The biggest mistake in cold email copy is writing for yourself, not for the reader. Long emails that explain everything about your company, list your clients, and then ask for a 45-minute call are asking too much from someone who does not know you yet. Cold email has one job: generate a reply. A reply that says "not now" or "not right" is still useful data. Everything else flows from getting that reply.
1. The three-line structure
The most reliable cold email format in 2026 is three to five sentences with one CTA. Nothing more.
Line 1: personalised first line. One specific observation about the prospect's company, role or situation. "Noticed you just expanded your sales team from 3 to 8 reps" or "Saw your post about missing pipeline targets last week." This is the only truly personalised sentence and the most important one.
Line 2: the problem you solve. Name the problem in the language your ICP uses, not in the language of your offer. Not "We provide automated SDR solutions" but "When teams scale quickly, the prospecting process often breaks down, lists go stale and nobody quite owns outbound anymore."
Line 3: the proof or credibility line. One specific result, case study reference, or named client: "We fixed this for a 60-person SaaS company in London recently, their outbound booked 22 calls in the first month." Specific numbers in this position are worth 10 times more than vague claims.
CTA: A low-friction ask. See the section below.
2. The personalised first line at scale
Writing a unique first line for 1,000 prospects sounds impossible. It is not, if you use the right tools. Clay allows you to pull live data about each company: recent news, LinkedIn activity, job postings, tech stack changes. This data becomes the input for a GPT-4o prompt that drafts a specific first line for each prospect. Output is reviewed in batches. A two-person team can process 500 personalised first lines in a day using this approach.
The result is an email that reads as individually written to each prospect, at a fraction of the time of true manual personalisation.
3. The five CTAs that get replies
In order of typical reply rate for cold email:
- "Does this sound like something you're dealing with?" (question format, binary yes/no)
- "Worth a 15-minute call this week?" (low time commitment, specific timeframe)
- "Would it help if I sent you the case study from Company X?" (value-first, no commitment)
- "Open to a quick intro?" (vague but low-friction for senior prospects)
- "Who would be the right person to speak with about this?" (for when the recipient is not the decision-maker)
The CTAs that kill reply rates: "Book a 45-minute discovery call here [link]", "Visit our website to learn more", any CTA that requires the recipient to do something before they have decided they are interested.
4. What not to include
Never include: company history or founding story, a list of all your services, a video embed or GIF, attachments of any kind (damages deliverability), multiple links, a long signature with your company tagline and social links, or a P.S. that pitches something else. Every element in a cold email should serve the reply. If it does not, remove it.
The email that gets a reply is not the most impressive email. It is the most relevant one, read by the right person at the right time, asking for the smallest reasonable thing.
5. Follow-up copy
Follow-up emails should not repeat email 1. Each follow-up should try a different angle: a different problem, a different proof point, or a different format. The most effective follow-up format is often the simplest: "Bumping this up in case it got buried. Still worth a call?" Two sentences, one CTA. The goal of the follow-up is to resurface, not to re-sell.
Frequently asked questions
How long should a cold email be?
Under 100 words for first-touch. Three to five sentences. Shorter emails consistently outperform longer ones in reply rate when the copy is specific and relevant.
What is the best CTA for a cold email?
Low-friction, binary questions: "Does this sound like a problem you're dealing with?" outperforms "Book a 45-minute call here." Get a reply first, then propose the call.
Should I mention competitors in cold email copy?
No. Mentioning competitors introduces defensiveness into a first impression. If a prospect asks in a reply, that is the right time for a comparison conversation.