slack/email alert: “New MQL: [Name], [Company], [Score], [Top actions]”. Send lead an email: “We noticed you’re exploring [topic]” with booking link. Update lifecycle stage to MQL. |
| Timing | Immediate (within 5 minutes of threshold crossing) |
| Expected Outcome | Speed-to-lead under 10 minutes. Harvard Business Review found that responding within 5 minutes makes you 21x more likely to qualify a lead. |
| Exit Condition | Sales accepts or rejects the lead (rejected leads return to nurture with adjusted score) |
For the scoring model that powers this workflow, use our lead scoring model template.
| Element | Details |
|---|---|
| Trigger | No email opens or site visits for 60 days |
| Conditions | Was previously engaged (opened 3+ emails or visited 2+ pages historically). Not a current customer. Email is deliverable (no bounces). |
| Actions | Email 1: “We miss you” + top-performing content piece (highest CTR from past 90 days). Email 2 (Day 5): New resource or tool they haven’t seen. Email 3 (Day 10): “Should we keep sending?” with clear yes/no preference link. If no response after Email 3: suppress from all marketing for 90 days. If re-engages: reset score decay, add to active nurture. |
| Timing | 3 emails over 10 days |
| Expected Outcome | 10-15% re-engagement rate. The rest get suppressed, improving your overall deliverability metrics. |
| Exit Condition | Re-engages (open + click) or moves to suppression after Email 3 |
Conversion workflows target leads at the decision point. These workflows have the highest direct revenue impact because they catch people who are already ready to buy but need one more push.
| Element | Details |
|---|---|
| Trigger | Item added to cart, checkout not completed within 1 hour |
| Conditions | Known contact (has email). Cart value > $0. Not purchased in the last 24 hours (prevent false triggers from payment delays). |
| Actions | Email 1 (1 hour): “You left something behind” + cart contents with images and prices. Email 2 (24 hours): Social proof (reviews, star ratings for cart items). Email 3 (48 hours): Incentive (10% off or free shipping) with urgency (48-hour expiration). SMS (optional, 4 hours after Email 1): Short reminder with cart link. |
| Timing | 3 emails + optional SMS over 48 hours |
| Expected Outcome | 5-15% cart recovery rate. Klaviyo’s 2024 benchmark shows abandoned cart emails recover 3-5% of abandoned carts on average, with the 3-email sequence recovering up to 14%. |
| Exit Condition | Purchase completed or 48-hour sequence ends |
| Element | Details |
|---|---|
| Trigger | Trial reaches Day 10 of 14 (or Day 25 of 30) |
| Conditions | Has not upgraded. Branch by usage: active user (5+ sessions) vs. low-usage (0-4 sessions). |
| Actions | Active users: Email highlighting their usage stats + “Here’s what you unlock with a paid plan.” Low-usage users: Email offering a personal onboarding call + trial extension (7 extra days). Both tracks: Day 13 email with upgrade CTA and feature comparison table. Post-expiry (Day 15): “Your trial ended” + limited-time reactivation offer (7 days). Internal alert to success team if high-value account doesn’t convert. |
| Timing | 3-4 emails over 5 days |
| Expected Outcome | 20-30% conversion for active users. 5-10% for low-usage users with extension offer. |
| Exit Condition | Upgrades to paid or trial expires (enters win-back queue after 30 days) |
Retention workflows are the most under-built category in marketing automation. Teams spend 80% of their effort on acquisition and 20% on retention, despite retention being 5-25x more cost-effective per dollar of revenue generated (Harvard Business Review). These three workflows address the most common churn triggers.
