Friday, 10 April 2026

Email Marketing Automation for Small Businesses: What to Build, How to Write It, and When to Send It

Email Marketing Automation for Small Businesses The Complete Guide

You get a new subscriber. Someone found you, liked what they saw, and handed over their email address. Then nothing happens for a week because you were busy.

They've already forgotten you.

Email marketing automation is what happens instead. It's a system that sends the right email the moment someone takes an action: signs up, buys something, clicks a link, goes quiet. You don't write or send anything manually. You build the sequence once. It runs on its own from that point forward.

For a small business, that's not a nice-to-have. Most small businesses send emails reactively. When there's news, when there's a sale, when someone remembers. The person who downloaded your guide last Tuesday and hasn't heard from you since? They needed a follow-up on Wednesday. Automation sends it.

This guide is specifically for small businesses deciding which automations to build. Not a general explainer on what automation is. If you're a solo operator, a lean team, or someone who writes their own emails and wants them to do more work, start here.


What is email marketing automation?

Email marketing automation is when an email (or series of emails) sends automatically based on a trigger: someone subscribes to your list, makes a purchase, clicks a link, or goes quiet for 90 days.

The email doesn't wait for you to press send. It goes out when the trigger fires.

You can automate a single email or an entire sequence. Most small businesses start with a welcome series and build from there. According to AWeber's research, 79% of small businesses say email marketing is important or very important to their business strategy. Automation is what makes that strategy sustainable when you're running lean.


Why consistent follow-up beats sending more emails

Most small businesses send emails when they remember to. According to AWeber's research, 86% of small businesses send at least once a month, but only 54% send at least once a week. That inconsistency is where leads go cold. Not because subscribers lost interest, but because nothing arrived to keep the relationship moving.

Automation makes follow-up consistent without requiring your attention each time. A subscriber who downloads your free guide and hears nothing for three weeks is a missed opportunity. An automated three-email nurture sequence that starts the moment they download? That's a relationship.

The other thing automation does: it scales without breaking. You might be able to personally follow up with 10 new leads. You can't do it with 100. Automation doesn't get tired.


The 5 automations every small business should have

Start here. These are the highest-impact sequences, in the order you should build them.

1. Welcome series (3 to 5 emails)

Your welcome email is the most-opened email you'll ever send. It goes out when a new subscriber signs up, and that moment of peak attention is yours to use.

A welcome series spreads that introduction across several days or weeks. Here's a simple structure:

  • Email 1 (send immediately): Deliver what you promised, welcome them, tell them what's coming
  • Email 2 (day 2): Share something useful. A tip, a resource, a quick win
  • Email 3 (day 4): Tell your story. Who you are, why you do this, what makes you different
  • Email 4 (day 6): Introduce your core offer, but frame it as a solution, not a pitch
  • Email 5 (day 8): Ask a question. Invite a reply. Replies signal to inbox providers that people want your mail

Welcome emails generate up to 320% more revenue per email than standard promotional messages. They also get open rates four times higher than other emails. That's why this automation must be built first.

2. Lead nurture sequence

Not every subscriber is ready to buy. Most aren't. A lead nurture sequence builds the case over time, so that when someone is ready, you're the obvious choice.

A simple nurture sequence looks like this:

  • Week 1: Educational content that solves a specific problem
  • Week 2: A case study or customer story
  • Week 3: A FAQ or objection-handling email ("Here's what people ask before they work with us")
  • Week 4: A direct offer or call to action

The goal isn't to push. It's to earn the decision. Coleen Otero, a brand coach who has worked with over 1,000 entrepreneurs, puts it plainly: having someone's attention and high open rates means they're interested. They're just not ready yet. Your job is to keep showing up with value until they are.

3. Abandoned cart recovery (for ecommerce)

Someone added your product to their cart and left. That's not a lost sale. It's a warm lead who got distracted.

Abandoned cart recovery emails work best within the first hour after abandonment. A three-email sequence performs better than one:

  • Email 1 (1 hour after abandonment): Friendly reminder, no pressure
  • Email 2 (24 hours later): Address a likely objection, add social proof
  • Email 3 (72 hours later): Create urgency, optionally offer a small incentive

The typical conversion rate for abandoned cart emails is 10% to 15%, placing them among the highest-performing sequences in email marketing. For a small business, that's revenue that would otherwise disappear.

4. Re-engagement campaign

Your list decays. Someone who signed up 18 months ago and hasn't opened an email in 90 days is dragging down your deliverability and inflating your subscriber count.

A re-engagement sequence does two things: it wins back subscribers who still care, and it gives you a clean reason to remove those who don't.

A three-email re-engagement sequence:

  • Email 1: A simple, personal check-in. "We miss you" works.
  • Email 2: Lead with your best content or offer as a reason to re-engage
  • Email 3: A last chance with a clear CTA to stay subscribed. "This is the last email we'll send" gets attention.

Anyone who doesn't engage after three emails can be removed without guilt. Your deliverability will improve, and your open rates will go up.

5. Post-purchase follow-up

The sale is the beginning of the relationship, not the end. A post-purchase sequence turns one-time buyers into repeat customers.

  • Email 1 (send immediately): Order confirmation with useful details
  • Email 2 (day 3): Onboarding tips or advice for getting the most out of their purchase
  • Email 3 (day 10): Request a review or testimonial
  • Email 4 (day 30): Cross-sell or introduce a complementary product or service

This sequence does the relationship maintenance that most small businesses skip because they're too busy. Automation means it happens without you.


How to set up email automation for your small business

Every email automation has three components: a trigger, a series of emails, and the timing between them. Get those three things right and the setup is straightforward on any modern platform.

Here's how to build your first automation:

1. Choose your trigger. A trigger is the action that starts the sequence. The most common starting point is a new subscriber joining your list. Other common triggers include a purchase, a link click, or a tag being applied. Pick one. You can add more complex logic later.

2. Write the emails before you build the workflow. Most people open the workflow builder first and get stuck. Write the emails in a doc, in order, before you touch the platform. Knowing what you want to say makes the setup take minutes instead of hours.

