…
. So we need to wrap each paragraph in that comment block? They said “write as plain HTML paragraphs and headings (e.g.,…
)”. Likely they want that format. We’ll produce content using those blocks. We need headings: maybe h2 etc. For headings, they might want similar:…
. We’ll follow. We need to include title line: “Title: …” then blank line then HTML. Let’s craft content. Let’s count words later. Now content: We’ll have intro paragraph, then sections: The Challenge, Why Multi-Touch Works, The Automated Sequence (list touches), Implementation Steps, Benefits, Conclusion, then promo paragraph. We need to keep concise. We’ll write paragraphs with the wp:paragraph blocks. Let’s draft and then count words. I’ll write in plain text then count. Draft: Title: AI-Powered Multi-Touch Follow-Up Sequence for Trade Show Exhibitors: Automating Lead Qualification and Post-Event Follow-Up with aiTrade show booths generate a flood of leads, but their interest levels vary wildly—from casual browsers to ready‑to‑buy prospects. Without a systematic follow‑up, most of these contacts slip away, wasting the investment in travel, staffing, and booth design.
An AI‑driven multi‑touch sequence solves this by delivering the right message at the right time, automatically qualifying leads while you focus on the hottest opportunities.
Why a Structured Sequence Works
Research shows that prospects need multiple reminders from different angles before they engage. A predefined cadence lets you systematically disqualify uninterested contacts, saving you from chasing ghosts.
The Automated Touch‑Points
Touch 1 (Day 0‑2): AI‑personalized recap email sent within 24‑48 hours of the event. It references the specific conversation or booth demo, making the lead feel remembered.
Touch 2 (Day 4): If no reply, the automation sends a value‑add follow‑up—such as a relevant case study, whitepaper, or short video that addresses a pain point you discussed.
Touch 3 (Day 10): A light‑touch social proof email featuring testimonials or user‑generated content from similar industries, reinforcing credibility without a hard sell.
Touch 4 (Day 17): Direct call‑to‑action offering a demo, trial, or limited‑time offer. The email includes an easy opt‑out link; any “not now” reply automatically archives the lead in your CRM.
Touch 5 (Day 21‑28): Break‑up email for non‑responders, politely closing the loop while leaving the door open for future engagement.
Implementation Checklist
1. Trigger: Add every new lead to the “Post-[Event Name] Follow‑Up” list in your CRM.
2. Week 1: AI crafts and sends Touch 1 to all leads. Hot leads (e.g., those who asked for pricing) are flagged for manual outreach by you.
3. Week 2: If no reply, Touch 2 goes out automatically; Touch 3 follows on Day 10.
4. Week 3: Touch 4 is dispatched on Day 17. Any “not now” response triggers an automatic archive; genuine replies jump to your personal queue for immediate attention.
5. Week 4: Touch 5 is sent only to leads still silent after Touch 4, completing the sequence.
Benefits You’ll See
• Higher reply rates because each touch builds on the previous one.
• Reduced manual workload—AI handles timing, personalization, and list segmentation.
• Cleaner pipeline: uninterested leads are auto‑archived, keeping your sales team focused on qualified prospects.
For a comprehensive guide with detailed workflows, templates, and additional strategies, see my e-book: AI for Trade Show Exhibitors: How to Automate Lead Qualification and Post-Event Follow-Up Drafting.
