Paid live workshop with Kevin Rogers
Copy Chief Email Clinic
Write sales emails that keep your voice intact, make the offer clear, and help the right buyer make a decision.
What if your sales emails sounded more like the person your buyers already trust?
Kevin has a way of making the sales moment feel less like a performance and more like a useful conversation.
Sarah Mitchell, founder and course creator
Most people can tell when a sales email stops sounding like the person who wrote the rest of the newsletter.
The first few lines feel honest. The story has a pulse. The lesson makes sense. Then the offer arrives, and the whole email changes posture.
The voice gets tight. The proof starts stacking up too fast. The CTA tries to carry the whole email. The reader can feel the writer trying to convert them instead of helping them decide.
That is where a lot of good offers lose people.
Not because the offer is weak.
Not because the audience is cynical.
Because the email stops feeling like a trustworthy human is on the other side.
In this workshop, Kevin Rogers will show you how to plan and rewrite offer emails so the selling moment feels clear, grounded, and recognizably yours.
The problem is not that you need more swipe lines
Most sales email advice gives you more pieces to collect:
- a better hook
- a cleaner transition
- a stronger proof point
- a sharper objection line
- a more urgent CTA
Those pieces can help.
But they do not solve the real problem if you do not know what the email is supposed to do for the buyer today.
Every offer email needs a job.
Sometimes the job is to make the problem visible. Sometimes it is to make the offer feel relevant. Sometimes it is to help someone lower the pressure around price. Sometimes it is to let the wrong person opt out while the right person feels more confident.
When that job is clear, the writing gets simpler. The voice comes back. The pitch stops feeling stapled onto the end of the email.
Which sales email problem do you recognize?
Founders
You have an offer people ask about, but your launch emails still feel too formal, too cautious, or too long when it is time to ask for the sale.
Course creators
You teach well and explain well, but your sales emails drift into lesson mode and do not make the offer decision clear enough.
Copywriters
You can write polished copy for clients, but you want a sharper diagnostic process for seeing why an offer email is not landing.
Marketers
You are responsible for the campaign, the deadline, and the numbers, and you need the email sequence to sell without sounding like the brand got replaced for launch week.
Here is what Kevin will show you
This is not a workshop about decorating sentences. It is about making better sales decisions before you write.
- The one job an offer email must do before it asks for the sale.
- How to identify the buyer hesitation your email actually needs to answer.
- Why good writers often sound fake the moment the pitch begins.
- How to make the offer feel relevant before explaining the features.
- The reader-state question Kevin uses before choosing an email angle.
- How to use a story without making the pitch feel glued on.
- Why a smaller, cleaner promise can outsell a louder one.
- How to ask for the sale without sounding like you need the sale.
- The wrong-buyer line that can make the right buyer trust the email more.
- What to write when someone is interested but not ready.
- How to write the middle emails after the obvious angles are already used.
- How to mention price without making the whole email about price.
- How to write deadline emails that create clarity instead of panic.
- How to make a sales email hard to stop reading without turning it into clickbait.
- Where AI can help you think and where it flattens the voice.
- How to turn a messy first draft into a cleaner buyer decision.
- How to keep the CTA short enough that it does not fight the page.
- How to tell whether a sales email is too clever, too timid, or too crowded.
Why this matters more now
More sales emails are becoming technically competent and emotionally empty.
They have hooks. They have urgency. They have clean transitions. They sound like they were assembled from the right parts.
But they do not sound like anyone in particular.
That matters because trust is still personal.
If your email could have been sent by any company with the same offer, the reader has less reason to feel like you understand them.
Your advantage is not another template. Your advantage is a clearer read on the buyer, a sharper offer decision, and a voice that still sounds like you when the selling starts.
Inside the Copy Chief Email Clinic
This is a working session, not a lecture you half-watch while answering Slack.
Kevin will break down the job of an offer email, show how to diagnose a draft, and walk through a live rewrite so you can see what changes when the email starts serving the buyer’s decision instead of the writer’s anxiety.
Included with the workshop
Bonus 1
Offer Email Map
You will get the planning map for deciding what each email in a promotion needs to do. It gives the draft a job before you start trying to make the sentences sound better.Bonus 2
Rewrite Checklist
You will get a pass-by-pass checklist for tightening an offer email: buyer state, angle, offer relevance, proof, objection, CTA, and voice.Bonus 3
Live Draft Diagnostic
Kevin will show how to inspect a real or sample draft and identify the places where the email is losing trust, clarity, or momentum.What you get
- The live 2-hour Zoom workshop with Kevin Rogers.
- A live rewrite and guided planning session.
- The recording, so you can revisit the process after the live session.
- The Offer Email Map for deciding what each email in a promotion is supposed to do.
- The Rewrite Checklist for improving one sales email without turning it into a different voice.
- A guided worksheet for planning one offer email during the session.
- A live example teardown showing what changes and why.
- A clearer diagnostic lens for email drafts that sound polished but do not sell.
- A shorter CTA discipline so the page and email do not fight the reader.
Workshop Details
- Host
- Kevin Rogers
- Date
- Wednesday, September 23rd, 2026 – 10:00 PDT / 13:00 EDT / 18:00 BST
- Duration
- 2 hours
- Location
- Zoom
- Cost
- $1
Kevin Rogers
You will get the recording either way
If the live time is awkward, register anyway. Everyone who registers gets the recording after the workshop, so you can watch the teaching and work through the writing session later.Questions you might have
Do I need to have an offer ready?
No. It helps if you have something in mind, but you can still use the process with a future offer, a newsletter promotion, or a product you are thinking about launching.
Is this only for professional copywriters?
No. It is for anyone responsible for writing or improving offer emails. Copywriters will get a diagnostic framework, but founders and creators can use the same process.
Will Kevin review my email live?
This validation workshop copy describes a live diagnostic format. The actual test run does not promise individual production feedback unless the final event owner approves that format.
Is this about using AI?
Not mainly. Kevin will show where AI can help with thinking and where it can make the writing generic, but the workshop is about the human decisions behind stronger sales emails.
Will there be a recording?
Yes. Everyone who registers gets the recording after the live session.
What should I bring?
Bring one offer, one audience, and ideally one sales email you want to improve. If you do not have that yet, bring a blank page and the worksheet will still give you a way in.
Join Kevin live on Zoom
$1 for this workshop.Everyone who registers gets the recording.