Cold email templates you can copy (and why they work)
Templates do not close on their own, but a good structure speeds things up a lot. We share cold email frameworks that work and, above all, why.
Searching for cold email templates is tempting, but copying a template without understanding why it works is the recipe for sounding like everyone else. Better to understand the structure and adapt it to your case. These are the frameworks that perform best.
The problem-solution framework
Start by acknowledging a specific problem of their sector or role, connect with how you solve it in one sentence and close with a low-friction question. It works because it starts from their reality, not your product. The hook is the problem, not the pitch.
The signal framework
If you have a signal — news, a change, an expansion — use it as the opener: it shows it is not a mass send. Connect that signal with a likely need and propose a brief conversation. It works because relevance is obvious from the first line.
- First line about the lead, not about you
- Brevity: read in seconds
- A single clear value
- A single low-friction call to action
- Human tone, no corporate jargon
Why you should not copy literally
If thousands use the same template, it stops working: buyers recognize it. The structure is copied; the words are not. Adapt the hook to your sector, personalize with the lead context and test variants. The template is a starting point, not a magic shortcut.
The multiplier: leads with context
The best template performs poorly on a cold list and well on enriched leads. The lead context — sector, need, signal — is what fills the template gaps with real personalization. That is why buying qualified leads directly improves your cold emails.