3. Set the timing. Decide how many days pass between each email. For a welcome series, days 0, 2, 4, 6, and 8 is a proven structure. For re-engagement, spacing of 7 to 14 days between emails gives subscribers time to act before the next message arrives.

4. Add tags at key points. When a subscriber completes a sequence or clicks a specific link, apply a tag.

Tags let you segment future sends and prevent someone from receiving the same content twice. For example, tag anyone who completes your welcome series as "welcomed" so they don't receive it again if they rejoin your list later.

5. Test before you activate. Send every email to yourself. Read it on your phone. Click every link. Check that the wait times are set correctly. A welcome series with a broken link or a 30-day wait between emails one and two is worse than no automation at all.

6. Activate and monitor. Once live, check open rates and click rates after the first 50 subscribers complete the sequence. If a specific email has a significantly lower open rate than the others, the subject line or timing needs adjusting.

Most modern email platforms handle all of this in a visual workflow builder. AWeber's Workflow builder uses a point-and-click interface with no coding required, and pre-built templates for the most common sequences so you're not starting from scratch. If you'd rather skip the setup entirely, AWeber's Done-For-You service builds your complete email system, including a branded template, welcome workflow, and landing page, in 7 days for $79.


What makes an automated email actually work

Setting up the automation is the easy part. Writing emails that people want to read is where most small businesses stall. A few principles that apply to every automated sequence:

Lead with value, not offers. The value-value-value-offer sequence works. Three emails that give something useful before you ask for anything earns more trust than a pitch in email one.

Write like one person is reading it. Your automated emails go to many people, but each person reads theirs alone. "Hey everyone" breaks that spell. Write to the person, not the list.

Use a consistent sender name. Subscribers open emails from people they recognize. Use your name, not your brand name, in the From field.

Keep it short. Automated emails aren't newsletters. They're conversations. Two or three paragraphs with one clear ask performs better than a full editorial digest.

Test before you set it and forget it. Send test emails to yourself. Check mobile rendering. Click every link. A broken link in your welcome series is a terrible first impression.

AWeber will automatically check all your URLs to make sure they're valid.

URL link checker in AWeber

Use AI to write the first draft, then make it yours. AWeber's AI Writing Assistant is built directly into the email editor. It generates a full email from a short prompt, so you're editing rather than starting from scratch. A prompt that works well:

"Write a welcome email for a [type of business] that delivers a [lead magnet] and tells the subscriber what to expect over the next week. Warm, direct tone. Under 200 words."

Swap in your voice, add a specific detail about your business, and send. The goal isn't to automate your writing. It's to remove the blank page so you actually build the sequence.


Automation by business type

Not every automation applies to every business. Here's how to prioritize based on what you do. Each section links to a deeper guide when available.

Service businesses (coaches, consultants, freelancers, agencies): Welcome series and lead nurture are your highest-priority sequences.

Your sales cycle is longer, so nurturing trust over weeks matters more than urgency.

A discovery-call confirmation automation is also high-value: when someone books, trigger an automated prep sequence that sets expectations and reduces no-shows.

Read more about: Email automation for coaches

Ecommerce and retail: Welcome series and abandoned cart recovery first. Post-purchase follow-up second. These three sequences directly tie to revenue you'd otherwise leave on the table.

Read more about: Email automation for ecommerce

Restaurants and local businesses: Welcome email with an offer (first-time discount, free item), a pre-visit reminder sequence, and a post-visit follow-up that asks for a review. Re-engagement on a 60-day cycle keeps regulars coming back.

We miss you email from Sedona Taphouse

Nonprofits: Welcome series introducing your mission, followed by a donor nurture sequence that builds the case for giving before you ask. A post-donation thank-you sequence improves donor retention. Donors who receive a strong thank-you are more likely to give again.

B2B businesses: Lead nurture is the priority. B2B buyers have longer decision cycles and rarely purchase on a first contact. A 4-to-6-week nurture sequence that addresses objections, shares proof, and builds authority tends to outperform any single campaign.

Creators and bloggers: A welcome series that delivers your best content, followed by a sequence that introduces your paid products or memberships. Tag subscribers based on what they click so future emails stay relevant to their interests.


The one automation most small businesses skip

Re-engagement.

It's not glamorous, but list hygiene directly impacts your deliverability. When inbox providers see that a large percentage of your list never opens your emails, they start routing your messages to spam, including for the subscribers who do want to hear from you.

Running a re-engagement campaign every 6 months keeps your list clean and your deliverability strong.


Frequently asked questions about email automation for small businesses

What is the best email automation platform for small businesses?

The best email automation platform for a small business is one that handles the core sequences — welcome series, abandoned cart, re-engagement, and post-purchase — without requiring a developer or a long setup process. It should include 24/7 support, pre-built templates, and pricing that doesn't penalize you for growing your list.

AWeber is built specifically for small businesses on those criteria. Unlike enterprise platforms that added a "small business" tier as an afterthought, AWeber was built for small teams from the start. Key features include:

  • Unlimited automations on paid plans
  • A built-in AI writing assistant to speed up email creation
  • 24/7 support from real humans
  • Pre-built workflow templates for the most common sequences
  • A Done For You setup service that builds your full system in 7 days for $79

For a side-by-side comparison of the leading options, this breakdown of the best email automation tools covers what each platform does well and where they fall short.

How many emails should be in an automated sequence?

The right number depends on the sequence type:

  • Welcome series: 3 to 5 emails over 7 to 10 days
  • Lead nurture: 4 to 6 emails over 4 to 6 weeks
  • Abandoned cart: 3 emails over 72 hours (sent at 1 hour, 24 hours, and 72 hours after abandonment)
  • Re-engagement: 3 emails over 2 to 3 weeks
  • Post-purchase: 3 to 4 emails over 30 days

More emails are not always better. Each email in a sequence should have one clear purpose. If you can't define why an email needs to exist, remove it.

