Tested cold email templates for sales outreach, partnership proposals, link building, PR pitches, investor outreach, job inquiries, and agency prospecting. Each includes the subject line, full email copy, and a follow-up template.
Last updated: March 2026 · Reading time: 16 min
The average cold email reply rate is 1-5%, according to Woodpecker’s 2024 analysis of 20 million cold emails. But the top 10% of cold emailers consistently achieve 15-25% reply rates. The difference isn’t luck or timing. It’s structure. Every cold email that works follows a pattern: relevant opener, specific value, low-friction ask.
Cold email: An unsolicited email sent to a recipient with no prior relationship. Unlike spam, a cold email is targeted, personalized, and sent to a specific person for a specific reason.
We scored the 12 templates below on three criteria:
| Criteria | What we evaluated |
|---|---|
| Personalization depth | Is it specific to the recipient, or could it be sent to 1,000 people unchanged? |
| Value clarity | Can the reader understand what they gain in under 5 seconds? |
| Ask size | Is the CTA small enough to say yes to without thinking hard? |
“We send about 200 targeted cold emails a month for our own outreach and client campaigns. The templates that consistently clear 20% reply rates share one trait: the first sentence makes it impossible to think this email was sent to 500 people. If your opening could apply to anyone, your email is already dead.”
Hardik Shah, Founder of ScaleGrowth.Digital
Sales cold emails have the lowest tolerance for fluff. Your prospect gets 50+ sales emails per week (Gartner, 2024). You have 2-3 seconds to prove relevance before they delete. The templates below open with something specific about the prospect’s business, not a compliment about their LinkedIn profile.
Subject line: Quick thought on [prospect’s company] + [specific area]
Reply rate benchmark: 18-22%
Hi [First Name],
I noticed [specific observation about their business, e.g., “your pricing page doesn’t mention enterprise plans, but your blog content targets VP-level buyers”]. That gap usually means you’re leaving 15-20% of qualified traffic without a conversion path.
We helped [similar company] fix exactly this problem. They added a demo-request CTA on 4 pages and booked 23 more qualified meetings in Q3.
Worth a 15-minute call to see if it applies to [company]?
[Your name]
[Title], [Company]
Why it works: The opening observation is specific enough that the prospect knows you looked at their site. The case study is concrete (23 meetings, Q3). The ask is small (15 minutes) and conditional (“to see if it applies”), which reduces pressure.
Follow-up (3 days later):
Subject: Re: Quick thought on [prospect’s company] + [specific area]
Hi [First Name],
Following up on my note from Tuesday. I put together a quick 2-minute breakdown of what I’d change on your [specific page]. Want me to send it over?
[Your name]
Subject line: Congrats on [specific event]. Quick question.
Reply rate benchmark: 20-28%
Hi [First Name],
Saw that [company] just [trigger event: raised a round, launched a new product, hired a Head of Marketing, opened a new market, hit a milestone]. Congrats. That usually means [implication of the event, e.g., “you’re about to scale your outbound team”].
When [similar company] was at the same stage, they used [your product/service] to [specific outcome, e.g., “cut their ramp time from 6 weeks to 2 weeks for new SDRs”].
If [scaling outbound] is on your plate right now, I’d love 15 minutes to share how.
[Your name]
[Title], [Company]
Why it works: Trigger events (funding rounds, new hires, product launches) signal buying intent. Your email arrives when the problem is already on their mind. The congratulation is genuine and specific, not a fake rapport builder. Timing this email within 48 hours of the event is critical.
Partnership emails fail when they lead with what you want (“We’d love to partner with you”). The winning approach flips it: lead with what the partner gains. Partnership cold emails that lead with partner benefit get 3.2x more replies than those that lead with the sender’s ask, according to a 2024 analysis by Hunter.io.
Subject line: [Your company] + [their company] audience overlap idea
Reply rate benchmark: 15-20%
Hi [First Name],
I run [your company]. We serve [your audience, e.g., “B2B SaaS marketing teams doing $5-50M ARR”]. Your audience at [their company] looks similar based on [evidence: their content topics, customer logos, LinkedIn data].
Here’s what I’m thinking: a co-created [asset type: webinar, guide, template, research report] on [topic both audiences care about]. We’d promote it to our [X,000] subscribers, you’d promote to yours. Both audiences get something useful, both brands grow their lists.
