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Generate Informal Food Conversation Starters for Sales Teams
Cold email prompt example for sparking local-food rapport in outbound. This prompt auto-generates a single, casual sentence that references a famous dish tied to the prospect’s city or state, using nicknames when relevant and skipping formal greetings. It asks what they think about a specific local staple, assumes they’ve tried it, and nudges for opinions or recommendations. Perfect for B2B sales teams personalizing first-touch messages on LinkedIn or email, it turns geographic data like City and State into a quick, authentic icebreaker that feels human.Use cases include outbound prospecting, social selling, and reply-rate lifts in cold campaigns. Feed it CRM fields such as Company HQ city, prospect location, or enriched intent data, and it outputs city-level references like hot dish in Minneapolis, Detroit-style pizza in the Motor City, or the cheez whiz debate in Philly. If the city lacks a clear specialty, it intelligently defaults to a signature state dish, keeping relevance high.Value for B2B teams: faster personalization at scale, more replies, and warmer conversations without heavy research. It slots into AI sales research workflows, lead enrichment steps, or as a merge-tag output directly in sequences. This B2B sales prompt is especially useful for SDRs seeking fast, context-rich hooks that do not feel templated.If your input is provided in another language, note that the original input language is detected, and the final description is produced in English only.
AI Prompt Preview
Write a sentence asking someone what they think about a famous food item from this location: {{City}} {{State}}If you can't find anything notable in the city, look at signature dishes from their state.Example: See you're in Minneapolis. Never tried hot dish, how is it?Or Example 2: See you're in Detroit. I love your pizza! Any recommendations for next time I go?OrExample 3: See you're in Philly. What's your answer on the debate between cheez whiz or no on cheesteaks?Make sure to be a little more specific, for example don't just say "I see you're in Houston, have you tried the famous bbq?" say "how's that southeast texas brisket?"And don't say "have you tried?" just assume that they've tried it. Try to write it informally. You don't need to mention the city AND state. Just mention the one that matters. Use a nickname for the city if applicable.No need to start with a greeting either. just say "see you're in x...."
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