| Element | Details |
|---|---|
| Trigger | Customer shows churn signals: login frequency drops 50%+ from average, support tickets increase 3x, NPS score drops below 7, or usage of core feature stops. |
| Conditions | Active paying customer. Has been a customer for 30+ days (exclude onboarding-phase friction). |
| Actions | Internal alert: flag account for customer success review. Email from CSM (personal, not marketing template): “I noticed [specific behavior change]. Can we help?” If no response in 3 days: phone call from CSM. If support tickets were the trigger: escalate ticket priority + proactive resolution email. If feature usage dropped: send targeted feature tutorial or invite to training session. |
| Timing | Immediate alert + 3-day follow-up cadence |
| Expected Outcome | 20-35% churn prevention rate for flagged accounts. Gainsight’s 2024 Customer Success report found early-warning intervention reduces churn by 26%. |
| Exit Condition | Customer re-engages (usage returns to baseline) or churns |
| Element | Details |
|---|---|
| Trigger | Customer hits usage milestone: 80% of plan limit, completes onboarding, or uses product for 90+ days |
| Conditions | Current plan has an upgrade path. Not in a billing dispute or support escalation. Health score is positive (NPS 7+). |
| Actions | Email 1: “You’re getting great results. Here’s how to get more.” Show their current usage vs. next tier benefits. Email 2 (Day 4): Case study of similar customer who upgraded + results. In-app notification: highlight locked feature with “Upgrade to unlock.” If approaching plan limit: “You’re at 80% of your [contacts/storage/users]. Upgrade now to avoid disruption.” |
| Timing | 2 emails + in-app prompt over 7 days |
| Expected Outcome | 3-8% upgrade rate from triggered campaign. ProfitWell (2024) found usage-triggered upsell converts 2.5x better than calendar-based upsell campaigns. |
| Exit Condition | Upgrades, dismisses in-app prompt, or 14-day cool-down before re-trigger |
| Element | Details |
|---|---|
| Trigger | Customer birthday (if collected) or account anniversary date |
| Conditions | Active customer. Birthday/date field is populated. Not in an active support issue. |
| Actions | Email: Personal message from founder/team with a gift (discount code, free month, bonus credits, or exclusive content). For anniversaries: include a “year in review” summary with their usage highlights and results achieved. |
| Timing | Morning of the date (8am in their timezone if available) |
| Expected Outcome | 55-70% open rate (Experian found birthday emails generate 342% more revenue per email than promotional campaigns). Account anniversary emails reinforce the relationship and reduce churn around renewal dates. |
| Exit Condition | Single send, no follow-up needed |
Not all automation is customer-facing. These two workflows handle internal operations that would otherwise require manual intervention and create delays.
| Element | Details |
|---|---|
| Trigger | High-value action by a known contact: pricing page visit, demo request form, competitor comparison page visit, or return visit after 30+ days inactive |
| Conditions | Lead is in sales pipeline OR has a lead score above 50. Action happened during business hours (queue for next morning if after hours). |
| Actions | Slack notification to assigned sales rep: “[Name] from [Company] just [action]. Lead score: [X]. Last 3 actions: [list].” If no assigned rep: Slack to #sales-alerts channel with round-robin assignment. CRM activity logged automatically. If demo request: auto-create calendar hold for rep and send booking link to lead within 2 minutes. |
| Timing | Immediate (under 2 minutes) |
| Expected Outcome | Average response time drops from 42 hours (Drift’s 2024 benchmark) to under 10 minutes. |
| Exit Condition | Rep acknowledges notification or lead is contacted |
| Element | Details |
|---|---|
| Trigger | Customer completes a milestone: finishes onboarding, reaches 30/60/90 day mark, completes a project, or support ticket is resolved |
| Conditions | No feedback requested in the last 30 days (prevent survey fatigue). Not in a billing dispute. |
| Actions | Email with 1-question NPS survey (0-10 scale, in-email click). If NPS 9-10 (Promoter): thank you email + link to leave Google/G2 review + referral program invite. If NPS 7-8 (Passive): “What would make us a 10?” follow-up question. If NPS 0-6 (Detractor): immediate alert to customer success + personal outreach within 24 hours. |
| Timing | Survey 24 hours after milestone. Follow-up based on response within 1-2 days. |
| Expected Outcome | 25-40% NPS response rate (vs. 5-10% for annual surveys). Promoter-to-review conversion of 10-20%. Detractor save rate of 30-40% with fast intervention. |
| Exit Condition | Feedback received and routed, or 7 days with no response |
After building and optimizing hundreds of workflows across 40+ client accounts, we’ve identified five patterns that separate high-performing automations from the ones that get built and forgotten:
Pattern 1: Branch early, branch often. The workflows that convert best use conditional branching based on behavior. A webinar attendee who asked a question gets a different follow-up than one who watched passively. A trial user who’s active gets a different conversion email than one who logged in once. One-size-fits-all sequences underperform branched sequences by 40-60% on conversion rates.
Pattern 2: Speed matters at decision points. When a lead crosses an intent threshold (visits pricing, requests demo, crosses MQL score), response time is the biggest variable. Five minutes beats five hours. Five hours beats five days. Build your highest-intent workflows with immediate triggers, not daily batch sends.
