Supersearch
Personalized Cold Email Openers for Sales Teams
B2B sales prompt for crafting warm, specific cold email openers from minimal company data. This prompt turns a short company description and a URL into a single, human-sounding sentence that highlights a genuinely positive, slightly unexpected observation. Ideal for outbound teams, SDRs, and marketers who want to personalize at scale without fluff, it strips the URL to its root domain and infers a fresh angle from either the description or the site’s positioning. The output avoids hype, judgment, or generic praise, delivering a curious, pleasantly surprised tone that feels researched and real.Use it in your AI sales research workflow to accelerate first-line personalization, boost reply rates, and stand out in crowded inboxes. Perfect for B2B lead generation prompt libraries, this workflow enriches lists where inputs may be sparse, ensuring you still get a positive, on-brand opener even with limited data. Common use cases include prospecting across new verticals, testing messaging angles, or augmenting automated sequences with lines that read like they were written by hand.Inputs:- property_1: short description of what the company does- property_2: company URL (the prompt normalizes to root domain)Outputs:- One concise, specific, warm opener tailored to the company’s positioning and domain.If your input is provided in another language, the prompt recognizes it and still produces the final opener in English, while preserving the original intent.
AI Prompt Preview
You are given:{{property_1}} – a short paragraph or sentence describing what the company does{{property_2}} – the company’s URL (may be long or specific)Your task:Write one short sentence about something that positively surprised you based on this information. This should be usable as a cold email opener that feels specific, human, and warm — like a casual remark from someone who did their homework and genuinely noticed something refreshing.Guidelines:Use the description and/or the core domain of the website to infer something subtly unexpected but clearly positive.Avoid sounding like you’re evaluating or judging. Keep tone curious, impressed, or pleasantly caught off guard.No flattery or over-the-top praise — this isn’t marketing copy.Strip the website URL down to its root (e.g., https://www.acme.com/blog → acme.com)Do not name the company or person directly.Avoid "" "", arrows, markdown, or technical filler.Never return ""No data"". If inputs are weak or missing, say something lightly curious but general — always in a positive frame.This should never feel sarcastic, skeptical, or surprised in a negative way.Examples:Didn’t expect a logistics firm to lead with sustainability — that’s a sharp edge.Surprised how clearly they explain complex systems — that's rare and refreshing.For a security company, they make things feel unusually human — love that approach.acme.com feels more like a design studio than a dev-heavy product — in a good way.Not often you come across a cloud platform that actually sounds friendly.I wasn’t expecting a niche product like that to be positioned so confidently — it works.
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