Three years into my career, restless and looking for something uncomfortable to try, I offered to help a friend get leads for his computer sales business. No tools. No LinkedIn. No cold email. We walked into logistics companies in Mannadi and Parrys, Chennai. Cold. No appointments. No introductions.
We visited around 20 companies. Most said no. Two or three showed real interest. But I was 23 and I had just learned something no job had taught me: rejection only feels unbearable until you walk toward it repeatedly. After that it just feels like weather.
The same principles that worked in those Chennai logistics offices work in cold email today. The medium changed. Human psychology did not.
The fundamental principle: write for one person
The biggest mistake in cold email is writing for a segment instead of a person. The difference isn't subtle — it's the difference between being deleted and getting a reply.
The anatomy of a cold email that gets replies
One job only: get the email opened. Nothing more.
High-performing patterns: a specific observation about their business, a direct reference to a mutual context, or a simple human opener like "Quick thought."
The most important sentence in the email. It must make the prospect feel this email is about them, not you.
Two to three sentences maximum. The problem you solve and why it's relevant to them specifically.
Not features. Not pricing. Not your company history. Just the problem and its relevance — nothing else.
Keep it small. The goal of the first email is to start a conversation. A simple question starts a conversation. A calendar request starts a negotiation.
The personalisation framework that actually works
Not all personalisation is equal. There are three levels — and which level you invest in should depend on the account's value to you.
Account Level
What is happening at this company right now that makes your solution relevant? A recent hire, a market expansion, a funding round, a product launch — anything that creates context for your outreach.
Role Level
What does this specific role care about? A VP of Sales cares about pipeline. A Head of Marketing cares about attribution. A Founder cares about burn and speed. Write to what the role is measured on.
Individual Level
What has this specific person said or written that gives you a genuine hook? A LinkedIn post, a podcast interview, a product announcement they authored. For accounts above ₹20 lakhs in potential annual value, this level is worth the investment. For scaled outbound, Level 1 and 2 are sufficient if done genuinely.
The follow-up sequence that gets replies
Specific observation + relevant problem + low friction question
Lead with something real you noticed about their business. Connect it to a problem you solve. End with a yes/no question, not a calendar link.
A different approach to the same problem
Not "just following up." Come at the same challenge from a different direction — a different use case, a different framing, a different consequence of not solving it.
One specific result from a similar company
Brief. Relevant. A single sentence on what a comparable company achieved — not a case study, just a credibility signal that makes replying feel lower risk.
"I'll assume the timing isn't right and won't reach out again."
This final email gets a disproportionate number of replies. The human tone and the explicit out create a low-pressure environment where a quick reply feels easy. No sales language. Just honesty.
The numbers to aim for
| Metric | Target Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Open rate | 30–60% | Driven by subject line and sender domain reputation |
| Reply rate | 5–15% | Driven by messaging quality and targeting relevance |
| Positive reply rate | 3–5% | Replies that convert to conversations or meetings |
Most founders try to fix things in exactly the wrong order. The right order:
Key takeaways
- Write for one person — specificity at scale is the goal
- Subject line job: get the email opened, nothing more
- Opening line must demonstrate genuine research
- Body maximum three sentences — problem and relevance only
- CTA should be a question, not a calendar request
- Real personalisation operates at account, role, and individual level
- Follow up with new angles, not reminders
- End every sequence with a clean break-up email