Emails that land. Follow-ups that send themselves.
When an email lands in spam, the words inside never matter. We set up your sending domains, put the technical records in place that inboxes trust, and warm everything up gently before real sending starts. Then the follow-up sequences run on their own — polite, well-timed, and stopping the moment someone replies.
What changes.
[ BEFORE → AFTER ]What we set up and run.
[ THE WORK ]Sending domains
We set up separate domains for your outreach, so your main company address stays protected.
Inbox trust records
The technical setup that tells Gmail and Outlook your mail is genuinely yours, so it gets through the door.
Gentle warmup
New domains start small and build up slowly, so inboxes learn to welcome your messages.
Follow-up sequences
Multi-step messages that go out on schedule and stop the moment someone replies.
Clean lists, clear reports
Bounces and unsubscribes come off the list by themselves, and a plain report shows you what landed, opened, and got answered.
How it starts.
[ SMALL ]We sit down with you and look at how email works in your business today — who you write to, what happens after the first message, where threads go quiet. Then we set up the one piece that helps most right now. Often that's a single warmed-up domain and one good sequence. The rest grows from there, at your pace.
See the five-step journey →Common questions.
[ FAQ ]Why do my emails go to spam?
Usually it's not the writing — it's that the inbox doesn't recognise the sender. Gmail and Outlook check a few technical records before deciding where a message goes, and many companies never set them up. We put those records in place and warm the domain so inboxes learn to trust it.
Do the follow-ups really send themselves?
The routine part does. You approve the words once, and the sequence handles the timing, the waiting, and the reminders. The moment someone replies, the automation stops and a person takes over the conversation — anything that needs judgment stays with you.
How long does email warmup take?
New domains need a gentle start — usually a few weeks of small, steady sending before they're ready for real volume. Rushing this stage is the usual reason cold email goes quiet, so we don't rush it. You'll see the progress in plain reports along the way.
Next step
The first move is a conversation.
Tell us where your company stands and what eats your week. We'll tell you, plainly, what we would fix first — and what we'd leave alone for now.
or write to [email protected]