eCommerce GrowthMay 12, 2026

30-Day LinkedIn Content Calendar for Agency Owners (Steal Mine)

The exact 30-day LinkedIn posting schedule I use — post types, hooks, topics, and the strategy behind each one. Free to copy.

Mark Cijo

Mark Cijo

Founder, GOSH Digital

30-Day LinkedIn Content Calendar for Agency Owners (Steal Mine)

30-Day LinkedIn Content Calendar for Agency Owners (Steal Mine)

I've been posting on LinkedIn consistently for the last year. Not because I love "building a personal brand" -- honestly, that phrase makes me cringe. I post because it works. LinkedIn brings us inbound leads every single month. Qualified ones. Brand owners and marketing directors who've been following my content for weeks or months before they reach out.

And the thing that made it work wasn't being clever or going viral. It was having a system.

I'm going to give you the entire system. The exact 30-day content calendar, the strategy behind each post, the hooks I use, and the formats that actually get engagement. Copy the whole thing. Modify it for your niche. Run it for 30 days and see what happens.


The Strategy First (Before the Calendar)

Most agency owners approach LinkedIn wrong. They post when they feel inspired, which means they post once a week for two weeks and then disappear for a month. Or they post generic motivational quotes that get likes from other agency owners but zero engagement from actual prospects.

Here's the framework I use:

Post 5 days a week. Monday through Friday. Weekends are dead on LinkedIn for B2B audiences. Don't waste content there.

Rotate through 5 content types. This keeps your feed varied and serves different purposes:

  1. Value posts -- Teach something specific. A tactic, a framework, a how-to. This is what builds credibility.
  2. Story posts -- Personal stories, client stories, lessons learned. This is what builds connection.
  3. Proof posts -- Case study snippets, metrics, results. This is what builds trust.
  4. Opinion posts -- Hot takes, contrarian views, things you'd say to a client's face but most agency owners are afraid to post. This is what builds authority.
  5. Engagement posts -- Questions, polls, "help me decide" posts. This is what builds reach (LinkedIn's algorithm favors posts with comments).

The weekly cadence:

| Day | Content Type | Purpose | |---|---|---| | Monday | Value | Start the week by teaching something | | Tuesday | Story | Build personal connection | | Wednesday | Proof | Show results, build trust | | Thursday | Opinion | Stir conversation, build authority | | Friday | Engagement | Drive comments, expand reach |

Now here's the important part: every single post should be written for your buyer, not your peers. I see agency owners writing posts that impress other agency owners. That's great for your ego and terrible for your pipeline. Your content should make a brand owner or marketing director think "this person understands my problems."


The 30-Day Calendar

Each post below includes the hook (first 1-2 lines that appear before "see more"), the format, and the strategy behind it.


Week 1: Establish Expertise

Day 1 (Monday) -- Value Post

Hook: "Your email list is not an asset. Your ENGAGED email list is an asset. Here's the difference."

Format: Text post (8-12 lines)

Content direction: Explain why list size is a vanity metric. A 100K list with 12% open rates is worth less than a 30K list with 45% open rates. Give the math -- show how engagement-based sending reaches more inboxes and generates more revenue than blasting a big list. End with one actionable tip: "Send your next campaign to your 30-day engaged segment only. Compare the revenue per recipient to your last full-list blast. I'll wait."

Strategy: Positions you as someone who thinks differently about email marketing. Challenges a common assumption. Brand owners who've been told "grow your list" will stop scrolling.


Day 2 (Tuesday) -- Story Post

Hook: "I once told a client their email program was costing them money. They were doing $500K/month from it."

Format: Text post (12-15 lines)

Content direction: Tell the story of auditing a client who looked successful on paper but was destroying their deliverability by sending to their full list. Their $500K/month from email could have been $800K if they weren't landing in spam for 40% of their list. Walk through what you found and what changed. End with the lesson: "Revenue from email isn't the right metric. Revenue per engaged subscriber is."

Strategy: Story format grabs attention. The counterintuitive hook ("doing $500K but it's costing them money?") stops the scroll. Showcases real expertise without bragging.


Day 3 (Wednesday) -- Proof Post

Hook: "November 2022. One brand. $1.64M in email revenue. Here's the 3-phase strategy behind it."