Is email automation worth it for a small business with a small list?

Yes, and a small list is actually the best time to set up automation. AWeber's research found that small businesses with 500 or fewer subscribers report effective email strategies at roughly half the rate of those with larger lists. The difference is rarely the list size itself — it's that smaller lists tend to have less consistent follow-up in place.

A 100-person list with a working welcome series, a nurture sequence, and a re-engagement campaign will outperform a 1,000-person list that only gets occasional broadcast emails. Automation is what creates that consistency, and the sequences you build on a small list will scale without any changes as your list grows.

How much does email automation cost?

Email automation tools range from free to several hundred dollars a month, depending on list size and features. Most small businesses are well served by a mid-tier plan in the $15 to $50 per month range.

AWeber's free plan includes automation for up to 500 subscribers. Paid plans unlock unlimited automations, advanced tagging, behavioral triggers, and full workflow capabilities. For businesses that want a professionally built system without the setup time, AWeber's Done For You service builds a complete automation setup — welcome workflow, branded template, landing page, weekly AI-generated newsletter draft — in 7 days for $79.

How long does it take to set up email automation?

A basic welcome series takes most small business owners 2 to 3 hours to set up: roughly an hour to write the emails and another hour to build and test the workflow. More complex sequences with conditional branching or behavioral triggers take longer, but are not required to start.

If you want a complete system — welcome workflow, branded template, landing page, and automations configured for your business — AWeber's Done-For-You service delivers it in 7 days for $79. You fill out a short survey, and the team builds everything. The most common reason small businesses don't have automation in place is not lack of knowledge. It's not starting. Either route removes that obstacle.

What's the difference between an email sequence and an email campaign?

An email sequence (also called an automated series or workflow) sends based on a trigger and a preset schedule. It activates automatically when a subscriber meets a condition and runs without any manual input after setup.

An email campaign typically refers to a single broadcast email sent to a list at a specific time — a newsletter, a promotion, or an announcement. Campaigns require you to write and send each time. Sequences do not. Most small businesses use both: sequences handle relationship-building and follow-up automatically, while campaigns handle timely news and promotions.


What to build, how to write it, and when to send it

Here's the full recap in one place.

What to build: Start with a welcome series. Add lead nurture, then abandoned cart if you sell products, then post-purchase, then re-engagement. Each sequence you add covers a gap that was previously costing you leads or revenue. Build in that order and you'll have a complete system within a few weeks.

How to write it: Write to one person. Lead with value before you ask for anything. Keep it short. Use your name in the From field.

Use AWeber's AI Writing Assistant to get a first draft down fast, then make tweaks as you see fit. The blank page is the biggest reason small businesses never finish their sequences. Remove it.

When to send it: Triggers handle the timing. A welcome email sends the moment someone subscribes. A cart recovery email sends one hour after abandonment. A re-engagement email sends after 90 days of silence. You set the rules once. The system applies them to every subscriber, every time, without you making a decision.

That's what automation actually does. It doesn't replace your marketing judgment. It makes sure your judgment gets applied consistently, to every person, at the right moment, whether or not you had a good week.



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Thursday, 9 April 2026

TikTok for small business: How to scale your strategy and drive ROI

Growing a small business demands serious dedication.

Whether you run the show alone or work alongside a lean team, keeping up with TikTok often feels like an exhausting treadmill.

You know the routine: hunting down trends, filming endless takes and hoping your latest video breaks through the noise.

When those efforts yield a handful of views but zero impact on your bottom line, frustration sets in fast.

Transitioning your approach requires a fundamental shift in how you view the platform. TikTok is no longer just an experimental playground for brand awareness. It is a robust search engine and a primary driver for social commerce. Surviving the pivot from manual hustle to scalable growth means moving away from vanity metrics and establishing a mature TikTok marketing strategy rooted in trackable performance.

This guide breaks down exactly how to construct a sustainable TikTok presence for a small business. We explore how to refine your niche, leverage data-backed user-generated content and implement automation tools that give you your time back.

How small businesses can use TikTok for marketing in 2026

As we move deeper into the decade, short-form video consumption has matured. The days of pointing at floating text bubbles to a trending song are fading. Today’s consumers spot an inauthentic sales pitch from a mile away and demand genuine value.

Data to back your strategy: If you’re questioning whether TikTok is worth the investment, the data speaks for itself. According to the 2026 Social Media Content Strategy Report, 50% of social media users have TikTok accounts and that number rises to 72% for Gen Z. What’s more, 69% of US marketers are upping their investment in the network in 2026, the most of any platform. You aren’t just competing for views; you are competing for high-intent market share.

Data charts from the 2026 Social Media Content Strategy Report [cite: 1024] showing top platforms US social media users plan to spend more time on in 2026 [cite: 1014], led by Facebook at 46% [cite: 1016], compared to the top platforms US marketers plan to invest more resources into [cite: 1021], led by Instagram at 72%[cite: 1022].

Capturing this market share requires a departure from the hustle of the past. Lean social media marketing teams must adopt a structured, intent-driven approach to outpace larger competitors and turn that massive audience pool into predictable pipeline.

The shift from performance to proof content

We are seeing a transition away from polished, traditional marketing toward raw “proof” content. Consumer trust requires transparency. Shoppers no longer want to be told a product is great; they want to see it proven in real time.

This shift provides a massive advantage for lean teams. Instead of spending your limited budget on expensive production gear, focus on showcasing the genuine behind-the-scenes realities of your business. Consider Peachybbies, a small business that exploded on the platform by showing the messy, satisfying process of mixing their slime products. They avoid glossy ads. Instead, they lean into user-generated content and authentic product demonstrations to build community trust.

Peachybbies Slime TikTok profile highlighting satisfying slime mixing videos, colorful textures, and weekly shop restock announcements.

Moving beyond vanity metrics to trackable ROI

Getting caught up in the dopamine hit of a viral video happens to the best of us. Racking up a million views feels like a huge win. But if those viewers do not click the link in your bio or convert into paying customers, the impact on your bottom line remains zero.

