How to Set Up Your First Kit (ConvertKit) Email Automation in 2026
An email automation is the one thing that turns a list of subscribers into a business that runs without you. This is the exact, no-fluff walkthrough I'd give a friend: how to build your first automated welcome sequence in Kit, from a blank account to a live flow that nurtures every new subscriber while you sleep.
I've built dozens of automations in Kit since 2022 — welcome sequences, product launch flows, re-engagement campaigns. The good news: Kit's visual builder is the cleanest in the category, and you can have a working automation live in under an hour. Let's do it step by step.
What an "automation" actually is in Kit
Kit splits the job into two connected pieces, and understanding the difference saves you hours of confusion:
- Sequence — the ordered set of emails themselves (email 1 on day 0, email 2 on day 2, and so on). Think of it as the content.
- Automation (Visual Automation) — the logic that decides who enters the sequence, what happens when they finish, and what branches off based on their behaviour. Think of it as the wiring.
A welcome flow is just a sequence plugged into an automation that triggers when someone subscribes. That's the whole concept. Now let's build it.
Step 1 — Create the form that captures subscribers
Open Grow → Landing Pages & Forms → Create New. Pick an inline form (sits inside a blog post) or a modal (pops up). Keep it to one field — email — for the highest conversion. Name it something you'll recognise later, like "Blog opt-in".
Inside the form settings, find the Incentive tab. Turn on "Send incentive email" only if you're delivering a lead magnet; otherwise turn it off so it doesn't collide with the welcome sequence you're about to build. This is the single most common beginner mistake — two welcome emails firing at once.
Step 2 — Write the welcome sequence
Go to Automate → Sequences → New Sequence. A five-email welcome sequence is the proven default. Here's the structure I use and recommend:
| Send timing | Job | |
|---|---|---|
| 1 — Welcome & deliver | Immediately | Say hi, deliver the lead magnet, set expectations |
| 2 — Your story | +1 day | Build connection — who you are, why you do this |
| 3 — Best resource | +2 days | Send your single most useful free piece of content |
| 4 — Quick win | +2 days | One actionable tip they can apply today |
| 5 — Soft offer | +3 days | Introduce your product or paid newsletter, gently |
For each email, set the delay at the top, write a plain-text-style body (Kit's deliverability rewards simple, personal emails over heavily designed templates), and toggle the email to Published. Leave the sequence itself in draft until step 4.
Step 3 — Build the visual automation
Now the wiring. Go to Automate → Visual Automations → New Automation. Choose the "Subscribes to a form" trigger and select the form you made in Step 1. This is the entry point — anyone who fills that form drops into the flow.
Click the + below the trigger and add an Action: Add to Sequence, then pick your welcome sequence. That's the minimum viable automation: subscribe → receive the five emails. You could stop here and have something genuinely useful.
Step 4 — Add a tag so you can segment later
Before you go live, add one more action after the sequence: Add Tag → "completed-welcome". Tags are Kit's superpower — they let you send future broadcasts only to people who've already been warmed up, or trigger a different automation once this one ends. Tagging from day one means your list stays organised as it grows instead of becoming a single undifferentiated blob.
Step 5 — Test it, then switch it on
Subscribe to your own form with a personal email address. Confirm email 1 arrives within a couple of minutes. Check the formatting on mobile (most opens are mobile). Once you're happy, flip both the sequence and the automation to Live in the top-right toggle. New subscribers now enter automatically.
Start building on Kit — free up to 10,000 subscribers
Kit's free plan is the most generous starting point for creators in 2026. Upgrade to Creator only when you need automations.
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Three automations to build next
Once your welcome flow works, these are the highest-leverage additions for a one-person business:
- Product launch sequence — a 4–6 email flow triggered by a "launch-interest" tag, ending in a purchase link via Kit Commerce.
- Re-engagement flow — triggered when a subscriber hasn't opened in 60 days; one "are you still there?" email, then auto-remove or tag as cold to protect deliverability.
- Buyer onboarding — triggered by a purchase tag, delivering the product and asking for feedback. This is where digital-product revenue compounds.
For the full reasoning on why Kit beats the alternatives for this kind of work, see my Kit (ConvertKit) review and the best email marketing tools for solopreneurs.
FAQ
No. The free plan covers forms, landing pages, and broadcasts up to 10,000 subscribers, but sequences and visual automations require the Creator plan ($29/mo at 1,000 subscribers). You can set everything up the moment you upgrade.
Five is the proven default — enough to build trust and make one soft offer without overwhelming new subscribers. You can extend it later, but don't start with twelve emails you'll never finish writing.
A sequence sends automatically based on when someone subscribes (evergreen). A broadcast is a one-off email you send to your whole list or a tagged segment at a specific moment, like a newsletter issue or an announcement.
Your subscribers import cleanly, but automations have to be rebuilt — the logic models differ. The upside is Kit's builder is far simpler, so it's usually a one-afternoon job. See my ConvertKit vs Mailchimp comparison for the migration details.