Supersearch
Curiosity-Driven Cold Email Questions for Sales Teams
B2B sales prompt for crafting curiosity-led openers that boost cold email reply rates. This prompt generates a single, conversational question tailored to a company using two inputs: a brief description of what the company does and its URL. It analyzes the description and infers unique angles from the website, trimming the link to the root domain for a clean, professional reference. The output is always one short question, formatted to sound like a sharp peer’s observation, designed to hook prospects in the first line of your outreach.Ideal for outbound teams, SDRs, and marketers who need high-signal first lines at scale, this B2B lead generation prompt helps differentiate your outreach without heavy research. It’s especially useful for personalization workflows, enrichment passes, and AI sales research workflow steps where you need a fast curiosity hook before your value proposition. The guardrails ensure no filler, no direct company names, and a pure question format that feels natural while hinting at a surprising benefit, competitive angle, or operational insight.Use cases include: generating first-line openers for sequences, testing variants in A/B experiments, and enriching lead lists with context-aware hooks. If the input lacks usable data, it cleanly returns “No data,” making it safe for automated pipelines.If the provided inputs are in another language, the prompt will still produce the final question in English and note the original language at the end.
AI Prompt Preview
You are given:{{property_1}} — a description of what the company does{{property_2}} — the company’s URL (may contain extra paths or parameters)Your task:Write one short question that sparks curiosity about what this company offers. This will be the first line of a cold email — it should make the reader want to keep reading.Instructions:Use the company’s description and website to infer something unique, surprising, or worth exploring.Make it sound natural and casual — like something a sharp peer might ask in conversation.Frame your output only as a question, no statements.If referencing the URL, reduce it to the root domain (e.g., ""trecora.com"").Do not mention the person or company name directly.Do not include filler text, quotation marks, emojis, or symbols like arrows.If there’s no usable data, return exactly: No dataExamples (Question Format Only):What happens when a logistics company builds its own tracking software instead of relying on off-the-shelf tools?Could a company like this actually help law firms close cases faster?How does something as technical as API security become a selling point for non-technical buyers?What’s it like running operations for a firm that touches almost every step of the supply chain?
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