Your new subscriber just handed you their phone number. That is, arguably, more personal than a follow on Instagram or a like on LinkedIn. They trust you not to ruin it. Here’s how not to.
A welcome series is a first impression, a value delivery mechanism, and a quiet argument for why staying subscribed is worth their while. All compressed into a handful of short messages. Done right, it sets the tone for a relationship that actually converts. Done wrong, it’s a fast track to the opt-out.
Below are seven templates across the most common business types. Copy them. Adapt them. Make them yours. The brackets are there for a reason.
A note on timing: Space your welcome series out. Message 1 sends immediately. Message 2 goes out 24-48 hours later. Message 3 follows 3-5 days after that. Don’t send three texts before someone’s even had their morning coffee.
TEMPLATE 1: The Retail / E-Commerce Welcome
Someone signed up, probably because you dangled a discount in front of them. Deliver the value immediately, and give them a reason to actually browse instead of tab-closing the moment the code lands.
Message 1: Instant send
Hey [First Name]! You’re in 🎉 Here’s your [10%] off: [CODE]. Shop now → [link]
We’ll send you the good stuff. New arrivals, members-only deals, the occasional heads up when something sells out fast.
Reply STOP to opt out anytime.
Message 2: 48 hours later
Still thinking about it? No pressure, but [CODE] expires in [X days].
Our bestsellers tend to go fast: [link to top products]
– [Brand Name]
Message 3: 5 days later
Welcome to the [Brand Name] crew, [First Name]. Expect texts that are actually worth reading: new drops, exclusive deals, and the occasional “this is selling out, just so you know.”
What are you most interested in? Reply: WOMEN, MEN, or BOTH. We’ll tailor things for you.
TEMPLATE 2: The Restaurant / Food & Beverage Welcome
People sign up for restaurant SMS lists because they want deals and they want to know about specials before they’ve already eaten somewhere else. Deliver fast, be warm, and don’t make it feel like a corporate newsletter decided to become a text.
Message 1: Instant send
Welcome to [Restaurant Name] texts, [First Name]! 🍕
As a thank you: enjoy [free appetizer / 15% off / BOGO] on your next visit. Just show this text.
We’ll let you know about weekly specials, events, and the occasional deal that doesn’t make it to the menu.
Reply STOP to opt out.
Message 2: 3 days later
Hey [First Name]! This week’s special at [Restaurant Name]: [describe special briefly]. Available [days/hours].
Reserve a table: [link or phone number]
See you soon.
TEMPLATE 3: The Service Business / Appointments Welcome
Salons, med spas, fitness studios, home services—any business where the “product” is a booking. The goal here isn’t just to say hello; it’s to get them back on the calendar before the novelty of subscribing wears off.
Message 1: Instant send
Hi [First Name]! Thanks for joining [Business Name]! You’ll now get appointment reminders, exclusive offers, and early access to booking when we get busy (and we do get busy).
Ready to schedule? → [booking link]
Reply STOP to unsubscribe anytime.
Message 2: 48 hours later
[First Name], as a new subscriber, you get [10% off / a complimentary add-on / first-time offer] on your next appointment.
Book here: [link]
Offer valid through [date]. – [Business Name]
Message 3: 1 week later
Quick heads up: [specific service or seasonal promo] is booking up for [month]. If you’ve been meaning to come in, now’s a good time.
Grab a spot: [link]
TEMPLATE 4: The SaaS / Digital Product Welcome
If someone gives you their phone number for a software product, they’re invested. Use the welcome series to help them actually succeed with your product.
Message 1: Instant send
Hey [First Name]! Welcome to [Product Name] 👋
Your account is live: [login link]
One tip to start: [single, specific, genuinely useful tip e.g., “Connect your first integration in under 2 minutes here: [link]”]
Reply STOP to opt out of texts.
Message 2: Day 3
Most [Product Name] users who [complete X action] in their first week stick around. Just saying.
Here’s a 3-minute setup guide if you haven’t gotten there yet: [link]
Questions? Reply here!
Message 3: Day 7
One week in, [First Name]. How’s [Product Name] treating you?
If you’ve hit a wall or have a question, we’re here: [support link or reply]
If things are going well, we’d genuinely love a review: [link]
TEMPLATE 5: The Non-Profit / Community Organization Welcome
People join your list because they care about something. The job of your welcome series is to reflect that back. Make them feel like they joined something real, not a marketing funnel with a mission statement bolted on.
Message 1: Instant send
Hi [First Name]! Welcome to [Org Name]. Genuinely glad you’re here.
You’ll hear from us about [upcoming events / volunteer opportunities / impact updates]
Want to get involved right away? → [link]
Reply STOP to opt out.
Message 2: 3 days later
[First Name], here’s something worth knowing: [one concrete impact stat or recent win e.g., “Last month, our volunteers logged 4,200 hours. That’s the equivalent of two full-time staff.”]
We’ll keep you in the loop as things happen. Thank you for being part of this.
TEMPLATE 6: The Real Estate / High-Consideration Purchase Welcome
High-consideration buyers are not impulse shoppers. They’re doing research, comparing options, and going to take a while. Your welcome series should position you as the most useful, least pushy person in their search. Which, in real estate, is not a high bar to clear.
Message 1: Instant send
Hi [First Name], this is [Agent/Team Name] at [Brokerage]. You’re now set up to get market updates, new listings that match your criteria, and the occasional insight that doesn’t make it to Zillow.
Anything you want to tell me upfront about your search? Reply here! I check these personally.
Message 2: Day 2
[First Name], quick question: are you flexible on [neighborhood / timeline / price range]? Knowing this helps me send you listings worth your time instead of everything that technically fits the filters.
Just reply. It takes 10 seconds.
Message 3: Day 5
New to the market this week in [Area] that I thought you’d want to see: [link]
Let me know if any of these are worth a showing. – [Name]
TEMPLATE 7: The Event / Entertainment Welcome
Concerts, festivals, comedy shows, local events. People sign up because they don’t want to miss something. Your welcome series should feel like a tip from a friend who’s always in the know, not a box office announcement read by no one.
Message 1: Instant send
You’re on the list, [First Name] 🎟️
[Venue/Event Name] subscribers get first access to tickets, lineup announcements before they go public, and the occasional deal when we have seats to fill.
See what’s coming up: [link]
Reply STOP to opt out.
Message 2: 48 hours later
Heads up, [First Name]: [upcoming event] goes on sale to the public [date]. You can grab tickets now before it opens up: [link]
Being on this list has its perks.
Message 3: 1 week later
[First Name], what kind of events do you care about most? Reply with what fits:
1 – Live music 2 – Comedy 3 – Food & drink events 4 – All of the above (valid answer)
We’ll make sure you only hear about the stuff you actually want.
A Few Rules That Apply to All of These
Keep it short. SMS is not the place for paragraphs. If your message is running past 160 characters and you can’t tighten it, give it another editing pass.
One ask per message. Click a link, reply with a number, book an appointment. Pick one. Multiple CTAs in a single text is a great way to get exactly zero of them acted on.
Use their name once. Once. Using [First Name] in every single message starts to feel less like personalization and more like a mail merge that escaped the office.
Always include opt-out language in message one (and periodically after). It’s legally required under TCPA guidelines and also just the right thing to do. People who can easily leave are more likely to stay.
Test your send times. A welcome text landing at 6am or 11pm is not a warm welcome. Schedule with some awareness of when actual humans check their phones.
The real goal of a welcome series is to demonstrate, as quickly as possible, that being on your list is worth the space in their inbox. Do that, and the rest of the relationship takes care of itself.