| name | soap-opera-sequence |
| description | Write Russell Brunson's 5-email Soap Opera Sequence (SOS) for any product or funnel. This is the exact email nurture framework from DotCom Secrets that turns cold leads into buyers by hooking them with a cliffhanger story across 5 days. Works for dropshipping, info products, SaaS, supplements, coaching, and any funnel where you collect emails and want a proven follow-up system that sells without being pushy.
|
| author | karausab590-ops |
| version | 1.0 |
| website | https://clawads.io |
| tags | ["email-marketing","russell-brunson","soap-opera-sequence","dotcom-secrets","sales-funnel","dropshipping","email-sequence","storytelling"] |
| category | Email Marketing |
Soap Opera Sequence (Russell Brunson)
What This Is
The Soap Opera Sequence (SOS) is a 5-email story-based nurture sequence from Russell Brunson's DotCom Secrets. It's the default follow-up system used in virtually every ClickFunnels funnel.
The core idea: each email ends on a cliffhanger (like a soap opera episode), compelling the subscriber to open the next one. The story builds trust and desire simultaneously, so by email 5, the sale feels like a natural conclusion — not a pitch.
Used by: dropshippers, supplement brands, course creators, ecommerce brands, info marketers, SaaS.
The 5-Email Framework
Email 1: Set The Stage
Goal: Hook them immediately, introduce yourself, set up the backstory.
Structure:
- Open with a dramatic or relatable moment (the "before")
- Tease what's coming ("I'll share the full story tomorrow, but first...")
- Hint at a secret, discovery, or transformation
- Cliffhanger ending: "Tomorrow I'll reveal the one thing that changed everything..."
Subject line formulas:
- "I almost gave up on [GOAL] until this happened..."
- "The embarrassing moment that changed my life"
- "How I went from [PAINFUL SITUATION] to [DREAM RESULT]"
Template:
Subject: [HOOK SUBJECT]
Hey [first name],
My name is [YOUR NAME], and I almost [EMBARRASSING/PAINFUL MOMENT].
[2-3 sentences painting the "before" picture — struggling, frustrated, stuck]
Then one day, [INCITING INCIDENT — something that set things in motion].
I'm going to share the full story with you over the next few days — including [SPECIFIC PROMISE that builds curiosity].
But first, I want to make sure you got [FREE GIFT / LEAD MAGNET they signed up for].
[LINK TO LEAD MAGNET OR CONFIRMATION]
Tomorrow I'll tell you about [CLIFFHANGER — the discovery, the mistake, the turning point].
Talk soon,
[NAME]
P.S. [REINFORCE THE CLIFFHANGER — one sentence that makes them desperate to read tomorrow's email]
Email 2: High Drama
Goal: Share your "backstory" — the lowest point or biggest struggle. Build emotional connection.
Structure:
- Open with the backstory (the pain, the failure, the problem)
- Build genuine drama — don't shy away from the struggle
- Introduce the "Epiphany Bridge moment" (the moment you discovered the solution)
- Cut off right before the reveal
- Cliffhanger: "Tomorrow I'll show you exactly what I discovered..."
Subject line formulas:
- "Things got worse before they got better..."
- "The day I hit rock bottom (and what happened next)"
- "I made a terrible mistake..."
Template:
Subject: [DRAMA SUBJECT]
[First name],
When I left off yesterday, I told you about [RECAP OF EMAIL 1 HOOK].
What I didn't tell you was how bad things actually got.
[DESCRIBE THE LOWEST POINT — be specific, emotional, real]
I remember thinking: [INNER DIALOGUE — the doubt, the fear, the frustration]
I tried [THING THEY'VE PROBABLY ALREADY TRIED — common failed solution].
[What happened. It didn't work. More struggle.]
Then one night/day/week, [THE DISCOVERY MOMENT — describe finding the insight, method, or product].
I couldn't believe what I was seeing.
I'll tell you exactly what it was — and why it worked — in tomorrow's email.
[NAME]
P.S. [ONE-LINE CLIFFHANGER — "You won't believe what happened when I tried it the first time..."]
Email 3: The Epiphany
Goal: Reveal the "thing" — the insight, method, framework, or product. Create an "aha moment."