We did this with [named partner] last quarter and it generated [specific result, e.g., “1,400 new subscribers for each brand”].
Interested? I can send a one-page brief with the proposed topic and timeline.
[Your name]
[Title], [Company]
Why it works: It shows you’ve done the homework (audience overlap evidence). The proposed format is specific (not “let’s collaborate somehow”). The proof point (1,400 subscribers each) makes the ROI clear. And the ask (“I can send a one-page brief”) is low-effort for the recipient.
Subject line: [Your product] + [their product] integration?
Reply rate benchmark: 12-18%
Hi [First Name],
[X] of our customers already use [their product] alongside ours. They’ve been asking for a native integration that [specific use case, e.g., “syncs campaign data from your platform into our reporting dashboard”].
We’d build and maintain the integration on our end. Your team’s involvement would be minimal: mostly API access and a logo approval for our marketplace listing.
For reference, our integration with [similar partner] drives [X] new signups/month to their platform.
Worth a quick chat to explore?
[Your name]
[Title], [Company]
Why it works: Customer demand provides social proof and reduces perceived risk (“your customers already want this”). Offering to do the work removes the biggest objection (resource commitment). The reference integration with results gives them a clear picture of what success looks like.
Link building outreach has some of the lowest reply rates in cold email: 3-8% average. The reason is volume. Site owners receive dozens of link requests weekly, and 90% of them are generic “I found a broken link on your page” templates. The templates below work because they offer genuine value, not just a link swap.
Subject line: Missing resource on your [topic] page
Reply rate benchmark: 8-12%
Hi [First Name],
I was reading your guide on [specific page title] and noticed you link to [2-3 resources they currently link to]. Great list.
We just published [your resource title]: [URL]. It covers [specific angle their current resources don’t cover, e.g., “the 2026 benchmark data that most guides are still missing”].
Might be a useful addition for your readers. Either way, solid guide.
[Your name]
Why it works: It references the specific page (not “your website”). It acknowledges what they already have. And it explains why your resource adds value their current links don’t cover. The “either way” close removes pressure.
Subject line: Original data for your [topic] article
Reply rate benchmark: 10-15%
Hi [First Name],
I noticed your article on [topic] cites [source] for the [specific stat] data point. We just ran our own study on this: we analyzed [X,000 data points] and found that the number is actually [your finding].
Here’s the full study with methodology: [URL]
If you’re updating that article, you’re welcome to cite our data. Happy to provide additional context or a quote if useful.
[Your name]
[Title], [Company]
Why it works: Original data is the #1 reason journalists and bloggers link to sources. You’re not asking for a favor; you’re offering a better, more current source for their existing content. The offer to provide a quote makes their job easier.
Journalists get 50-100+ pitches per day, according to Muck Rack’s 2024 State of Journalism report. 68% of journalists say fewer than 25% of pitches they receive are relevant. The bar is high, but the formula is simple: match their beat, lead with the news, keep it under 150 words.
Subject line: [Specific data point or news hook] + [their beat]
Reply rate benchmark: 8-15%
Hi [First Name],
I read your piece on [their recent article]. Related angle that might work for your readers:
[One paragraph: the news hook. What happened, why it matters, what data supports it. Be specific. E.g., “We surveyed 500 B2B marketers and found that 62% are shifting budget from paid social to organic search in 2026. That’s a reversal from 2024 when 71% were increasing paid social spend.”]
I can provide:
Want me to send the data over?
[Your name]
[Title], [Company]
[Phone number]
Why it works: Referencing their recent article proves relevance. The pitch is a complete story angle, not “I’d love to be featured.” Offering raw data, quotes, AND additional sources makes their job 10x easier. The phone number signals professionalism and availability.
Subject line: Source for [topic they cover]: [your credential]
Reply rate benchmark: 6-12%
Hi [First Name],
I follow your coverage of [beat]. If you ever need a source on [specific topic area], I’m available.
Quick background: I’m [name], [title] at [company]. I’ve [specific credibility: “managed $4M+ in ad spend across 50 B2B accounts” or “built email programs for 3 companies from 0 to 100K subscribers”].
Recent coverage: [1-2 links to past quotes, interviews, or your own published work]
No pitch here. Just putting this on your radar for when you need a practitioner perspective on [topic].