Scaling your efforts means looking past superficial numbers to focus on actionable social media metrics. You need to understand which videos drive website traffic, generate leads and contribute to your sales pipeline. Shifting your focus to conversion rates and click-throughs helps you stop chasing fleeting trends and start building a reliable revenue engine. By analyzing your performance data with robust social media analytics, you can double down on the formats that convert and turn your profile into a dedicated sales channel.

How to build a TikTok marketing strategy for small business

A successful TikTok strategy shifts your focus from guessing what might work to executing what does.

Refine your niche by tapping into TikTok subcultures

Traditional demographic targeting falls flat on an app where the algorithm prioritizes niche communities over general audiences. Instead of trying to reach everyone, identify and embed yourself within TikTok subcultures. These micro-communities—ranging from #CleanTok to niche B2B software circles, are where your most engaged potential customers spend their time.

Use TikTok social listening to observe industry conversations and find your place. What specific challenges are these communities trying to solve?

Aligning your content with a defined subculture naturally attracts followers who are already primed for your solution. This makes finding your target audience more efficient and builds immediate trust.

Audit other small businesses on TikTok to identify content gaps

Watching what competitors do is standard practice, but analyzing why they succeed uncovers true opportunity. When auditing other small businesses on TikTok, look at their top-performing videos through the lens of the Three E’s:

  • Education
  • Entertainment
  • Emotion

Ask yourself: what immediate value does the viewer get? Are they learning how a product works, laughing at a relatable struggle or feeling inspired by a beautiful aesthetic?

Once you understand the mechanics of their success, look for what they miss. Perhaps another small business on TikTok in your space relies on trending dances but ignores customer education. That content gap is your entry point to establish authority. Conduct a thorough TikTok competitor analysis to craft a unique angle rather than echoing the noise.

How to optimize TikTok social search for small business visibility

Getting your videos in front of the right audience is no longer about crossing your fingers for algorithmic luck. Consumers use the platform as a primary search engine to find product recommendations, local services and operational hacks. To capture this high-intent traffic, structure your content for searchability.

Sprout Essentials Pro Tip: Virality is a spike, but consistency is a strategy. Focus on optimizing your content for TikTok social search so your videos continue to drive targeted leads long after their publication date.

Master TikTok SEO: Keywords, captions and hashtags

When a potential customer types a query into the search bar, the platform scans multiple elements of your video to determine relevance. Relying on a single, broad hashtag is a missed opportunity. You need a comprehensive approach to TikTok SEO.

Start by identifying the specific phrases your audience uses to describe their pain points. Weave these targeted keywords naturally into your spoken audio, on-screen text overlays and video captions.

For example, rather than captioning a video “New product drop,” use a descriptive, search-friendly phrase like “How to organize your home office with our new desk organizers.” Utilize a robust social media content strategy to ensure you target the semantic entities your buyers care about, rather than guessing.

How to leverage trending audio and effects strategically

Sound design is deeply embedded in TikTok’s culture and functionality. Tapping into a trending audio clip or a popular visual effect gives your video an algorithmic boost. However, slapping a viral song onto a mediocre video won’t drive meaningful growth.

Contextual alignment is key. Use trending sounds as background audio for your educational “proof” content, ensuring the volume is low enough that your voiceover remains the focal point. This allows you to ride the wave of a trend while delivering actual value. If a specific audio trend doesn’t fit your brand voice, skip it. Authenticity always outperforms forced participation.

Optimize your TikTok Business Account for lead generation

When your SEO efforts drive search traffic to your grid, your TikTok profile must act as a high-converting landing page. Generating consistent views means little if you cannot capture that attention:

  1. Ensure your bio explicitly states your value proposition in one short sentence with a strong call to action.
  2. Direct visitors to a specific product catalog or a targeted promotional landing page to maximize social media lead generation.
  3. Pin your top three pieces of “proof” content, videos that demonstrate your product in action or answer common FAQs, to the top of your grid so new visitors instantly grasp your worth.

How to create TikTok content for consistent small business growth

Staring at a blank screen while the clock ticks is the fastest route to creative fatigue. Scaling your presence means removing the friction from your production process. Rely on proven formats and structured workflows to maintain a high output without sacrificing your sanity.

5 high-converting TikTok ideas for small businesses

You don’t need a massive production budget or a dedicated film crew to drive sales. The most effective small business TikTok ideas rely on the tools you already have: your smartphone, your workspace and your daily operations.

These five low-lift formats consistently perform well for lean teams:

Content Format The Three E’s Focus Why It Converts
The “Pack an Order with Me” Emotion & Entertainment Builds transparency, shows the human element behind the brand and creates an ASMR-like viewing experience.
The 3-Second Problem Solver Education Directly addresses a customer pain point and proves your product’s utility before they scroll.
The Founder’s Journey Emotion Fosters community connection by sharing the realistic, unpolished struggles of running a lean operation.
Customer Q&A Response Education Uses the native video reply feature to turn common objections or FAQs into trust-building moments.
The Unfiltered Workspace Tour Entertainment Demystifies your process and leans into the raw authenticity that the platform’s audience craves.

Consider Enchanted Scrunch, a US solo-run hair accessory brand. They built a massive following not through complex choreography, but by filming the daily reality of fulfilling orders and answering customer questions on camera. Their approach proves that operational transparency is engaging.

Enchanted Scrunch TikTok account featuring the small business founder demonstrating unbreakable hair scrunchies and behind-the-scenes content.

The power of video batching to avoid burnout

Filming a new video every day is unsustainable for a solo marketer. The secret to long-term survival is video batching. Dedicate one specific block of time—perhaps three hours on a Thursday afternoon—to outline, shoot and edit a week’s worth of content in one go.

Once your videos are finalized, load them into a centralized social media content calendar to visualize your distribution strategy. Batching keeps you in a creative flow state. It eliminates the daily scramble for ideas and ensures your feed remains active even when you are tied up with inventory or customer service.