Format: Text post with numbered list (10-12 lines) or carousel (5-7 slides)

Content direction: Condensed version of your BFCM case study. Phase 1: 6-week warm-up. Phase 2: BFCM execution (VIP early access, daily cadence, cart recovery). Phase 3: Post-BFCM retention. Don't give every detail -- give enough to demonstrate mastery. End with: "BFCM isn't a 5-day event. It's a 10-week project."

Strategy: Specific numbers build trust instantly. $1.64M is attention-grabbing. The 3-phase framework gives people something to remember and share.


Day 4 (Thursday) -- Opinion Post

Hook: "Unpopular opinion: most brands should FIRE their email agency."

Format: Text post (10-12 lines)

Content direction: Explain that most email agencies do the bare minimum -- send 2 campaigns a week, run the same welcome flow they set up 18 months ago, and send a pretty report that nobody reads. If your agency hasn't touched your flows in 6 months, hasn't cleaned your list, hasn't run a deliverability audit, and can't tell you your revenue per engaged subscriber -- they're coasting. End with: "The agency bar is low. If your current agency is clearing it, genuinely great. If they're not, you owe it to your business to find one that will."

Strategy: Contrarian opinion generates comments. Agency owners will disagree (good -- comments boost reach). Brand owners will feel validated. You're positioning yourself as the anti-lazy-agency.


Day 5 (Friday) -- Engagement Post

Hook: "Quick poll for eCommerce brand owners: What percentage of your total revenue comes from email?"

Format: Text post with a question (4-5 lines)

Content direction: "I've been collecting this data for years. Drop your percentage in the comments and I'll tell you if it's above or below your industry benchmark. Include your industry (fashion, beauty, supplements, etc.) and I'll give you a specific number."

Strategy: Drives comments. People love getting personalized benchmarks. Every comment is a warm lead -- you now know their industry, their email performance, and you can DM them with value.


Week 2: Build Connection

Day 6 (Monday) -- Value Post

Hook: "5 Klaviyo flows that should be running in every Shopify store. Most stores have 2 of them. Here's what you're missing."

Format: Carousel (7 slides -- title + 5 flows + CTA slide)

Content direction: Each slide covers one flow: Abandoned Cart, Welcome Series, Post-Purchase, Browse Abandonment, Win-Back. For each: what it does, why it matters, one specific tip. Final slide: "If you're missing any of these, you're leaving automated revenue on the table every single day."

Strategy: Carousels get 2-3x the reach of text posts on LinkedIn. Educational content that people save and share. Each flow is a mini-lesson.


Day 7 (Tuesday) -- Story Post

Hook: "The worst advice I got when starting my agency: 'Niche down immediately.'"

Format: Text post (12-15 lines)

Content direction: Tell the real story of how GOSH Digital started in eCommerce email/SMS, then expanded to full-service because clients kept asking for more. The niche gave us expertise. But saying "no" to paid media, SEO, and web design for clients who trusted us would have been leaving money and relationships on the table. The lesson: niche is how you start. Expanding is how you grow. But you expand from a position of proven expertise, not desperation.

Strategy: Relatable to other agency owners (they'll engage). Also shows brand owners that you're not a one-trick pony -- you have depth across channels.


Day 8 (Wednesday) -- Proof Post

Hook: "We took an email program from 12% of revenue to 28% in 6 months. Here's what changed."

Format: Text post with before/after comparison (10 lines)

Content direction: Before: 3 default flows, sporadic campaigns, full-list blasting. After: 12 active flows, 3 campaigns/week, engagement-based segmentation. Flow revenue went from $8K/mo to $35K/mo. Campaign revenue went from $15K/mo to $42K/mo. End with: "The difference wasn't talent or budget. It was execution. Specifically, doing the 5 things every email marketer knows they should do but doesn't."

Strategy: Before/after is the most compelling proof format. Specific numbers make it credible. The punchline ("doing what everyone knows they should") makes readers ask "...what are the 5 things?"


Day 9 (Thursday) -- Opinion Post

Hook: "Your Shopify store has 14 apps installed. You need 5 of them. The other 9 are costing you sales."

Format: Text post (8-10 lines)

Content direction: Every Shopify app adds JavaScript to your store. That slows down page load time. Slower pages kill conversion rates. The math: 7% conversion drop per 1 second of load time. Most stores have 5-9 apps they installed "just to try" and never removed. Those apps are silently bleeding revenue. "Go to your Shopify admin right now. Look at your app list. If you can't immediately explain why each app is there and what revenue it drives, uninstall it."

