outbound-email-strategy
Outbound Email Strategy
Expert outbound email execution for B2B sales and business development. Build high-response cold outreach campaigns that feel personalized and drive conversations.
Quick Start
- Define ICP — Who are you targeting and why?
- Research Prospects — Find personalization signals
- Craft the Hook — Lead with value, not a pitch
- Build Sequence — 5-7 touches across channels
- Handle Responses — Script for every outcome
ICP Framework
Define Your Target
| Element | Question | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Title | Who decides? | VP of Engineering |
| Company | What type? | B2B SaaS, $1-10M ARR |
| Pain | What hurts? | Content isn't converting |
| Trigger | Why NOW? | Just raised funding |
| Proof | Why YOU? | Helped similar company get result |
Questions to Answer
- What's their job title/role?
- What company size/type?
- What industry or vertical?
- What pain are they experiencing RIGHT NOW?
- Why should THEY specifically care?
Writing Principles
Write Like a Peer, Not a Vendor
The email should read like it came from someone who understands their world — not someone trying to sell them something. Use contractions. Read it aloud. If it sounds like marketing copy, rewrite it.
Every Sentence Must Earn Its Place
Cold email is ruthlessly short. If a sentence doesn't move the reader toward replying, cut it.
Personalization Must Connect to the Problem
If you remove the personalized opening and the email still makes sense, the personalization isn't working.
Lead with Their World, Not Yours
"You/your" should dominate over "I/we." Don't open with who you are.
One Ask, Low Friction
Interest-based CTAs ("Worth exploring?" / "Would this be useful?") beat meeting requests.
Subject Lines
Short, boring, internal-looking. The subject line's only job is to get the email opened.
Rules:
- 2-4 words, lowercase, no punctuation
- Should look like it came from a colleague
- No product pitches, no urgency, no emojis
Examples:
- "reply rates"
- "hiring ops"
- "Q2 forecast"
Email Sequence Framework
Sequence Types
| Type | Duration | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Classic Cold | 7 emails, 2 weeks | Standard outreach |
| Fast-Track | 5 emails, 1 week | Quick follow-up |
| Long-Play | 12-14 emails, 4-6 weeks | Enterprise/Nurture |
| Event-Based | 3-5 emails | Trigger-specific |
Sequence Flow
| Day | Goal | Length | CTA | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1: Introduction | 0 | Awareness + relevance | 50-100w | Soft ask |
| 2: Value Proof | 2 | Establish credibility | 75-125w | Meeting time |
| 3: Different Angle | 4 | Alternative pain point | 50-75w | Yes/no question |
| 4: Social Proof | 6 | Peer validation | 60-90w | Simple reply |
| 5: Resource Share | 8 | Give before asking | 40-60w | Soft |
| 6: Direct Ask | 10 | Be straightforward | 30-50w | Meeting request |
| 7: Breakup | 14 | Final attempt + opt-out | 25-40w | "Close your file?" |
Optimal Send Times
Tue–Thu, 10–11 AM or 2–3 PM in recipient's timezone.
Personalization Framework
4-Level System
| Level | Time | What to Include |
|---|---|---|
| Tier 1 (Basic) | 30 sec | Name, company, industry |
| Tier 2 (Researched) | 2-3 min | News, LinkedIn content, job postings |
| Tier 3 (Deep) | 10-15 min | Podcast quotes, custom video, mutual connections |
Research Sources
- LinkedIn posts and activity
- Company news/press releases
- Job postings (indicate priorities)
- Podcast appearances
- Conference presentations
- Mutual connections
Personalization Patterns
Content-Based:
"Your post on X resonated — especially the point about Y."
Hiring Signal:
"Noticed you're hiring X — usually means Y pain."
Company News:
"Saw the news about X. Insight: Y."
Mutual Connection:
"X mentioned you're working on Y. Made me think of Z."
Message Components
The Hook (First Line)
Make it impossible to ignore. Prove you know them.
Good:
- "Saw your post about X — made me think of Y"
- "Noticed you're hiring X — usually means Y"
- "Your talk on X was Y"
Bad:
- "Hope this email finds you well"
- "I'm reaching out because..."
- "I came across your profile..."
The Observation
Show you understand their world.
"Companies at your stage usually struggle with X" "Saw you're scaling — that usually creates Y"
The Value Offer
Give before you ask.
- "Made you a quick audit"
- "Put together resource that might help"
- "Happy to share how we solved this for X"
The CTA
Make it natural and low-friction.