Sprout Essentials Pro Tip: Consistency doesn’t mean manually posting every day. A centralized content calendar allows smb marketers to batch and schedule videos weeks in advance. This ensures your content hits the For You Page (FYP) when your audience is active, without you needing to open the app and scramble for ideas daily.

How the TikTok FYP algorithm rewards consistency

TikTok’s For You Page (FYP) algorithm is the recommendation engine dictating what videos appear on a TikTok user’s main feed. It learns from individual viewing habits, watch time and interactions to serve personalized content.

A common misconception is that the algorithm only cares about viral hits. In reality, it favors accounts demonstrating reliable, steady posting habits. When you show up regularly, the platform categorizes your account as an active contributor. This makes it easier for the algorithm to map your videos to the right TikTok subcultures. Social media management tools can help you schedule your batched content and hit those consistent publishing windows without opening the app every day.

How to use TikTok Shop for small business social commerce

TikTok has evolved from a discovery engine into a closed-loop shopping ecosystem. For lean teams, implementing a seamless social commerce strategy is one of the fastest ways to drive measurable ROI.

TikTok Shop allows users to discover, research and purchase your products without leaving the app. This eliminates the drop-off that occurs when forcing buyers to navigate to an external website.

Setting up your storefront

Building a frictionless checkout experience starts with the native integration. You don’t need deep technical expertise to launch your storefront, but you do need to follow the platform’s compliance guidelines.

Use this checklist to get your shop live:

  1. Navigate to the TikTok Seller Center and register using your official business credentials.
  2. Upload your verification documents (such as a business license or tax ID) to ensure compliance and gain platform approval.
  3. Sync your existing e-commerce catalog via integration or upload your core product inventory manually.
  4. Link the approved storefront to your main profile grid so the shopping bag icon appears for all visitors.

Once your shop is approved and populated, immediately begin tagging products in your batched “proof” videos and live streams. Need more help? Our dedicated TikTok Shop post has the answer.

Partnering with creators and affiliates

Scaling your revenue doesn’t mean you have to film every video yourself. Tapping into TikTok’s native affiliate marketing program allows you to leverage other credible voices to sell your products on commission.

Build a mature influencer marketing strategy by identifying creators who already have authority within your niche subculture. Consider a UK indie makeup brand like Glisten Cosmetics, which built a massive global presence by empowering beauty creators to showcase their water-activated eyeliners.

Glisten Cosmetics TikTok profile page showcasing colorful eyeliner tutorials and cruelty-free vegan beauty products.

By offering a competitive commission rate through the Seller Center, you incentivize creators to generate authentic reviews, tutorials and unboxing videos that link to your products. This approach scales your reach exponentially while keeping your upfront marketing costs tied to actual performance.

How to measure TikTok marketing ROI for small business

Measuring success on a visual platform requires discipline. It’s tempting to celebrate high view counts and rapid follower growth, but sustainable scaling demands a focus on revenue-generating actions. If your engagement metrics don’t reflect an impact on your bottom line, your strategy needs an adjustment.

Moving from views to pipeline and conversions

Transitioning your mindset from simple brand awareness to active customer acquisition is the hallmark of a growth marketing operation. Choose TikTok metrics that show how users interact with your brand after they finish watching your content. Are they clicking the link in your bio? Are they applying your affiliate promo codes at checkout?

Connecting these dots proves the value of your content creation efforts. Your earlier TikTok audit helped establish a performance baseline, allowing you to monitor how your click-through rates and website traffic evolve over time.

How to automate your reporting and save hours every week

Pulling data manually from native app insights drains valuable hours from your week. Automate this workflow so you can focus on strategy and operations, not data entry. Unifying your TikTok analytics into clear, actionable dashboards takes the guesswork out of your content strategy. It allows you to identify which videos drive the most conversions so you can replicate that success.

Sprout Essentials Pro Tip: Stop wasting hours compiling manual spreadsheets. The Sprout Essentials plan includes post performance reporting and a direct Google Analytics integration, allowing small business marketers to connect social engagement directly to website traffic. Set custom date comparison ranges to prove exactly how your content strategy impacts your bottom line month over month.

Scale your small business on TikTok without the burnout

Transitioning from spontaneous posting to a structured system takes time, but the payoff is immense. By focusing on search-optimized video formats and leaning into authentic, proof-driven content, you set your brand up for predictable visibility. As the platform evolves with deeper live commerce integrations and longer tutorials, a reliable framework ensures you adapt without scrambling.

Sustainable growth doesn’t mean working harder. It means working smarter by batching your videos, optimizing your profile for lead generation and relying on affordable social media marketing tools to handle the heavy lifting.

Equipping yourself with robust social media automation gives you the bandwidth to focus on what matters: running your business. Stop chasing fleeting viral moments and treat your profile like a conversion engine. Step off the daily content treadmill and build a TikTok presence that drives real revenue.

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How to Choose the Best Email Marketing Platform for Your Small Business

How to choose the best email marketing platform

There are dozens of email marketing platforms competing for your attention. Every one of them promises to be the easiest, the most powerful, or the best value. Choosing between them shouldn't take weeks.

The right email marketing platform for your small business is the one that handles deliverability reliably, fits your budget at your current list size, includes automation without requiring technical expertise, and has real human support when something goes wrong. Everything else is secondary.

This guide walks through the six questions that actually matter when choosing an email platform. Here is what to look for in each answer.


The six questions to ask before choosing an email marketing platform

1. Does it prioritize deliverability?

Deliverability is whether your emails land in the inbox or the spam folder. It's the most important thing an email platform does for you, and it's the one thing most small businesses don't think to ask about until something goes wrong.

AWeber customer Coleen Otero learned this the hard way. After switching to a different platform, her open rates dropped from 30-40% to 5%. "As a small business owner, that is detrimental to my ROI, detrimental to the sales," she said in an AWeber webinar.

She returned to AWeber and recovered those rates.