Strategy: Practical, opinionated, and immediately actionable. Shopify store owners will screenshot this and share it.


Day 10 (Friday) -- Engagement Post

Hook: "I'm building a free resource for eCommerce brands. What would be most useful?"

Format: Text post with options (5-6 lines)

Content direction: Give 3-4 options: (A) Klaviyo flow template pack, (B) BFCM email playbook, (C) Shopify speed optimization checklist, (D) Email revenue benchmark calculator. Ask people to comment with A, B, C, or D. "I'll build whichever one gets the most votes and share it here for free."

Strategy: Drives engagement (comments). Also gives you market research -- you'll know what your audience cares about most. And when you deliver the resource, you have a follow-up post with a built-in warm audience.


Week 3: Deepen Trust

Day 11 (Monday) -- Value Post

Hook: "The email you send 30 minutes after cart abandonment is worth more than the one you send 4 hours later. Here's why."

Format: Text post (8-10 lines)

Content direction: During high-intent moments (BFCM, flash sales, new drops), shoppers are comparing across multiple stores simultaneously. A 4-hour delay means they've already bought from your competitor. The data: 30-minute abandoned cart emails recover 15-20% more carts than 4-hour emails during peak shopping periods. Default Klaviyo timing is 4 hours. Change it. At minimum for BFCM, but consider testing 1-hour or 30-minute timing year-round.

Strategy: Specific, tactical, immediately actionable. The kind of post that makes someone think "I should check my cart flow timing right now."


Day 12 (Tuesday) -- Story Post

Hook: "A client once asked me: 'Why are you telling me to email FEWER people?' Twelve weeks later, they understood."

Format: Text post (12-15 lines)

Content direction: Story of switching a client from full-list sends to engagement-based segments. They resisted -- "but we're reaching fewer people!" Walk through the progression: tighter segments led to higher open rates, which led to better deliverability, which meant MORE emails reached the inbox, which led to higher revenue. "They went from reaching 200K people in spam to reaching 80K people in the primary inbox. Revenue from email went up 35%. Fewer recipients. More money."

Strategy: Counterintuitive. Teaches through narrative. The "12 weeks later they understood" hook creates curiosity.


Day 13 (Wednesday) -- Proof Post

Hook: "$70M+ in revenue driven for eCommerce brands. Here are the 3 things that actually moved the needle."

Format: Text post or carousel (3 slides + intro/outro)

Content direction: Distill everything into three principles: (1) Flows generate revenue while you sleep -- build 10-15 automated flows, not 2. (2) Segment or die -- engagement-based sending protects deliverability and increases revenue per send. (3) Consistency beats intensity -- 3 campaigns/week every week beats 10 campaigns in one week then silence for a month. End with: "It's not complicated. It's just not easy to do consistently. That's where the gap is."

Strategy: The $70M number stops the scroll. Three simple principles are memorable and shareable. The closing line ("not complicated, just not easy") is honest and builds trust.


Day 14 (Thursday) -- Opinion Post

Hook: "Stop calling email a 'retention channel.' It's a revenue channel. Here's why the distinction matters."

Format: Text post (10-12 lines)

Content direction: When brands label email as "retention only," they underinvest in it. They hire a junior marketer, give them Klaviyo access, and move on. But email drives 25-50% of total revenue for well-run eCommerce brands. That's not a "retention tactic" -- that's a primary revenue channel that deserves senior talent, real budget, and strategic attention. "If a channel drives 30%+ of your revenue, it's not an afterthought. Treat it accordingly."

Strategy: Challenges a common framework. Marketing directors who categorize email under "retention" will pause and reconsider. Positions you as someone who thinks about email at a strategic level, not just a tactical one.


Day 15 (Friday) -- Engagement Post

Hook: "Be honest: when was the last time someone on your team actually LOOKED at your Klaviyo flows?"

Format: Text post (4-5 lines)

Content direction: "Not 'glanced at the dashboard.' Actually opened each flow, read the copy, checked the metrics, and made improvements. If the answer is 'months ago' or 'I'm not sure,' you're not alone. Most brands set up flows once and never touch them again. Drop a comment with how many active flows you have -- I'll tell you if there are gaps."

Strategy: Slightly uncomfortable question that generates honest responses. Every comment is a lead who just admitted their flows need work.


Week 4: Convert Attention to Action

Day 16 (Monday) -- Value Post

Hook: "The 7 segments every Klaviyo account needs. If you have fewer than 5, your email program is underperforming."

