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HomeGrowth › Email Sequences That Actually Get Replies

Email Sequences That Actually Get Replies

brandon sheriff··2 min read·2 views
Growth

The average cold email gets a 1–3% reply rate. Most people accept this as normal. It isn’t — it’s a symptom of sequences that are structured for convenience rather than conversion.

After analyzing hundreds of outreach campaigns across industries, the sequences that consistently hit 15–25% reply rates share a small set of structural traits. This post breaks them down.

The 3-Email Core Sequence

More isn’t better. The highest-performing sequences are usually three emails: one opener, one follow-up with a new angle, and one breakup email. Beyond three, reply rates drop sharply and unsubscribe rates climb.

Email 1: One Problem, One Question

The opener should do one thing: identify a specific problem the recipient likely has and ask a single question about it. No pitch, no credentials, no attachments. Just a problem and a question. Keep it under 75 words.

Example structure: “I noticed [specific observation about their business]. Most [role] I talk to are dealing with [problem]. Is that on your radar right now?”

Email 2: A Different Angle (Not a Follow-Up)

Most follow-ups say “just checking in” or “wanted to bump this up.” Those phrases signal that you have nothing new to say. Instead, lead with a different angle — a relevant stat, a short case study, or a question about a different pain point.

Email 3: The Breakup

The breakup email has the highest reply rate of the three, consistently. Be direct: “I won’t keep reaching out after this — but wanted to make sure [problem] isn’t something you’re actively working on. If timing is off, happy to reconnect later.”

brandon sheriff
brandon sheriff

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