Structure:
- Open by picking up from the cliffhanger
- Reveal the core insight or discovery (this is your Epiphany Bridge)
- Explain HOW it works and WHY it's different from what they've tried
- Make it feel like they're discovering it alongside you
- Introduce the product/offer naturally — it's the vehicle for applying the insight
- Soft call-to-action (not a hard sell yet)
Subject line formulas:
- "Here's what I discovered..."
- "The thing nobody told me about [TOPIC]"
- "Why everything I thought I knew was wrong"
Template:
Subject: [EPIPHANY SUBJECT]
[First name],
Yesterday I told you I discovered something that changed everything.
Here's what happened.
[DESCRIBE THE DISCOVERY — be specific. What did you find? What did you learn? What did you see/try?]
The reason it works is [EXPLAIN THE MECHANISM — the "why" behind it].
See, most people think [COMMON BELIEF]. But that's not how it actually works.
The truth is [REAL INSIGHT]. And once I understood that, everything clicked.
[TRANSITION TO PRODUCT/OFFER]
That's when I started using [PRODUCT/METHOD/SYSTEM].
The results? [BRIEF TEASER OF RESULTS — save the full proof for email 4].
If you want to [GET THEIR DESIRED OUTCOME], this is what I'd recommend starting with:
[LINK TO OFFER] — [ONE LINE DESCRIPTION]
But tomorrow I want to share something even more important: [CLIFFHANGER — a specific result, case study, or secret technique].
[NAME]
Email 4: Hidden Benefits
Goal: Stack the value. Reveal benefits they didn't expect. Overcome the primary objection.
Structure:
- Open with a "hidden benefit" they didn't know about
- Stack 2-3 additional benefits (results, use cases, side effects they'll love)
- Address the #1 objection directly ("I know what you might be thinking...")
- Include social proof (testimonials, your own results, case studies)
- Stronger CTA toward the offer
Subject line formulas:
- "The unexpected result I didn't see coming"
- "There's something I forgot to mention..."
- "But wait — it also does THIS"
Template:
Subject: [HIDDEN BENEFIT SUBJECT]
[First name],
I told you about [MAIN BENEFIT FROM EMAIL 3].
But here's what I didn't expect...
[HIDDEN BENEFIT #1 — a surprising or secondary result]
[HIDDEN BENEFIT #2 — another unexpected win]
[SHORT TESTIMONIAL OR YOUR OWN PROOF — "Sarah tried it for 2 weeks and..."]
Now, I know what some of you might be thinking:
"[MAIN OBJECTION — too expensive / takes too long / doesn't work for me because...]"
Here's why that's actually not a problem:
[OBJECTION CRUSHER — 3-4 sentences addressing it directly and specifically]
If you're ready to [GET THE RESULT], here's where to start:
[LINK TO OFFER] — [URGENCY ELEMENT if applicable]
Tomorrow's the last email in this series — and I'm saving the best part for last.
[NAME]
P.S. [TESTIMONIAL SNIPPET or a one-line teaser for tomorrow]
Email 5: The Call To Action
Goal: Make the full offer. Create urgency. Close the sale.
Structure:
- Recap the journey (brief — 2-3 sentences)
- State the transformation/result clearly
- Present the complete offer with all components
- Create genuine urgency (deadline, limited quantity, bonus expiring)
- Strong, clear CTA
- Address last remaining hesitation with a guarantee or risk reversal
Subject line formulas:
- "Last chance + everything you get"
- "This is your moment [first name]"
- "[DEADLINE]-hour warning"
Template:
Subject: [CTA SUBJECT]
[First name],
Over the last few days, I've shared [BRIEF RECAP — 1 sentence on the journey].
The bottom line: [CLEAR TRANSFORMATION STATEMENT — what changed and why it matters].
If you've been on the fence, here's everything you get when you [JOIN/BUY/START] today:
- [CORE PRODUCT/OFFER]
- [BONUS 1]
- [BONUS 2]
- [GUARANTEE/RISK REVERSAL]
Total value: [$ VALUE]
Your investment: [ACTUAL PRICE]
[BUTTON/LINK: CLAIM YOUR SPOT / GET INSTANT ACCESS / START TODAY]
Here's the thing — [URGENCY REASON: doors close / price increases / bonuses expire] at [DATE/TIME].
After that, [WHAT HAPPENS — price goes up, bonuses disappear, cart closes].
If you're still thinking "is this right for me?" — ask yourself:
[QUALIFYING QUESTION that makes your ideal buyer say "yes, that's me"]
If yes, this was built for you.