Format: Carousel (9 slides -- title, 7 segments, CTA)

Content direction: Each slide: segment name, definition, and how to use it. Engaged 30, Engaged 90, Never Purchased, One-Time Buyers, Repeat Buyers, VIPs, At-Risk/Lapsed. Final slide: "Segments aren't complicated. They're just the difference between broadcasting and actually marketing."

Strategy: High-save, high-share content. Carousels outperform on LinkedIn. Each segment is a mini-lesson that people will reference later.


Day 17 (Tuesday) -- Story Post

Hook: "The day I realized our biggest competitor wasn't another agency. It was our clients' internal teams doing it 'good enough.'"

Format: Text post (12-15 lines)

Content direction: Story about losing a prospect to "we'll just do it in-house." They had a junior marketer running Klaviyo. Six months later they came back because their email revenue had stagnated at 14% while their competitors were hitting 30%+. The lesson: "good enough" is the most expensive thing in marketing. The gap between a 15% email program and a 35% email program on a $2M/year store is $400K in annual revenue. That's not "good enough." That's $400K left on the table. End with: "The most expensive marketing hire is the one who's too junior for the channel they're responsible for."

Strategy: Addresses the main objection ("we'll just do it ourselves"). Does it through story, not argument. Makes the cost of inaction tangible.


Day 18 (Wednesday) -- Proof Post

Hook: "One flow. One optimization. $47K in additional monthly revenue."

Format: Text post (8-10 lines)

Content direction: Walk through a specific flow optimization -- for example, adding a dynamic product block and social proof element to an Abandoned Cart flow, plus shortening the timing from 4 hours to 1 hour. Before: $23K/month from the flow. After: $70K/month. Same list size. Same traffic. Same product. Just a better flow. "Automated flows are the closest thing to free money in eCommerce marketing. They run 24/7. They target based on real behavior. And when they're optimized, they compound."

Strategy: Specific, credible, and demonstrates ROI from a single change. Brand owners read this and think "I wonder what my flows could be doing."


Day 19 (Thursday) -- Opinion Post

Hook: "Hot take: If your agency sends you a report with impressions, reach, and CTR but can't tell you how much revenue they drove, fire them."

Format: Text post (8-10 lines)

Content direction: Impressions don't pay rent. Reach doesn't make payroll. The only metric that matters for a revenue-driving channel is revenue. And the agencies that hide behind vanity metrics are the same ones that get defensive when you ask "so how much money did this make us?" Your agency should be able to say: "This month, email drove $X in revenue. Here's the split between flows and campaigns. Here's what we're testing next month." If they can't, you have a reporting problem, a strategy problem, or both.

Strategy: Validates what many brand owners already feel but haven't articulated. Makes them evaluate their current agency. Positions you as the agency that ties everything back to revenue.


Day 20 (Friday) -- Engagement Post

Hook: "I'm booking 5 free Klaviyo audits this month. Here's what you get."

Format: Text post (6-8 lines)

Content direction: List what the audit covers: flow performance review, segmentation analysis, deliverability check, campaign frequency assessment, and a prioritized action plan with specific revenue estimates. "No pitch. No strings. I'll pull up your account on a call, walk you through what I find, and give you a document with exactly what to fix and in what order. If you want to work together after that, great. If you want to fix it yourself, also great. Comment 'AUDIT' or DM me."

Strategy: Direct conversion post. One per month is enough. The "comment AUDIT" mechanic generates public engagement (other people see the comments and get curious). The "no pitch, no strings" framing lowers the barrier.


Week 5 (Days 21-25): Reinforce and Expand

Day 21 (Monday) -- Value Post

Hook: "Deliverability is the most boring topic in email marketing. It's also the only topic that matters."

Format: Text post (10-12 lines)

Content direction: If your emails don't reach the inbox, nothing else matters. Your copy, your design, your segmentation -- all worthless in the spam folder. Three things to check today: (1) Spam complaint rate under 0.1%. (2) Open rates by domain (if Gmail is 40% but Yahoo is 12%, you have a Yahoo-specific problem). (3) Dedicated sending domain set up with DKIM, SPF, DMARC. "Deliverability is preventive medicine. Nobody wants to think about it until they're sick. And by then, recovery takes 3-6 months."

Strategy: Teaches something most people ignore. The "boring but essential" framing is honest and builds trust.