Good:
- "Worth a look?"
- "Interested?"
- "Want me to send it over?"
Bad:
- "Let's book a 30-minute call"
- "When are you free to chat?"
Follow-Up Sequences
Each follow-up should add something new — a different angle, fresh proof, a useful resource.
Follow-Up Templates
Email 2 (Value Bump):
"Quick follow-up — additional insight. [Restate offer]."
Email 3 (Different Angle):
"New observation about their business. Thought this might be relevant."
Email 4 (Social Proof):
"Just helped similar company with result. Thought of you."
Email 5 (Break-Up):
"Closing the loop. If problem isn't a priority, no worries. Door's open."
Response Handling
Classification & SLA
| Response Type | Example | SLA | Action |
|---|---|---|---|
| Positive | "Yes, let's talk" | 5 min | Book meeting |
| Curious | "Tell me more" | 1 hr | Send proof point |
| Objection | "Too small" | Same day | Handle with framework |
| Timing | "Not now, Q3" | Same day | Set reminder |
| Referral | "Talk to CFO" | 1 hr | Reach out to referral |
| Hard No | "Not interested" | 24 hr | Polite close |
Response Scripts
Positive Response:
"Thanks! Here's what I promised. Quick question: [qualifying question]? If [condition], [next step]."
"Not Now" Response:
"No problem. Would it make sense to reconnect in [timeframe]?"
"What's This?" Response:
"In short: [1-sentence value]. [Reoffer value]. Worth a look?"
Skeptical Response:
"Fair to ask. [Proof point]. Happy to share case study if useful."
Cold Call Scripts
Talk Track
- Opener: Permission + value in one line
- Discovery: 3 questions (current flow, pain metric, priority)
- Value Hits: Match pain, cite proof, propose next step
- Objections: Acknowledge → brief proof → micro-commit
- Close: Time-bound CTA + send calendar while on call
Performance Benchmarks
| Metric | Good | Great | Exceptional |
|---|---|---|---|
| Open Rate | 35-45% | 45-55% | 55%+ |
| Reply Rate | 3-8% | 8-15% | 15%+ |
| Meeting Booked | 1-3% | 3-6% | 6%+ |
High Reply Rate Signals
- Personalized opening
- Clear value prop in first 2 sentences
- Similar-company social proof
- Low-friction CTA
- Clean plain-text formatting
A/B Testing Strategy
Test Elements
| Element | Test Approach |
|---|---|
| Subject lines | Question vs. Statement |
| First line | Hook types: signal vs. pain vs. question |
| CTA | Direct vs. soft vs. value offer |
| Timing | Morning vs. afternoon |
| Length | Short (50w) vs. medium (100w) |
Method
Send 50/50 split to 100 prospects. Wait 48h, measure opens + replies. Winner goes to remaining list.
Volume Guidelines
| Stage | Volume | Focus |
|---|---|---|
| Testing (Week 1-2) | 20-50/day | Find what works |
| Scaling (Week 3-4) | 50-100/day | Systematize |
| Cruising (Month 2+) | 100+/day | Maintain and iterate |
Rule: Never sacrifice personalization for volume.
Compliance & Deliverability
Authentication (Required)
- SPF: Sender Policy Framework
- DKIM: DomainKeys Identified Mail
- DMARC: Domain-based Message Authentication
Spam Rate Thresholds
- Hard ceiling: 0.3% complaint rate
- Target: <0.1% for reliable inbox
Best Practices
- Keep sending identity stable
- Warm up new domains gradually
- One-click unsubscribe (List-Unsubscribe-Post)
- Follow CAN-SPAM requirements
Common Mistakes
| Mistake | Why It Fails | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Generic opener | "Hope you're well" ignored | Specific observation |
| Feature dump | They don't care yet | Lead with their pain |
| Multiple CTAs | Confusion | Single clear ask |
| Long emails | Won't be read | Under 75 words |
| Same angle each email | No reason to reply | New value per touch |
| No personalization | Feels like spam | Add research |
The Outbound Math
Example:
- 100 emails/day × 5 days = 500 emails/week
- 5% response rate = 25 responses
- 50% positive = 12-13 interested
- 50% book calls = 6-7 calls/week
- 20% close = 1-2 customers/week
That's 4-8 customers/month from outbound.
Related Skills
- lead-generation-and-demand - Demand generation
- sales-strategy-and-enablement - Sales processes
- conversion-rate-optimization - CRO frameworks