[LINK]
[NAME]
P.S. [LAST URGENCY REMINDER + RISK REVERSAL — "If it doesn't work, you pay nothing / get a full refund / keep everything."]
How To Use This Framework
Step 1: Fill In Your Epiphany Bridge Story
Before writing any emails, answer these:
- The Before: Where were you (or your customer avatar) before the discovery? What were you struggling with?
- The Inciting Incident: What happened that set the discovery in motion?
- The Failed Attempts: What did you try that didn't work?
- The Discovery Moment: How did you find the solution? Be specific — a conversation, a book, a product, an experiment?
- The Mechanism: Why does the solution work? What's the core insight?
- The Results: What specifically changed?
Step 2: Map Your Offer
- What is the main product/offer?
- What's the #1 objection you need to overcome?
- What's the biggest unexpected benefit?
- What's the guarantee or risk reversal?
- What's the urgency element (deadline, limited spots, bonus expiry)?
Step 3: Write The Emails In Order
Start with Email 3 (the Epiphany) — it's the pivot of the sequence. Then write Email 1 to set up the hook, Email 2 for the drama, Email 4 to stack benefits, Email 5 to close.
Prompt: Generate A Full Soap Opera Sequence
Paste this into any AI chat and fill in the brackets:
Write a 5-email Soap Opera Sequence (SOS) using Russell Brunson's framework from DotCom Secrets.
Product: [PRODUCT NAME AND WHAT IT DOES]
Target customer: [WHO THEY ARE, their main pain/frustration]
Main promise: [THE TRANSFORMATION — what changes after using this?]
Mechanism: [WHY it works — the core insight or unique angle]
Key objection to overcome: [THE #1 REASON THEY HESITATE]
Price: [ACTUAL PRICE]
Urgency element: [DEADLINE, SCARCITY, BONUS EXPIRY]
Guarantee: [REFUND POLICY OR RISK REVERSAL]
For each email, write:
- Subject line (with 2 variations)
- Full email body (300-500 words)
- Cliffhanger/PS line (except email 5)
Use conversational, direct tone. Write like a human talking to a friend. No corporate language.
Real Example: Dropshipping Posture Corrector
Product: Postura Pro posture corrector
Avatar: 28-45 year olds with back pain from desk work
Promise: Pain-free posture in 21 days
Mechanism: Muscle memory retraining (not just support)
Objection: "I've tried posture braces before, they don't work"
Email 1 subject: "The embarrassing moment at my desk that changed everything"
Email 1 hook: Describes a video call where someone asked why I was hunched over, leading to a spiral of research that ended with a $9 product from a supplier.
Email 3 epiphany: Reveals that most posture braces work by holding you in place (external support) but that actually weakens the muscles further. Postura Pro uses micro-resistance to TRAIN the muscles to hold good posture on their own. That's the mechanism. That's why it's different.
Email 5 CTA: Full offer with bonus back stretching guide, 30-day guarantee, 48-hour deadline for free shipping.
Subject Line Swipe File
Email 1 (Stage Setting):
- "I almost [FAILURE] until this happened..."
- "This is embarrassing to admit..."
- "My [embarrassing/painful] secret"
- "The day I nearly quit [TOPIC] forever"
Email 2 (High Drama):
- "Things got worse before they got better..."
- "I'm going to be honest with you"
- "The worst day of my [LIFE/JOURNEY/CAREER]"
- "I made a terrible mistake..."
Email 3 (Epiphany):
- "Here's what nobody told me about [TOPIC]"
- "The thing that finally worked (and why)"
- "I couldn't believe it was this simple"
- "Why [COMMON METHOD] doesn't actually work"
Email 4 (Hidden Benefits):
- "There's something I forgot to mention"
- "The unexpected side effect I didn't see coming"
- "But it ALSO does this..."
- "[RESULT] happened faster than I expected"
Email 5 (CTA):
- "Last chance + everything you get today"
- "This closes in [X] hours"
- "Are you in or out? (honest question)"
- "Everything on the table — full breakdown"
Notes On Tone
- Write in first person, past tense for the story, present tense for the offer.
- Keep paragraphs to 1-3 sentences max. White space reads better in email.
- Every email should feel like it was written in one sitting by a real person.
- Use "you" more than "I" once you get past the story phase.
- The PS line is often the most-read part of an email — make it count.