[Your name]
[Phone] | [Email] | [LinkedIn]
Why it works: This is a long-game play. Journalists maintain source lists and return to reliable sources repeatedly. “No pitch here” is disarming and true. When they do need a source, you’re top of mind. Include your phone number because journalists often work on tight deadlines.
Investors receive 100+ cold pitches per week (NFX, 2024). A warm intro is always better, but when you don’t have one, a cold email can work if you lead with traction, not vision. VCs spend an average of 3 minutes and 44 seconds reviewing a pitch deck (DocSend, 2023). Your email needs to earn those 3 minutes.
Subject line: [Company]: [Most impressive metric] in [timeframe]
Reply rate benchmark: 5-10%
Hi [First Name],
I’m building [Company], a [one-sentence description, e.g., “B2B payments platform for construction companies”]. We’re raising a [$X] [stage] round.
Quick numbers:
I’m reaching out because your investment in [their portfolio company] suggests you understand [the space or problem]. [One sentence on how your company relates to that thesis.]
Can I send you our deck?
[Your name]
Founder, [Company]
[LinkedIn URL]
Why it works: Numbers first, story second. The connection to their portfolio company shows you’ve done research. “Can I send you our deck?” is a smaller ask than “Can we meet?” and gives the investor control over the next step. Keep this email under 150 words total.
70% of jobs are never publicly advertised, according to LinkedIn’s 2024 workforce data. Cold emailing hiring managers directly bypasses the applicant tracking system and puts you in front of the decision-maker. The key is to lead with what you can do for them, not what you want from them.
Subject line: [Specific skill] + [their company’s current challenge]
Reply rate benchmark: 10-18%
Hi [First Name],
I’ve been following [company]’s [specific initiative, e.g., “expansion into the UK market” or “new product line launch”]. Based on [evidence], it looks like you could use someone who [specific skill set].
Quick context on me: I spent the last [X years] at [company/companies] doing exactly that. Highlights:
I’m not sure if you’re hiring for this right now, but if it’s on the roadmap, I’d love 15 minutes to chat.
[Your name]
[LinkedIn URL]
[Portfolio URL if relevant]
Why it works: Connecting your skills to their current initiative shows strategic thinking. Three specific achievements with numbers prove competence faster than a resume. “I’m not sure if you’re hiring” is honest and reduces pressure on both sides.
Agency cold emails are the most hated category in business inboxes. “We noticed your website could use improvement” is the fastest way to get deleted. The agencies that win clients through cold email do the opposite: they show specific work upfront. According to a 2024 HubSpot survey, 78% of buyers say they’re more likely to respond to a sales email that includes personalized insights about their business.
Subject line: 3 things I’d change on [their website/campaign]
Reply rate benchmark: 12-20%
Hi [First Name],
I took a look at [their website/specific campaign]. Three things stood out:
I run [your company]. We work with [type of clients] on [what you do]. Happy to walk through these in detail if any of them are on your radar.
[Your name]
[Title], [Company]
Why it works: You’ve already done the work. The three issues are specific, quantified, and actionable. This isn’t “we can help with your digital strategy.” It’s “here are three things costing you money right now.” The prospect can verify each point in 60 seconds, which builds instant credibility.
Subject line: How [similar company] grew [metric] by [percentage]
Reply rate benchmark: 10-15%
Hi [First Name],
We recently worked with [similar company in same industry/stage] to [specific outcome, e.g., “increase their organic traffic from 8,000 to 47,000 monthly visits in 6 months”].
They had a similar setup to [prospect’s company]: [1-2 specific similarities, e.g., “B2B SaaS, 50-person team, selling to mid-market, strong product but no content engine”].
The short version: we [key action, e.g., “built 35 bottom-funnel pages targeting buyer-intent keywords and restructured their site architecture”]. The result was [outcome] in [timeframe].
If [growth area, e.g., “organic acquisition”] is a priority for [company] right now, I can share the full breakdown.
[Your name]
[Title], [Company]
Why it works: The case study is specific enough to be credible (8K to 47K, 6 months, 35 pages). Drawing parallels between the case study client and the prospect (“similar setup”) makes it feel relevant, not generic. The ask (“I can share the full breakdown”) is informational, not a sales meeting request.