Pattern 3: Exit conditions prevent annoyance. Every workflow needs a clear exit. If a lead buys, they should immediately exit every pre-purchase workflow. If a lead unsubscribes, they should exit everything. Sounds obvious, but we audit automation accounts regularly and find 30-40% have workflows that continue firing after the goal is already achieved.
Pattern 4: Retention workflows drive more revenue than acquisition workflows. Cart abandonment gets all the attention, but churn prevention and upsell triggers typically generate 2-3x the revenue impact because they work with customers who already trust you and have payment methods on file.
Pattern 5: Measure against a control group. The only way to know if a workflow is working is to hold back 10-15% of eligible contacts and compare outcomes. If the workflow group doesn’t outperform the control, the workflow is adding complexity without value.
Start with three workflows, not fourteen. Pick the ones that match your biggest revenue leak. If you’re losing leads at the top of the funnel, build the welcome series and content download follow-up first. If you’re losing customers, start with churn prevention and the feedback loop.
“Every client wants to automate everything on day one. We push back on that. Pick three workflows. Build them properly with branching, exit conditions, and measurement. Run them for 60 days. Optimize based on data. Then add three more. The companies that try to build 15 workflows in a sprint end up with 15 broken workflows and no data to improve any of them.”
Hardik Shah, Founder of ScaleGrowth.Digital
Implementation tips that will save you time:
Use your CRM’s native workflow builder first. HubSpot workflows, ActiveCampaign automations, Klaviyo flows, and Mailchimp journeys can all handle these 14 workflows without third-party tools. Don’t introduce Zapier or Make until you’ve maxed out your primary platform’s capabilities.
Name your workflows with a consistent convention. We use: [Stage] – [Trigger] – [Goal]. Example: “ACQ – New Subscriber – Welcome Series” or “RET – Churn Signal – Save Campaign.” When you have 20+ workflows, naming discipline prevents confusion.
Document your workflows visually. Use Miro, Whimsical, or even a Google Doc with a simple flowchart before building in your automation tool. It’s faster to iterate on a drawing than to rebuild branching logic in a platform.
For the customer journey map that these workflows connect to, see our customer journey map template. And for the drip campaign email templates that feed into these workflows, check our drip campaign template.
The scoring model that powers workflow #6 (scoring-based routing). Includes demographic, behavioral, and negative scoring matrices.
Map the full customer journey, then connect each stage transition to the workflows in this guide.
Email templates for the nurture and welcome series workflows. Ready-to-customize copy for each email in the sequence.
Start with 3-5 workflows covering your biggest conversion gaps. Most mature marketing teams run 10-20 active workflows. Building more than 20 without a dedicated marketing ops person to maintain them leads to conflicts, duplicate sends, and broken logic. Quality over quantity.
For B2B SaaS: HubSpot (starting at $800/month for Professional) or Marketo (enterprise). For ecommerce: Klaviyo (free up to 250 contacts) or ActiveCampaign ($29/month). For small businesses: Mailchimp ($13/month) handles basic workflows. All of these can implement the 14 workflows in this guide without custom development.
Track three metrics per workflow: enrollment rate (are people entering?), completion rate (are they reaching the end?), and goal conversion rate (did they take the desired action?). Compare against a 10-15% holdout control group. If the workflow group doesn’t outperform control by at least 15%, the workflow needs optimization or replacement.
It depends on the workflow type. Welcome series: 3-5 emails over 7-14 days. Nurture sequences: 6-12 emails over 4-8 weeks. Cart abandonment: 2-3 emails over 48 hours. The key rule: stop when you run out of genuinely useful things to say. Padding a workflow with filler emails to hit an arbitrary count hurts more than it helps.
Yes, with limitations. HubSpot Free allows basic workflows with limited branching. Mailchimp Free supports simple automations. Brevo (formerly Sendinblue) offers automation on its free plan. The advanced branching in workflows like #5 (funnel-stage nurture) and #10 (churn prevention) requires paid plans, but the welcome series, content download follow-up, and feedback loop all work on free tiers.
ScaleGrowth.Digital designs, builds, and optimizes marketing automation workflows in HubSpot, ActiveCampaign, Marketo, and Klaviyo. We handle the strategy, implementation, and ongoing measurement.