What Coleen's experience illustrates: deliverability isn't just a technical setting. It's the foundation your entire email strategy sits on. A platform that lets bad actors send spam from shared infrastructure damages the sender reputation of every customer on that infrastructure . Yours included.

What to ask:

  • Does the platform manage deliverability in-house, or is it outsourced?
  • Does it support SPF, DKIM, and DMARC authentication?
  • Does it offer confirmed opt-in to protect your sender reputation?

2. Can you afford it as your list grows?

Most platforms charge by subscriber count. That means the price you see today isn't the price you'll pay in twelve months if your list grows.

Map out the cost at three list sizes: where you are now, at 1,000 subscribers, and at 5,000 subscribers. Some platforms look cheap at 500 contacts and become expensive quickly. Others have a generous free tier that gets restrictive before your list is large enough to generate meaningful revenue.

AWeber's free plan supports up to 500 subscribers and includes automation, landing pages, and 24/7 support. Paid plans start at $15/month.

For a full breakdown of what you get at each price point, see How Much Does Email Marketing Cost for a Small Business?

3. Can you set up automation without technical help?

Automation is where email marketing generates its best returns. A welcome series, a re-engagement campaign, a post-purchase sequence. They run without you once they're set up. But only if you can actually build them.

Look for a visual workflow builder that doesn't require writing code or hiring a developer. You should be able to drag and connect triggers, conditions, and actions to build a sequence in under an hour. AWeber's visual workflow builder lets you do exactly that, with branching paths and behavioral triggers built in.

AWeber's Workflow automation canvas

Test this before you commit. Most platforms offer a free trial. Use it to build a basic three-email welcome series. If it takes you more than an hour and two support tickets, it's going to slow you down every time you want to make a change.

4. What happens when something breaks?

You will need help at an inconvenient time. Right before a launch. On the day you're sending to your biggest list. At 10pm on a Friday.

Most email platforms offer support by email or chat during business hours. A few offer 24/7 support. Fewer still offer 24/7 support from a person who actually knows email marketing, not a chatbot that routes you to a knowledge base article.

Ask specifically: what does support look like when I have an urgent problem outside business hours? The answer tells you more about the platform than any feature list.

AWeber, for example, offers 24/7 human support as standard on every plan.

5. Does it do what your business actually needs right now?

The best platform for a solopreneur sending a weekly newsletter is different from the best platform for an ecommerce store running abandoned cart sequences. Don't pay for features you won't use for 18 months.

Start by listing the three things your email marketing needs to do in the next 90 days:

  • Collect subscribers and send a welcome sequence
  • Send a weekly or monthly newsletter
  • Recover abandoned carts or re-engage lapsed customers

If those are your three, you don't need enterprise-level CRM integration or predictive AI send-time optimization. You need a platform that does those three things reliably and doesn't get in your way.

Add complexity as your needs grow. Switching platforms later is far less painful than paying for complexity you don't use. Getting confused enough to stop using email marketing at all is the bigger cost.

If you want to see how specific platforms stack up against each other, we evaluated the best email marketing platforms for small businesses across deliverability, pricing, automation, and support. See the full breakdown: Best Email Marketing Platforms for Small Businesses.

6. How easy is it to move if you're already on another platform?

If you're not starting from scratch, migration is part of the decision. A platform that's technically good but painful to move to isn't the right choice if you're sitting on years of subscriber data, templates, and automation sequences you'd have to rebuild from scratch.

Ask specifically: does the platform offer migration support, and who does the work?

Some platforms say they support migration but mean they'll give you an export guide and leave you to figure out the rest. Others offer a genuine done-for-you migration where their team transfers your list, recreates your templates, and rebuilds your automations.

AWeber's migration service is free. The team handles the transfer from your current platform so you don't have to spend weeks rebuilding what you already have. Most migrations are completed within a few business days.

What to check before migrating:

  • Can your current platform export your full subscriber list with tags and custom fields intact?
  • Will your automations need to be rebuilt, or can they be transferred?
  • Does the new platform's support team have experience migrating from your current one?

A clean migration sets you up to start improving immediately rather than spending your first month just getting back to where you were.


What to prioritize at each stage of business

Just starting out (under 500 subscribers)

Your priority is getting a list built and a welcome sequence running. You don't need advanced segmentation or complex automation yet.

Look for: a free plan that includes automation, a landing page builder so you don't need a separate tool, and a simple drag-and-drop email editor. AWeber's free plan covers all three.

For tactics on growing your list from zero, see How to Build an Email List for Your Small Business.

Growing (500 to 5,000 subscribers)

Your list is generating revenue. You need better segmentation, more automation flexibility, and analytics that connect email activity to sales.

Look for: behavioral tagging, visual automation workflows, and integration with your ecommerce platform or CRM. This is where paying for a platform starts to have a clear ROI.

Established (5,000+ subscribers)

You need reliable deliverability infrastructure, advanced segmentation, and the ability to run multiple campaigns simultaneously without things breaking.

Look for: dedicated deliverability support, a robust API for custom integrations, and priority customer support. The cost of a platform problem at this list size is real money.


Red flags to watch for

Feature overwhelm on the homepage. If the platform's website leads with 1,000s of integrations and AI-powered predictive send time optimization, that's often a signal the product is built for enterprise marketing teams, not small business owners who are also running a business.

Pricing that hides list size costs. Some platforms advertise a low monthly price and then bury the fact that it only covers 500 contacts. Read the pricing page all the way through.

No mention of deliverability. If a platform's marketing never talks about inbox placement, sender reputation, or authentication, ask why. Deliverability should be a feature they're proud of.

Support that's only available during business hours. Small business owners don't keep business hours. Your email marketing problems won't either.


Frequently asked questions

What is the best email marketing platform for a small business?

The best email marketing platform for a small business is the one that prioritizes inbox deliverability, includes automation on its entry-level plan, fits your budget as your list grows, and offers real support when you need it. For most small businesses starting out, the right choice is a platform with a generous free tier that includes automation and won't require a developer to set up a welcome series.

Is free email marketing good enough for a small business?

