Hoppy Copy + Linkdify: The “LinkedIn-to-Inbox” Revenue Loop
Category: Monetization Guide
Excerpt:
Build a simple outbound system that books calls and nurtures leads—without sounding like a template. Use Linkdify to run respectful LinkedIn multi-step outreach, then use Hoppy Copy to write a tight email follow-up + nurture sequence. This tutorial shows sellable offers, step-by-step setup, scripts, safety rules, and realistic pricing.
Last Updated: January 30, 2026 | System: LinkedIn → Email → Meeting | Tools: Hoppy Copy (email + sequences) + Linkdify (LinkedIn outreach) | Goal: predictable leads without sounding like a bot
Where it leaks (the unsexy reasons you’re not booking calls)
Let’s be blunt: most “cold outreach advice” is written by people who already have inbound leads. They tell you to “be authentic” and “add value.” Cool. Helpful. Still doesn’t tell you what to do on a Tuesday when you need two more calls booked.
If your first message requires the prospect to think hard, click three links, and reply with a paragraph… they won’t. Not because they hate you. Because they’re busy. The first message should be easy to answer in 5 seconds.
Following up is awkward when it’s manual. So you avoid it. Then you tell yourself “they weren’t interested.” (Half the time, they were just distracted.)
A “not now” is not a rejection. It’s a timing issue. But if you don’t move them into a light email nurture, you’ll be forgotten by the time their timing changes.
The goal is not to convince everyone. The goal is to build a loop that reliably surfaces the right 5% who are ready.
What to sell (so you don’t sound like “another outreach guy”)
Here’s the reframing that changes everything: you are not selling “LinkedIn automation” or “email copy.” You’re selling a booked-meetings system with a clean handoff.
| Offer (what you call it) | What the client gets | Best buyer | Realistic price range* |
|---|---|---|---|
| Outbound Sprint (14 days) | ICP + 2 message angles + LinkedIn multi-step campaign + email follow-up sequence + weekly check-in | Founders / agencies / consultants | $400–$2,500* |
| Pipeline Retainer (monthly) | Ongoing lead imports + A/B testing + weekly reporting + email nurture improvements | Teams who need consistency | $600–$4,000/mo* |
| Done-for-you Copy Pack | 30 LinkedIn messages + 12 follow-ups + 7-email nurture + objection replies | DIY operators who need words | $150–$1,200* |
*These are not income claims. They’re typical market-friendly ranges based on deliverables, turnaround, revisions, and niche. Your results depend on your targeting, offer clarity, and lead quality.
Don’t sell “guaranteed meetings.” You don’t control other people. Sell what you control: volume of quality outreach, clean copy, respectful follow-up, clear reporting.
Setup (simple): build the loop in one afternoon
This is intentionally not complicated. You’re going to set up one LinkedIn campaign (Linkdify), and one email follow-up/nurture (Hoppy Copy). That’s it. The power comes from doing it consistently, not from stacking more tools.
Write your offer in one sentence, like a normal person:
“I help [specific buyer] get [specific result] in [timeframe], without [pain].”
Example (don’t copy it, write yours):
“I help small B2B agencies book 6–12 qualified calls a month by fixing their outreach + follow-up.”
If you can’t describe your ideal prospect in 20 seconds, your outreach will drift.
- Role: who are they?
- Trigger: what happened recently that makes them care?
- Pain: what are they tired of?
People ignore messages that ask for too much too fast. Choose one:
- “Want a 2-minute checklist?”
- “Want me to send 2 examples?”
- “Open to a quick 10-min chat?”
Keep it to 3–4 steps. If you need 9 steps to get a reply, the issue is the offer + targeting, not the number of follow-ups.
- Connection request (1 short line)
- Follow-up #1 (1 question, super easy to answer)
- Follow-up #2 (give a tiny resource / example)
- Close the loop (polite exit)
Don’t dump 5,000 random profiles into automation. Import smaller batches. Watch replies. Adjust. If your targeting is wrong, automation only makes you wrong faster.
A practical habit: run one niche + one job title for a week before expanding.
Your email follow-up does two jobs:
Job A: move warm people to a call.
Job B: keep “not now” people warm without being annoying.
Hoppy Copy is built around email content and sequences, so you can generate variations quickly and keep tone consistent.
The real win: you stop rewriting the same follow-up email every time you talk to a new lead.
Scripts (LinkedIn): copy that feels human, not “growth hack”
Two reminders before the copy:
1) People can smell “template voice” instantly.
2) The goal is not to sound clever. The goal is to start a normal conversation with the right person.
CONNECTION REQUEST (Copy/Paste)
Hey {first_name} — quick connect.