Now we need to count words. Let’s count manually. I’ll copy the text and count words. Title line: “Title: AI-Powered Multi-Touch Follow-Up Sequence for Trade Show Exhibitors: Automating Lead Qualification and Post-Event Follow-Up with ai” Count words: Title: (1) AI-Powered(2) Multi-Touch(3) Follow-Up(4) Sequence(5) for(6) Trade(7) Show(8) Exhibitors:(9) Automating(10) Lead(11) Qualification(12) and(13) Post-Event(14) Follow-Up(15) with(16) ai(17) So title line 17 words. Now we need to count content words (excluding title line and maybe blank lines). We’ll count paragraphs. I’ll go paragraph by paragraph. Paragraph 1: “Trade show booths generate a flood of leads, but their interest levels vary wildly—from casual browsers to ready‑to‑buy prospects. Without a systematic follow‑up, most of these contacts slip away, wasting the investment in travel, staffing, and booth design.” Count words: Trade(1) show2 booths3 generate4 a5 flood6 of7 leads,8 but9 their10 interest11 levels12 vary13 wildly—from14 casual15 browsers16 to17 ready‑to‑buy18 prospects.19 Without20 a21 systematic22 follow‑up,23 most24 of25 these26 contacts27 slip28 away,29 wasting30 the31 investment32 in33 travel,34 staffing,35 and36 booth37 design38. 38 words. Paragraph 2: “An AI‑driven multi‑touch sequence solves this by delivering the right message at the right time, automatically qualifying leads while you focus on the hottest opportunities.” Count: An1 AI‑driven2 multi‑touch3 sequence4 solves5 this6 by7 delivering8 the9 right10 message11 at12 the13 right14 time,15 automatically16 qualifying17 leads18 while19 you20 focus21 on22 the23 hottest24 opportunities25. 25 words. Heading: “Why a Structured Sequence Works” – heading words not counted? Usually headings count as words but we can include. Safer to count them as part of content. We’ll count. “Why”(1) “a”(2) “Structured”(3) “Sequence”(4) “Works”(5) => 5 words. Paragraph after heading: “Research shows that prospects need multiple reminders from different angles before they engage. A predefined cadence lets you systematically disqualify uninterested contacts, saving you from chasing ghosts.” Count: Research1 shows2 that3 prospects4 need5 multiple6 reminders7 from8 different9 angles10 before11 they12 engage.13 A14 predefined15 cadence16 lets17 you18 systematically19 disqualify20 uninterested21 contacts,22 saving23 you24 from25 chasing26 ghosts27. 27 words. Heading: “The Automated Touch‑Points” Count: The1 Automated2 Touch‑Points3 => 3 words. Paragraph Touch 1: “Touch 1 (Day 0‑2): AI‑personalized recap email sent within 24‑48 hours of the event. It references the specific conversation or booth demo, making the lead feel remembered.” We need to count words ignoring HTML tags but counting the text. Let’s extract text: “Touch 1 (Day 0‑2): AI‑personalized recap email sent within 24‑48 hours of the event. It references the specific conversation or booth demo, making the lead feel remembered.” Count: Touch1 1? Actually “Touch”1 “1”(2) “(Day”(3) “0‑2):”(4) AI‑personalized5 recap6 email7 sent8 within9 24‑48 hours10 of11 the12 event.13 It14 references15 the16 specific17 conversation18 or19 booth20 demo,21 making22 the23 lead24 feel25 remembered26. 26 words. Paragraph Touch 2: “Touch 2 (Day 4): If no reply, the automation sends a value‑add follow‑up—such as a relevant case study, whitepaper, or short video that addresses a pain point you discussed.” Text: “Touch 2 (Day 4): If no reply, the automation sends a value‑add follow‑up—such as a relevant case study, whitepaper, or short video that addresses a pain point you discussed.” Count: Touch1 1? Actually “Touch”1 “2”(2) “(Day”(3) “4):”(4) If5 no6 reply,7 the8 automation9 sends10 a11 value‑add12 follow‑up—such13 as14 a15 relevant16 case17 study,18 whitepaper,19 or20 short21 video22 that23 addresses24 a25 pain26 point27 you28 discussed29. 29 words. Paragraph Touch 3: “Touch 3 (Day 10): A light‑touch social proof email featuring testimonials or user‑generated content from similar industries, reinforcing credibility without a hard sell.” Text: “Touch 3 (Day 10): A light‑touch social proof email featuring testimonials or user‑generated content from similar industries, reinforcing credibility without a hard sell.” Count: Touch1 1? “Touch”1 “3”(2) “(Day”(3) “10):”(4) A