messaging-surface-rule-waitlist-email

Category: Coding Risk: Medium risk ★ 3.9 · Rating 3.9/5 (8) sboghossian/mini-claude-for-legal MIT

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network_accessautomation_control

name: messaging-surface-rule-waitlist-email
description: Use when drafting or reviewing waitlist confirmation, waitlist-position update, and waitlist-to-launch conversion emails for a legal AI assistant. Waitlist emails are sent to users who have expressed intent but have not yet used the product — making first-impression accuracy and UPL-safe framing especially important. Covers the welcome-to-waitlist email, position-update drip, early-access invitation, and the full-launch conversion email.
license: MIT
metadata:
id: messaging.surface-rule.waitlist-email
category: messaging
jurisdictions: [multi]
priority: P2
intent: [messaging, waitlist, email, onboarding, launch, consumer]
related: [messaging-compliance-checker, messaging-allowed-claims-consumer, messaging-banned-claims-consumer, messaging-pricing-framing-b2c, messaging-surface-rule-newsletter-mixed-audience, onboarding-b2c-vs-b2b-fork]
source: Louis — HAQQ Legal AI (github.com/sboghossian/mini-claude-for-legal)
version: "1.0"

Messaging — Surface Rule: Waitlist Email

When this applies

This skill governs the waitlist email sequence — the series of emails sent from the moment a user joins a waitlist through to their conversion to an active user. It includes:

  1. Waitlist confirmation email — sent immediately on sign-up
  2. Position / momentum update — optional periodic emails while the user is on the waitlist
  3. Early-access invitation — for users moving to the front of the queue
  4. Full launch / "you're in" email — when the product opens to the user

Waitlist emails reach users at a uniquely high-attention moment: they have just self-selected as interested and are forming their understanding of what the product is. Claims made in these emails become the user's baseline expectation. Over-promising at this stage creates a worse product experience and greater UPL risk than over-promising to a user who has already experienced the product.


Behavior — Waitlist Email Standards

Core rule: set expectations accurately

Waitlist emails must describe what the product is, not what it will achieve for the user. They may be aspirational in tone but must not make outcome claims that set unrealistic expectations.

Consumer audience default

Waitlist sign-ups arrive from paid social, organic search, and word of mouth — primarily non-lawyers. Unless the sign-up flow explicitly captures professional status, treat waitlist emails as consumer-audience copy and apply consumer messaging rules throughout.

If the sign-up flow captures professional status (e.g., a "for lawyers" waitlist), apply lawyer messaging rules for that segment.


Email-by-Email Rules

Email 1: Waitlist Confirmation (sent immediately)

Purpose: Confirm the sign-up, set accurate expectations, build anticipation.

Element Rule
Subject line Confirmatory: "You're on the Louis waitlist" — not "You're going to love this!"
Opening Acknowledge the sign-up warmly; no hyperbole
Product description 2–3 sentences; bridge line territory; "legal information and understanding" framing
What to expect What the product will do for the user when they get access — allowed claims only
What it is not Brief "legal information, not legal advice" statement; sets the right expectation before first use
CTA (optional) "Follow us on LinkedIn for updates" / "Tell a friend and move up the list"
Disclaimer "Louis provides legal information, not legal advice."

Allowed in confirmation email:

  • "When you get access, Louis will help you understand your contracts, know your rights, and prepare for any legal situation."
  • "We've built Louis for MENA — Lebanon, UAE, and KSA from day one."

Blocked:

  • "When you get access, Louis will handle all your legal work."
  • "No lawyer needed — Louis has you covered."

Email 2: Position / Momentum Update (optional drip)

Purpose: Maintain engagement and interest; prevent drop-off from waitlist.

  • Share a product teaser, feature preview, or use-case story
  • Use case stories: situational ("Here's how a Lebanese SME founder used Louis to understand their vendor contract in 10 minutes") — allowed if factual and sourced; not allowed if it implies outcome guarantees
  • Do not create urgency through false scarcity claims

Email 3: Early-Access Invitation

Purpose: Move the user from waitlist to active user with high conversion intent.

Element Rule
Subject line "Your early access to Louis is ready" — specific, clear, no banned claims
Body Reiterate what the product does; reinforce the "legal information" positioning; transition from anticipation to action
First-use guidance Direct to a first-action prompt: "Start by asking Louis about a contract you need to review"
CTA "Start now — free" or "Activate your access"
Disclaimer Retain the standard disclaimer

Email 4: Full Launch Conversion

Purpose: When the product opens fully, convert remaining waitlist users.

  • More urgent tone is appropriate: "Louis is now open to everyone — your spot is ready"
  • May reference the pricing model: free tier + paid upgrade — see [[messaging-pricing-framing-b2c]] for framing rules
  • Do not use urgency claims that are false ("Only 100 spots left" — if there is no actual limit)

Technical Email Compliance

All waitlist emails must comply with applicable email marketing law (see [[messaging-surface-rule-newsletter-mixed-audience]] for framework details). Key requirements:

  • Physical address in footer
  • One-click unsubscribe at every email
  • Accurate sender identification
  • No deceptive subject lines ("You've been selected" — allowed; "Your legal case has been resolved" — deceptive and blocked)

Examples

Strong waitlist confirmation subject line:

"You're on the Louis waitlist — here's what to expect"

Weak (avoid):

"Get ready — no more lawyer bills!"

Strong product description in confirmation email:

"Louis is a legal AI assistant for MENA — covering Lebanon, UAE, and Saudi Arabia. When you get access, you'll be able to upload a contract and get a plain-language breakdown, ask legal questions about your situation, and generate starting-point documents. Louis provides legal information — not legal advice. For complex matters, we'll tell you when to speak to a lawyer."


  • [[messaging-compliance-checker]]
  • [[messaging-allowed-claims-consumer]]
  • [[messaging-banned-claims-consumer]]
  • [[messaging-pricing-framing-b2c]]
  • [[messaging-surface-rule-newsletter-mixed-audience]]
  • [[onboarding-b2c-vs-b2b-fork]]