Day 22 (Tuesday) -- Story Post

Hook: "My first client paid us $1,500/month. We drove $180K in email revenue for them in 6 months. They still don't know how underpaid we were."

Format: Text post (12-15 lines)

Content direction: The real story of early agency days. Undercharging because you're hungry. Over-delivering because you have something to prove. That client became a case study that landed bigger clients. The lesson: "Your early clients aren't just revenue. They're your proof. Treat them like million-dollar accounts and eventually you'll have million-dollar accounts." Don't be bitter about undercharging early -- be grateful those clients gave you the chance to build your proof.

Strategy: Vulnerability and honesty. Other agency owners relate to the early days. Brand owners see someone who earned their credibility the hard way.


Day 23 (Wednesday) -- Proof Post

Hook: "31 months. $15.8M in email revenue. One brand. Here's what I learned."

Format: Text post or carousel (5-6 slides)

Content direction: The Phoenix case study condensed into top lessons. Lesson 1: Email can be the biggest revenue channel, not just a side channel. Lesson 2: Scale requires infrastructure -- you can't send to 12M recipients without deliverability prep. Lesson 3: The hardest part isn't the peak -- it's sustaining 30-47% attribution for 2+ years after the peak. "Most agencies optimize for the big month. The real skill is making every month a good month."

Strategy: The $15.8M number is a showstopper. The "31 months" timeframe shows long-term partnership, not a one-off win.


Day 24 (Thursday) -- Opinion Post

Hook: "AI isn't replacing email marketers. Bad email marketers are being replaced by good email marketers who use AI."

Format: Text post (10-12 lines)

Content direction: AI tools make the basics easier. Subject line generation, copy drafts, basic segmentation recommendations. But they don't replace strategy, pattern recognition, or the judgment that comes from managing $70M in email revenue. The brands that thrive will have humans who understand the data, use AI to move faster, and make decisions that no tool can automate. "The moat isn't the tool. The moat is knowing which lever to pull and when."

Strategy: Timely, nuanced, avoids both AI hype and AI fear. Positions you as someone who uses tools pragmatically.


Day 25 (Friday) -- Engagement Post

Hook: "What's your biggest frustration with your current marketing agency? (Be honest -- they're not reading this.)"

Format: Text post (3-4 lines)

Content direction: Simple, open-ended question. "I'm collecting real feedback from brand owners for a blog post. Drop your honest frustration below -- anonymous is fine. I'll compile the results and share them next week."

Strategy: Goldmine for content ideas. Every comment tells you what problems your prospects have. You can create future content addressing each frustration. Plus, people vent publicly and that generates more comments.


Week 5 Continued (Days 26-30): Close the Month Strong

Day 26 (Monday) -- Value Post

Hook: "The subject line formula that gets us 35%+ open rates on campaign emails. It has 3 parts."

Format: Text post (8-10 lines)

Content direction: The formula: Curiosity + Specificity + Brevity. Bad: "Check out our new products!" Good: "The $45 serum 4,200 customers can't stop buying." Break down why: curiosity (what serum?), specificity ($45, 4,200 customers), brevity (9 words). Give 3-4 more examples across different industries. "Subject lines aren't art. They're engineering. Test this formula against your current approach for 4 campaigns. Look at the open rate difference."

Strategy: Immediately actionable. People will screenshot the formula and test it. High-save post.


Day 27 (Tuesday) -- Story Post

Hook: "I almost lost our biggest client because of a spam complaint spike. Here's the 90-day recovery plan that saved the account."

Format: Text post (12-15 lines)

Content direction: Tell the story of managing deliverability recovery. The moment you see spam complaints climbing. The decision to dramatically tighten sending segments (which temporarily reduces revenue -- a hard conversation with the client). The 90-day plan: ultra-tight segments, list cleaning, re-engagement campaign, gradual expansion. End result: complaints dropped from 364/month to under 30. Open rates recovered from 14% to 39%. "The hardest part wasn't the technical fix. It was telling a client 'we need to send LESS to earn MORE.' Trust is the real skill in agency work."

Strategy: Shows you handle adversity, not just wins. Brand owners want an agency that can navigate problems, not just coast during good times.


Day 28 (Wednesday) -- Proof Post

Hook: "One stat that tells you everything: 47.61% of this brand's revenue came from email. In month 31."