The templates above will underperform if you ignore these fundamentals. Cold email is a system, not a single message. Here are the practices that separate 2% reply rates from 20%:
Personalize the first sentence. The first line determines whether the rest gets read. “I came across your company” is not personalization. “I saw your talk at SaaStr on PLG pricing” is. Spend 2-3 minutes per prospect researching their LinkedIn activity, recent blog posts, podcast appearances, or company news. The ROI on that time is enormous.
Keep it under 125 words. Cold emails between 50-125 words get the highest reply rates (Boomerang, 2023). Every word past 125 reduces your reply rate. Cut ruthlessly. If your email has more than 3 paragraphs, it’s too long.
One CTA, framed as a question. “Want me to send a quick breakdown?” outperforms “Let me know when you’re free for a 30-minute call.” Questions invite responses. Statements invite procrastination. And make the CTA easy to say yes to. “15-minute call” beats “hour-long strategy session.”
Send 3-4 follow-ups. 44% of salespeople give up after 1 follow-up, but 80% of deals require 5+ touchpoints (Brevet Group, 2024). Your follow-ups should add new value (a case study, a relevant article, a personalized insight), not just “checking in.”
Send Tuesday through Thursday, 8-10 AM local time. Yesware’s analysis of 500,000+ cold emails found Tuesday through Thursday mornings produce the highest reply rates. Mondays are inbox-clearing days, and Fridays are wind-down days. Match the recipient’s timezone, not yours.
| Cold Email Metric | Average | Top 10% |
|---|---|---|
| Open rate | 25-35% | 50%+ |
| Reply rate | 1-5% | 15-25% |
| Meeting booked rate | 0.5-2% | 5-10% |
| Optimal email length | 50-125 words | 75-100 words |
| Follow-ups before stopping | 1-2 | 3-4 |
Across all 12 templates, five patterns consistently drive higher reply rates:
1. Proof before ask. Every template provides evidence (a case study number, a specific observation, original data) before making the ask. Cold emails that lead with proof get 2.4x more replies than those that lead with the ask (Lemlist, 2024).
2. The ask is always small. “Want me to send the breakdown?” is easier to answer than “Let’s schedule a 45-minute deep dive.” Small asks get “yes” responses. From there, the conversation naturally escalates. Start small, build momentum.
3. Specificity signals competence. “We grew traffic by 488%” tells the reader you either know your numbers or you’re making them up. But “We grew organic traffic from 8,000 to 47,000 monthly visits over 6 months by targeting 35 bottom-funnel keywords” is specific enough to be verifiable, which makes it believable.
4. No “I hope this email finds you well.” Filler phrases signal a template. Cut them. Start with something that proves you know who you’re emailing. The first 8 words determine whether the rest gets read.
5. Follow-ups add value, not guilt. “Just checking in” and “Bumping this to the top of your inbox” are guilt-based follow-ups. They don’t work. Follow-ups that share a relevant article, case study, or new data point give the recipient a new reason to respond.
10+ follow-up templates for after meetings, proposals, demos, and cold outreach.
Subject lines by type: curiosity, urgency, personalization, and more.
A good cold email reply rate is 5-10%. The average across all industries is 1-5%, according to Woodpecker’s 2024 analysis of 20 million cold emails. Top performers consistently achieve 15-25% by combining deep personalization, specific value propositions, and low-friction CTAs.
Keep cold emails between 50 and 125 words. Research from Boomerang shows this range produces the highest reply rates. Every word past 125 reduces your chances of getting a response. If your email has more than 3 short paragraphs, cut it down.
Send 3-4 follow-up emails, spaced 3-5 days apart. 80% of deals require 5+ touchpoints, but 44% of salespeople give up after just 1 follow-up (Brevet Group, 2024). Each follow-up should add new value, not just say “checking in.”
Cold email is legal in the US under CAN-SPAM, as long as you include a physical address, a working unsubscribe link, and don’t use deceptive subject lines. In the EU, GDPR requires a legitimate business interest basis. In Canada, CASL is stricter and generally requires consent. Always check local regulations and include an opt-out mechanism.
Tuesday through Thursday, between 8-10 AM in the recipient’s local timezone. Yesware’s analysis of 500,000+ cold emails found these days and times produce the highest open and reply rates. Avoid Monday mornings (inbox overload) and Friday afternoons (weekend mode).
We build targeted outreach campaigns for brands that want meetings, not just sends. From prospect research to follow-up sequences, we handle the system.