Create a Follow-Up Message for Customers Who Downloaded a Free Resource
Why This Matters
A free download is not the end of the relationship.
It is the beginning.
A follow-up message helps guide the reader toward using the resource and taking the next step.
What This Does for Your Business
This can improve engagement, trust, and future sales or inquiries.
What Your Customer Sees
Your customer sees that you are not just collecting emails. You are helping them use what they downloaded.
The 10–12 Minute Fix
Write one follow-up email for freebie downloaders.
Include:
- hope it was useful
- one suggestion for using it
- related next step
- invitation to reply
Simple Example
Subject: Did you get a chance to use it?
Hi [Name], I hope the [resource name] was helpful. My suggestion: do not try to use the whole thing at once. Pick one section, spend 12 minutes on it, and make one useful move. If you have a question or want help figuring out where to start, just reply.
Virtual High Five
Good. You made the free resource more useful.
That builds trust.
Momentum Pep Talk
A download is only valuable if they use it.
Help them take the first step.
Let’s fix one thing today.
Do Not Let This Be Another Good Idea You Forget
You just read one small business move. Good. Now give your business a few honest minutes and actually use it.
12 Minutes A Day is built for solo business owners, local service providers, freelancers, and side-hustlers who are tired of feeling behind but do not have time for another giant course, complicated system, or fake business guru speech.
Small enough to start. Useful enough to count.
Get One Small Business Task Per Day
Enter your email to get the free 12 Minutes A Day Small Business Challenge — 30 tiny moves to improve your website, follow-up, local visibility, reviews, content, offers, and confidence.
No spam. No daily yelling. Just practical small business help you can actually use.
Build a Better Small Business in 12 Minutes a Day
12 Minutes A Day gives small business owners practical marketing tasks, website fixes, follow-up ideas, local visibility tips, review requests, content prompts, and offer clarity exercises that can be done in short, focused sessions. The goal is not perfection. The goal is motion.
One finished task is not small. It is evidence. Evidence that your business is still alive, that you are still moving, and that the mess can get smaller one piece at a time. Set the timer. Do the useful thing. Let’s fix one thing today.