A free email marketing plan is a strong starting point. The limitation is list size, not features. When your list grows beyond 500 subscribers and your email is generating measurable revenue, upgrading to a paid plan pays for itself quickly.

How long does it take to get started with email marketing?

With a platform like AWeber, you can have a signup form, a landing page, and a welcome email live in under an hour. AWeber also offers a Done For You service that builds your full email marketing system: branded templates, landing pages, welcome automation, and weekly AI-generated newsletter draft, in seven days for a one-time fee of $79.

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What is a landing page? Definition, examples, and how they work

What is a landing page

Some businesses seem to hit their marketing goals effortlessly. The reason is usually simple: they use landing pages.

High-converting landing pages fuel growth faster than almost any other tool. If you're not using them, you're leaving conversions on the table.

This guide provides a crystal-clear explanation (with plenty of examples!) so you will never again wonder what the term “landing page” means.

To better understand the real impact of landing pages, I connected with more than 50 businesses to find out whether or not they actually work. I’ve shared many of their stories and insights, plus a few priceless tips, in the guide below.

Everything you need to know about landing pages

What is a landing page?
Landing page vs. website: What’s the difference?
Why landing pages matter: Experts weigh in on the benefits
How do landing pages work?
What makes a high-converting landing page?
Landing page FAQs

What is a landing page? 

A landing page is where a visitor “lands” after clicking a call-to-action (CTA) link on a search engine results page, ad, email, blog post, or social media content. 

Landing pages encourage visitors to take one specific action: subscribe to a newsletter, schedule a consultation, purchase a product, or sign up for a service. That simplicity is what makes them so effective.

For example, Dreams Travel Consulting uses a landing page to offer a free guide on Disney World Luxury vacations in exchange for visitors sharing their email address. One offer. One form. One goal.

Landing page example for Dreams Travel Consulting

There are many kinds of landing pages, so design and content can vary dramatically depending on the goal, audience, and brand. Some are short: just a headline and a form. Others scroll for pages with detailed copy, images, and testimonials. What they all share is a single conversion objective.

What is a conversion on a landing page?

On a landing page, a "conversion" refers to the action you want a visitor to take. 

Types of actions include:

  • Subscribe to your marketing emails or newsletter
  • Sign up for a subscription service or free trial
  • Create an account with your company
  • Download an ebook or whitepaper in exchange for their contact information
  • Schedule a consultation
  • Try a free demo
  • Make a sale

In the example below, The Weight Loss Academy landing page has one CTA “Buy now.” So every time someone clicks on the CTA button and completes a purchase, it’s counted as a conversion.

Landing page example from The Weight Loss Academy

What’s the difference between a landing page and a website page?

Websites provide as many links and pages as needed to answer visitor questions and guide them toward purchasing a product or service. It helps visitors find the information they need.

Landing pages guide visitors to take one single action. And are often laser-focused on that one specific goal and contain a single call-to-action link. 

Think of it this way: your website is a continent; it has many pages that are all connected together and it’s easy to navigate from one corner of your website to another. 

Now think of your landing page as an island off the coast of that continent. It stands alone and does not connect to your continent. 

Image showing a mock up of a website home page compared to a landing page

For example, The School of Natural Healing is a good example. Their website has a full navigation menu and links to dozens of courses.

Website home page for School of Natural Healing

Their landing page for the Family Herbalist Course has one objective: sell that course. Nothing else on the page competes for attention.

Landing page example from School of Natural Healing where they're selling their family herbalist course

Should you create a landing page or a website page?

Do you want a visitor to do one thing and stay focused on a simple task? Or do you want them to explore and learn about you?

  • Do one thing: you need a landing page.
  • Explore and learn: you want a website.

Hosting your landing page offsite, on a dedicated marketing platform, is a great option for people who:

  • Don’t want to tackle the design challenges required to remove all website elements (such as site navigation and sidebars) that could distract from the page’s conversion rate. 
  • Are looking for enhanced landing page optimization (such as faster page load speeds) and more targeted analytics for running tests and experiments.
  • Do not have a website but still want to drive leads, conversions, and sales. You don’t need a website to have a landing page. This is a good option for people like creators and solopreneurs who are just starting out.

Where are landing pages published?

Landing pages are sometimes hosted on company websites, but many people publish them on a dedicated marketing platform like AWeber instead. This removes the design work required to strip out navigation menus and sidebars, and gives you faster load speeds and better analytics out of the box.

It's also a great option if you don't have a website yet. You don't need one. Creators and solopreneurs use standalone landing pages to grow their email list and sell products from day one.

Why landing pages matter: Experts weigh in on the benefits

Landing pages can help you generate far more leads, conversions, and sales than website pages.

But the benefits don’t stop there. Landing pages also help to:

  • Simplify the customer journey.
  • Improve your data collection and analysis.
  • Segment and personalize your marketing content.
  • Improve PPC campaigns.
  • Launch low-cost marketing campaigns that produce an excellent ROI.

I asked business owners across multiple industries why landing pages matter to them. A few answers stood out.

How businesses benefit from landing pages

I connected with several business owners, marketers, and agencies across multiple industries to find out why landing pages matter to them. 

Ling CEO Simon Bacher credits landing pages with driving over 10 million app downloads, saying they've been essential for showcasing his product's unique value and driving traffic to the platform.

Simon Bacher headshot

“Landing pages have drastically improved our conversion rates, resulting in over 10 million downloads of our app.

Simon Bacher
Ling

In the example below, Ling App uses its landing page to highlight the immersive language learning approach that differentiates its service from other educational apps. 

Landing page from Lin App where it highlights the immersive language learning approach that differentiates its service from other educational apps

MeasureSchool's Aleksa Filipovic points to the focus a landing page creates. "The good thing about landing pages is that they are designed with only one goal in mind. That allows you to personalize the page for your target audience as much as possible."

Aleksa Filipovic headshot

“Landing pages (along with other efforts) have helped us build up our email list with active email subscribers resulting in a newsletter with 15k readers and a 50% open rate.” 

