06 · Capabilities
Opt-in

Marketing

Track prospects through a lead lifecycle, run multi-channel follow-up touches with owner approval, and convert won leads into customers — a founder-operated lead engine.

5 min read · updated 28/05/2026

Opt-in Capability · off

Marketing is switched offMarketing

You can read the guide. An owner or manager flips this Capability on in settings — it then lights up across the app.

Overview

You meet a prospect, send a message, then chase the follow-up in your head or on a sticky note. Marketing puts that whole pursuit in Neev. Each prospect becomes a lead with a stage; every message in or out is logged on one thread; and when a lead is ready, you convert it into a customer without re-typing anything. It is a founder-operated engine — you stay in the loop on the first touch, and Neev handles the chasing.

Opt-in Capability · off

Marketing is switched offMarketing

You can read the guide. An owner or manager flips this Capability on in settings — it then lights up across the app.

This is an opt-in Capability — the Owner turns it on. Honest status: the lead model, the lifecycle, and the permissions exist in code, but the Capability is not yet a switch you can flip in Settings, and the Owner does not hold its permissions until it lands in a later release. Treat this page as how it will work once enabled.

Where to find it

Marketing lives in the Grow section of the sidebar as the Growth console, open to the Owner and Manager. It has four surfaces:

  • Leads (/growth) — a kanban board by stage; drag a lead across a column to advance it. The board sorts by engagement score and only allows legal moves (a lead reaches won only by converting it).
  • Lead thread (/growth/<lead>) — the per-lead view: contact details, stage controls, the cadence outline, and the full cross-channel conversation. Skipped and declined touches show read-only so you can see what the consent gate held back.
  • First-touch approvals (/growth/approvals) — the tray of outgoing first touches waiting for your sign-off. Approve flips a draft to approved; Approve & send funnels it through the consent gate.
  • Lead analytics (/growth/analytics) — the north-star (won ÷ handed-off) plus leading diagnostics (reply rate, qualified rate) and leverage diagnostics (% auto-handled, draft-approval rate), with a stage-distribution table.

The console is behind the Marketing Capability toggle: until the Capability is enabled for your workspace, each surface shows a locked panel rather than live data. It is built for both web and mobile.

Key concepts

  • Lead — one prospect: a name, contact details, the stage they are in, and who owns them. Leads are separate from customers — a lead becomes a customer only when you convert it.
  • Stage — where the lead is in the pursuit: new → contacted → engaged → qualified → handed off → won, plus lost and nurture. You move a lead forward as it warms up; a stalled lead can drop to lost or park in nurture and re-enter later.
  • Touch — one message on the lead's thread, inbound or outbound, across email or WhatsApp. The thread is the full back-and-forth in one place.
  • Cadence — the follow-up sequence: an intro, a value note, a nudge, and a breakup. Neev drafts each step in the lead's language and sends it for you.
  • First-touch approval — the very first automated message to a new contact waits for you to approve it before it sends. Later cadence steps send on their own.
  • Conversion — when a lead is won, you convert it: Neev records what it became (a business or a customer) and marks the lead won, keeping the link for your records.
Note
The first automated touch in Phase 1 is email. WhatsApp follow-ups only fire after the contact has replied or opted in — Neev never sends a cold WhatsApp on its own.

Common workflows

1
Add the lead
Create a lead with a name and contact details, pick the source, and assign an owner. It starts in the new stage.
2
Approve the first touch
When Neev drafts the first follow-up, it lands in the approval tray. Read it, then approve to send. This keeps you in control of the very first message to a new contact.
3
Let the cadence run
After the first touch, the intro / value / nudge / breakup steps send on their own. Each is drafted in the lead's language; consent is checked at send time, so a contact who hasn't opted in is skipped, not messaged.
4
Track the conversation
Open a lead to see the whole thread — every inbound reply and outbound touch in order. Move the lead forward as it warms up.
5
Convert the lead
When a lead is won, convert it: pick what it became and Neev records the link and marks the lead won.

Role notes

This is an Owner area, with the Manager able to approve first touches (the Capability lists both as approvers). The Owner views leads and threads, creates and updates them, approves and sends touches, configures the cadence, and converts won leads. The six permissions behind it — read, write, convert, approve, send, and cadence-write — all sit with the Owner by default.

Once the Capability is enabled you'll be able to grant a specific permission (say, read-only or approve-only) to a custom role — until then, the Owner holds them.

Note
Heads-up: because this Capability isn't registered into the live access catalog yet, even the Owner doesn't carry these permissions today. That binds at enablement in a later release.

Tips & time-savers

Tip
Park a lead in nurture instead of marking it lost when the timing is just wrong. Nurture re-enters the cadence later, so a "not now" becomes a "circle back" without you having to remember.

Keep the owner field honest — the leads board sorts and filters by owner, so an accurately-assigned lead is one you can actually find again.

Gotchas

Warning
A skipped touch is not a failure — it is the consent gate working. If a contact hasn't opted in for a channel, Neev records the touch as skipped rather than sending it. Don't re-send manually to "fix" it; that's the guardrail that keeps you compliant.
Warning
Converting a lead is a forward move. A converted lead transitions to won and carries its link to the customer record — treat the conversion as the end of the pursuit, not a step you redo.

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