I work with {role / niche} teams on {pain/result}. Thought it’d be good to connect.Tip: if you’re adding a “why,” keep it calm. No flattery paragraphs. No “I loved your inspiring post” unless it’s true.
FOLLOW-UP #1 Curious — are you doing outbound right now or is most of your pipeline coming from inbound?
This works because it’s easy. They can answer with 2 words.
FOLLOW-UP #2 If helpful, here’s a tiny checklist I use to diagnose why outreach isn’t getting replies: 1) targeting too broad 2) offer unclear 3) follow-ups inconsistent 4) asking for too much too soon If you tell me which one feels most true for you, I can share 2 examples.
CLOSE THE LOOP No worries if now’s not the moment. If it becomes a priority later, reply “loop me in” and I’ll send a quick plan.
This makes you feel like a grown-up, not a spammer. And it keeps the door open.
Avoid “Would you like to hop on a call?” in the first message. Earn the call by asking a small, relevant question first.
Email follow-up (Hoppy Copy): turn “interest” into a next step
Here’s the truth: most prospects don’t say “no.” They say nothing. Silence is the default. Email is your quiet advantage because it lets you follow up without forcing a live conversation.
Your nurture emails should read like a helpful note from a competent person—not a launch sequence. Calm, specific, useful.
Use this when a prospect says “not now,” or when they accept your connection but don’t reply. The goal is to stay present without being annoying.
7-EMAIL LIGHT NURTURE (Skeleton) Email 1 — “Context” - 3 lines: who you are + who you help + one simple problem you solve - soft CTA: “If you want, reply with your #1 bottleneck.” Email 2 — “The mistake” - one common mistake you see (ex: too broad targeting) - a simple correction - no pitch, just clarity Email 3 — “Example” - show a short before/after message example (no client secrets) - explain why the “after” works Email 4 — “Objection” - address the honest objection (ex: “I don’t want to spam people”) - explain your safety rules Email 5 — “Tiny win” - a 5-minute checklist they can do today - ask a yes/no question Email 6 — “Proof type” - share a small proof type that’s believable (process screenshot, framework) - avoid big claims Email 7 — “Open loop” - “If you want, I can map a plan for your niche.” - CTA: a short call OR a reply with 2 details
The trick is not “better AI.” The trick is feeding it your voice rules and your real-world constraints. Paste this prompt (and edit the brackets):
HOPPY COPY PROMPT (Copy/Paste) Write a 7-email light nurture sequence for B2B leads. Audience: - Role: [e.g., agency owner / SaaS founder / consultant] - They feel: overwhelmed, skeptical of spam, busy. - They want: more pipeline, but not cringe outreach. My offer (one sentence): [I help X get Y without Z.] Tone rules: - calm, specific, no hype - short sentences - no “Just checking in” - no “Hope this finds you well” - avoid buzzwords (“synergy”, “revolutionary”) - write like a thoughtful operator, not a copywriter CTA rule: - Only ask for a call after we’ve given a useful example. - Otherwise ask easy questions (yes/no or 1-sentence reply) Output: - subject line options (3 each email) - the email copy - a 1-line “goal of this email” - keep each email under ~170 words
If your nurture emails are long, you’ll feel proud… and nobody will read them. Keep them short enough that a busy person can finish them during a coffee refill.
Scoreboard: what to track (so you don’t spiral)
A simple scoreboard keeps you rational. Without one, you’ll change everything after one bad day and never learn what actually works.
- Connection acceptance trend (up/down)
- Reply quality (are they asking real questions?)
- Time-to-first-reply (are replies coming fast?)
- Meetings booked per week
- Which message angle gets the most “yes”
- Open rate direction (stable / falling)
- Click rate direction (stable / falling)
- Replies (even “not now” is useful)
- Unsubscribes (watch for spikes)
- Which email earns the most replies
WEEKLY REVIEW (Copy/Paste) 1) What message got the best replies this week? 2) What message got ignored? 3) What targeting batch performed best? 4) What objection came up most? 5) What will I change next week? (only one change) Note: If you change 5 things at once, you’ll never know what worked.
Safety rules (so you don’t torch your reputation)
Automation is a power tool. It can save you hours. It can also make you “that person” faster than you think. These rules keep you on the right side of trust.
Never run automation on a weak offer. Fix the offer first, then scale messages.
Start with small lead lists. Watch replies. Learn. Expand slowly.
You don’t need to invent a story. If you’re reaching out because you work with that niche, just say that.
“All good—no worries” is underrated. Pressure destroys reply rates and destroys brand trust.
If you’re collecting emails and sending campaigns, learn the basics of email compliance in your region. Don’t get cute with misleading subject lines.
If your outreach sounds like a normal person who respects time, you’re already ahead of 90% of the inbox.










