Being a first time salesman responsible for acquiring customers at TINT, I had done thousands of cold emails and had the same results: emails get ignored and not knowing what to do next. After many failures, I have learned some tips and used some tools that I want to share with you so you can soon close big brands and large clients in a matter of days, not weeks. All it takes is these 3 steps on how to cold email effectively.
Step 1. Finding the email
Read this post on how to find anyone’s email in less than 2 minutes.
Step 2. Crafting the message
After you find the person’s email you want to speak with, this is where you need to spend some time: crafting an email message that will get the other person to respond. If there are 3 things to remember whenever you are crafting a cold email message, it’s this:
- Keep it SHORT
Keep your message short. People are busier than ever today and get tons of emails today. If they see your email and open it, only to find 5 paragraphs they need to read through, you can expect them to delete your message immediately. No one has time to read an essay today, so do NOT craft an essay.
Keep your message short and spaced so the message is perceived as easy to read. A good rule of thumb is that you should be able to get through the email in 30 seconds. Again, your goal is to get the person intrigued enough to email you back.
- Stay RELEVANT
This is how you stand apart from all the rest of the world’s cold emails. In both your subject line and first few sentences of your cold email, do NOT make your email look like a spam or a template. Worst mistake ever if you do. If someone sees it as a template, the first thing they will think is “this person had no decency to spend some time to craft me a relevant email, so why should I spend time answering them back?”
That being said, put the person’s brand in the subject line, with something along the lines of “Love what ______ is Doing…Possible Chat?” Next, in the address, actually put the person’s first name. Whenever I see Dear Sir, or To Whom It May Concern, I instantly know it’s a template and press delete. Again, if you don’t want to spend time finding my name, I don’t want to spend time chatting with you.
Lastly, in the body of the message, mention about how you found them (referral? blog post?) while mentioning their brand as much as possible. The more relevant you can make it by including their name or brand name, the more the person will know you didn’t just spam them and took time to address them.
- Make it ACTIONABLE
No email is worth answering if there is no call-to-action. At the end of every email, there should be a reason why the other party should reply back to you. Do you want to schedule a meeting/call, or do you want them to check something out? Specify it loud and clear at the end of your message so there is no confusion on next steps.
Now what happens when you do all this perfectly and you don’t hear anything? That’s where good follow-up skills and key tools come into play.
3. Following up
It is very common that you will not hear from the other person after you cold email them for the first time. That’s why you need to follow up with them. Here are some tips and tools I do and use that have increased my conversions on getting people to email me back.
Follow up message:
- After your first cold email, wait at least 2-3 days to give the other person some time.
- If they don’t get back to you, follow up with a short, respectable email along the lines of “Hey ____, I just wanted to see if you had any thoughts on my previous email. Would love to chat whenever you have time and am super excited to see what we could potentially do with you.”
- If that doesn’t work, wait until you have some significant news like how you landed one of their biggest competitors as a client and you want to help them too or how you launched a new feature/product line that they’d love.
Whatever you do, do not email every day asking them to respond to you. You will come off needy, desperate, and not fun to do business with. Usually if they don’t respond, it their way of saying “no” to you. Tough, but the harsh truth.
But you want to know why they didn’t respond? Was it because it got lost in their inbox? Or was it because they read your email and was not interested? If it were the latter, you know you should move on. But if it were the former, you have to keep following up! This is where these tools come in handy.
Follow up tools:
Saving the best for last, SalesHandy has put together a comprehensive curated list of top cold email software. These tools will save you from going insane and close deals DAILY.
Use case: I need to send an email out to someone in New York at 8am because I know he will be checking his email at that time with no distractions. However, I’m in California, and don’t want to wake up at 5am to send it to him. I can use tools to schedule that.
Better yet, let’s say I sent a cold email out and want to be reminded to follow up with this person 4 days from now if they didn’t get back to me.
Do you have any tips or strategies you use to send cold emails not mentioned above?