Format: Text post (8-10 lines)

Content direction: The Phoenix at 31 months in. Still driving 47% of revenue from email. Most agencies show month 1 results. The real proof is month 31. Sustained performance, not a spike. "Anyone can have a good month. The question is: can your email program perform at that level for 2+ years? That's the difference between a campaign and a system."

Strategy: Longevity is the ultimate proof point. Most agencies show 30-day or 90-day results. Showing 31 months separates you from everyone.


Day 29 (Thursday) -- Opinion Post

Hook: "The agency model is broken. Here's what I think replaces it."

Format: Text post (12-15 lines)

Content direction: The broken model: agency takes on 40 clients, assigns a junior account manager to each, does the minimum, charges a retainer. What replaces it: smaller client rosters, senior-level talent on every account, transparent reporting tied to revenue, and a partnership model where the agency's success is literally tied to the client's revenue growth. "We keep our client roster intentionally small. Not because we can't scale -- because the moment we add client #50 and the quality drops, we become the kind of agency I built GOSH to replace."

Strategy: Positions your agency model as intentionally different. Brand owners who've been burned by big-agency neglect will resonate deeply.


Day 30 (Friday) -- Engagement Post (Month Wrap)

Hook: "This month I posted every weekday on LinkedIn. Here's what happened."

Format: Text post (8-10 lines)

Content direction: Share real metrics: impressions, engagement, DMs received, calls booked. Be transparent -- some posts flopped, some took off. Share the top-performing post and why you think it worked. Share the worst-performing post and what you learned. End with: "Consistency beats virality. 30 days of showing up taught me more about what my audience cares about than any marketing course. Here's to month 2."

Strategy: Transparent wrap-up that demonstrates consistency. The meta-nature of the post (posting about posting) generates engagement from both supporters and skeptics.


The Rules I Follow

A few principles that govern every post:

1. Write for buyers, not peers. Every post should make a brand owner or marketing director think "this person gets it." If only other agency owners engage, the content isn't working.

2. Specificity over generality. "$1.64M in email revenue in one month" beats "we drove great results." "39% open rate after list cleaning" beats "improved engagement." Numbers build trust.

3. First line is everything. On LinkedIn, only the first 2 lines show before "see more." If those 2 lines don't stop the scroll, nobody reads the rest. Write the hook first. Write it five different ways. Pick the most compelling one.

4. One idea per post. Don't try to teach everything in one post. One flow. One metric. One story. One opinion. Go deep, not wide.

5. End with a conversation starter, not a lecture. Ask a question. Invite disagreement. Request feedback. LinkedIn rewards comments more than likes. Posts that generate conversation get pushed to more feeds.

6. Never post and ghost. Reply to every comment within the first 2 hours. LinkedIn's algorithm heavily weights early engagement. If 10 people comment in the first hour and you reply to all 10, that's 20 comments in the algorithm's eyes. Plus, it shows you're a real person, not a content machine.


Adapt This for Your Niche

This calendar is built for an eCommerce marketing agency. But the framework works for any agency or service business:

  • SEO agency? Replace Klaviyo examples with search console data, ranking improvements, traffic growth.
  • Paid media agency? Replace email metrics with ROAS, CPA, ad spend efficiency.
  • Web design studio? Replace flow teardowns with conversion rate improvements, site speed fixes, UX case studies.
  • SaaS founder? Replace client results with user metrics, product updates, industry observations.

The content types stay the same: Value, Story, Proof, Opinion, Engagement. Just change the subject matter.


What's Next

Run this calendar for 30 days. Then do it again with fresh topics. By month 3, you'll have a content machine that generates inbound leads consistently.

If you want to see these principles applied to email marketing and eCommerce growth, follow me on LinkedIn. I post every weekday using this exact system.

And if you're an eCommerce brand looking for an agency that actually ties everything back to revenue -- not impressions, not "brand awareness," revenue -- let's talk.

Book a call: https://cal.com/markcijo/gosh


About the Author

Mark Cijo is the founder of GOSH Digital, a Klaviyo Gold Partner agency that has driven over $70M in revenue for eCommerce brands. GOSH Digital specializes in email/SMS marketing, paid media, SEO, and web development. Mark and his team work with brands that are serious about growth -- not vanity metrics.

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Mark Cijo

Written by Mark Cijo

Founder of GOSH Digital. Klaviyo Gold Partner. Helping eCommerce brands grow revenue through data-driven marketing.

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