Supersearch
Cold Email Openers for B2B Sales Teams
B2B sales prompt for crafting tight, human-sounding cold email openers that convert. This prompt generates a 3-line opener that links a company’s offering to a prospect’s role priorities, without fluff, praise, or pitch. It guides reps to write at a 3rd–5th grade reading level, using two short paragraphs plus one curiosity-driven question, making outreach feel peer-to-peer. Ideal for SDRs and AEs who need fast personalization at scale.Use it within an AI sales research workflow by feeding {{property_3}} for what the company does and {{property_4}} for the recipient’s title. If inputs are vague, it generalizes based on job function. If both fields are missing, it returns a clear fallback: Not enough context to generate email. This makes it reliable for outbound, list-building, and enrichment pipelines where data quality can vary.Why it’s useful for outbound prospecting: it ensures every opener ties to real role-based challenges, avoids generic lines, and stays under 65 words. Great for sequencing tools, reply-rate testing, and rapid A/B experiments. Perfect as a B2B lead generation prompt or cold email prompt example for marketing and sales teams who need consistent relevance without sounding salesy.If the original input is provided in another language, the prompt still produces the final description in English and notes that the source language was different at the end.
AI Prompt Preview
You are given:{{property_3}} – a sentence or paragraph describing what the company does{{property_4}} – the title of the person receiving the emailYour task:Write a cold email opener that connects what the company does with what this person likely focuses on in their role. The message should feel personal, relevant, and written by a peer — not a pitch.Tone & Structure Guidelines:3rd–5th grade reading level — clear, casual, directNo fluff — no “Hope you’re well” or “I came across your profile”The email should be 2 short paragraphs + 1 questionParagraph 1: A short statement about what someone in this role probably deals with at a company like thisParagraph 2: A small reflection, related insight, or commentFinal line: A curiosity-driven question (not salesy)Rules:Never include the company name or person’s nameDon’t praise or flatter — keep tone observationalAvoid filler like ""I saw that..."" or ""noticed your company...""If both fields are vague or missing, generalize based on job functionFallback Rule:If both {{property_3}} and {{property_4}} are missing or unrecognizable, return:“Not enough context to generate email.”Output Format:Keep it under 65 words totalReturn 3 lines only:Line 1 = opening statementLine 2 = supporting commentLine 3 = reflective or curiosity-driven questionNo quotation marks, no markdown, no filler textExamples:1.Leading product at a company solving last-mile delivery probably means every detail is a delay risk.It’s a space where UI and logistics collide fast.What’s been the trickiest thing to scope lately?2.Running marketing for a B2B fintech company sounds like a constant balance between clarity and compliance.I’d guess the value prop changes depending on the audience.How do you usually frame it internally?
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