Aleksa Filipovic
MeasureSchool

Sarah Blocksidge, Marketing Director at Sixth City Marketing, uses industry-specific landing pages to target different verticals: dentists, law firms, contractors. "With industry-focused landing pages, you can get super granular in your content and create unique, helpful content that not only ranks well, but converts well too."

Sarah Blocksidge headshot

“Landing pages have tremendously helped our business because they allow you to zero in on a specific, niche offering. “

Sarah Blocksidge
Sixth City Marketing

What can you do with landing pages?

Established businesses with websites use landing pages to drive conversions for nearly any type of marketing campaign.

For small businesses and solo-run businesses that don't have a website yet, landing pages can be especially powerful. They provide a cost-effective way to build traffic, generate sales, and grow an email list, without needing a full website.

Lead generation landing page sample

How do landing pages work?

Landing pages guide visitors along the marketing funnel through a 4-step process: Click, land, action, and conversion.

1 - Click: Someone clicks a CTA link in an ad, email, blog post, or social media content and gets sent to your landing page.

2 - Land: They arrive at a page built around one offer. No navigation. No distractions.

3 - Action: The page presents a clear CTA: Buy Now, Subscribe, Enroll, or Schedule a Consultation. It makes it easy to respond.

4 - Conversion: The visitor takes the desired action. That's a conversion.

What makes a high-converting lead generation landing page?

The most popular type of landing page is the lead generation page. Its purpose is to capture visitor information in exchange for something of value, like an ebook, template, or white paper.

Basic elements of a high-converting lead generation page

Successful lead generation pages have a few things in common:

A - A compelling headline that encourages people to sign up.
B - Focused copywriting that describes your offer and benefits in as few words as possible.
C - One clear call to action.
D - A sign-up form to capture subscriber information.
E - Social proof: Testimonials, review ratings, or customer logos.
F - Consistent branding so the page feels like a natural extension of your business.
G - Social media buttons to encourage subscribers to find out more about you and engage with you further

Anatomy of a landing page

Tips to create a landing page that converts

#1 - Write for your reader, not your brand: Challenge yourself to use the word "you" more than "we" or "I." The best landing page copy makes your audience feel seen, like you understand their problem perfectly.

#2 - Use proven templates: Templates can help you save time and money by offering writing prompts that help you successfully communicate your value. 

For example, AWeber has a large selection of templates that let you create custom, professional landing pages in minutes. No design experience needed.

#3 - Remove every distraction. Navigation menus and sidebars give visitors a way out. Take them off the page. The only link on a landing page should be your CTA.

#4 - Include one (and only one!) linked call-to-action. On longer landing pages, feel free to repeat the CTA frequently.

#5 - Remove distractions: Navigation menus and sidebars can distract your visitors from the page’s main purpose. Rather than encouraging them to browse your site, use your landing page to guide them toward your conversion goal.

#6 - Include social proof: If possible, include customer recommendations or another type of trust-building content on your landing page.

Hanna Feltges, Growth Marketer at Niceboard, found that adding reviews, customer logos, and star ratings to their landing pages increased free trial signups by around 20%. You don't need big brand names. Even a few genuine customer quotes will do.

In the example below, Niceboard includes the logos of businesses they’ve worked with as social proof.

Niceboard landing page which includes the logos of businesses they’ve worked with as social proof.

#7 - Test, analyze, and optimize: Experiment with different versions of your landing page to learn what works best for your audience.

Helen Garfield headshot

“I believe that the most important thing with landing pages is not just to design and publish the page and leave it at that. You have to keep testing and optimizing - yes even if it's just for a freebie!”

Helen Garfield
Owner, Creatives Desk

Landing page FAQs

Do I need a landing page?

If you want to grow your email list, sell a product, promote an event, or generate leads: yes. Landing pages are more effective than website pages for these goals because they remove distractions and keep visitors focused on a single offer.

Do I need a website if I use landing pages?

No. You can build and host a landing page through a platform like AWeber and promote it through social media, email, or paid ads. No website required.

How long does it take to create a landing page?

How long it takes to create your page depends on what you’re promoting and what type of landing page you need.

You can create a lead generation landing page for email subscriptions in minutes using a landing page builder with templates, on a platform like AWeber.

More complex landing pages, that you build without a template, can take anywhere from 2 - 10 days depending on the length of the page and what type of information and media you include.

How much does a landing page cost?

You can create professional landing pages for free with a user-friendly landing page builder and design templates. 

If you hire someone to create a landing page for you, expect to pay between $300 - $2,000 per landing page. Rates vary quite a bit, and your costs may be more or less than that. 

Most business owners agree that landing pages are worth the investment. But growing companies can’t always afford the high price tags that go along with good designers and copywriters. 

The good news is that you can build effective, professional landing pages with little to no budget at all. How? Use an email marketing platform that includes a landing page builder, templates, and hosting like AWeber.

Do I need design experience to build my own landing page?

If you use a comprehensive program to build your page, then you may need some experience to build it in a way that looks professional.

However, if you use a beginner-friendly landing page builder with a template, you can create a landing page in minutes -- even if you have absolutely no design experience.

How many landing pages should I have?

You can have as many landing pages as you need to promote your company’s different offerings. 

However, if you’re new to landing pages, it’s best to start with one and focus your efforts on driving conversions.

You can also use different versions of the same landing pages to experiment and see what design and writing work best for your audience. 

How do I drive traffic to my landing pages?

You can drive traffic to your landing pages by placing a link in your social media content, blog content, email marketing or newsletter, or paid ads.

Getting started with landing pages

Landing pages are one of the most effective tools a small business can use. And one of the most accessible. You don't need a website, a designer, or a big budget to get started.

At AWeber, we make it easy for you to build landing pages with a drag-and-drop landing page builder plus a wide selection of templates to get you started. And your pages will work hand-in-hand with our email marketing tools, which let you segment and personalize all your campaigns.

Open an AWeber account today and begin building a professional landing page for your business now!


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