🧪 Skills

Cold Outreach — Free Methodology

Run a complete cold email outreach campaign — from sourcing leads to handling replies. Covers ICP definition, lead sourcing strategy, email sequence construc...

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name: cold-outreach description: > Run a complete cold email outreach campaign — from sourcing leads to handling replies. Covers ICP definition, lead sourcing strategy, email sequence construction, personalization, reply handling, and suppression management. Use when an agent needs to build or execute a cold outreach pipeline from scratch, without paid tools or SaaS subscriptions. metadata: version: 1.0.0 author: Qsys tags: [cold-email, outreach, lead-gen, n8n, automation]

Cold Email Outreach

You are running a cold email outreach campaign. Your job is to source qualified leads, send a targeted email sequence, and handle replies systematically — without paid APIs or monthly subscriptions.

This skill covers the full methodology. If you'd rather skip the build and use pre-wired n8n workflows instead, the pre-built option is linked at the bottom of this skill.


Before You Start

You need four things before sending a single email:

  1. A defined ICP — who you're targeting (role, company size, industry, geography)
  2. A lead list — at minimum 50 verified contacts in a spreadsheet
  3. A sending account — Gmail or any SMTP-capable email, warmed up for 2 weeks
  4. A tracking system — a Google Sheet with: Lead, Email, Company, Status, Last Contacted, Reply Category

If any of these are missing, complete them first. Sending without them wastes your list.


Phase 1: Define Your ICP

The most common outreach failure: spraying a generic message to a mixed audience.

Build your ICP by answering:

  • What role feels the pain your offer solves? (Job title, seniority level)
  • What company stage/size is most likely to buy? (1-10 employees? 50-200? Series A?)
  • What industry or vertical is your proof strongest in?
  • What signals indicate they're ready now? (Hiring, funding, tool change, new product launch)

Document your ICP as a 3-line filter:

Target: [Role] at [Company Size] [Industry] companies, showing [signal if applicable] Example: Head of Sales at 10–50 person B2B SaaS startups, recently hiring SDRs

One ICP per campaign. If you're targeting two different personas, run two separate campaigns.

See references/lead-sourcing.md for ICP refinement tactics.


Phase 2: Source Leads

Free sources (no credit card required)

Source What you get Free limit
Apollo.io Email + company data 75 verified leads/month
Hunter.io Domain email finder 25 searches/month
LinkedIn (manual) Profile data, job titles Unlimited (manual work)
LinkedIn CSV export Sales Navigator export Requires Sales Nav trial
Google Sheets (hand-built) Any list you build Unlimited

Lead sourcing workflow

  1. Build your filter in Apollo — role, company size, industry, location. Export as CSV (up to 75/month free).
  2. Verify emails — Apollo provides verified emails. For other sources, run through Hunter.io's email verifier before importing.
  3. Deduplicate — remove any email addresses you've contacted in the last 90 days.
  4. Clean the list — remove:
    • info@, hello@, contact@ (catch-all mailboxes, low deliverability)
    • Role-based addresses (support@, sales@) unless that's your target
    • Any domain on your suppression list
  5. Import to tracking sheet — columns: First Name, Last Name, Email, Company, Title, Source, Status (set to "new"), Notes

Volume guidance

  • Ideal batch size: 20–40 new leads per week for a solo sender
  • More than 50/day risks deliverability flags on Gmail free tier
  • Quality > quantity: a 200-lead list of perfect-ICP contacts outperforms a 2,000-lead spray

See references/lead-sourcing.md for advanced sourcing tactics.


Phase 3: Write the Email Sequence

Sequence structure: 3 touches over 7 days

Touch Timing Purpose Length
Email 1 Day 0 Lead with value, one soft ask 5–7 sentences
Email 2 Day 3 Different angle or proof point 3–5 sentences
Email 3 Day 7 Final touch, close the loop 2–3 sentences

Writing principles

Write like a peer, not a vendor. Each email should read like it came from a smart colleague who noticed something relevant — not a sales machine following a script.

Lead with their world, not yours. The reader should see their own situation reflected back. "You/your" should dominate over "I/we."

One ask, low friction. Interest-based CTAs ("Worth 15 minutes?" / "Relevant to what you're working on?") consistently outperform meeting requests.

Subject lines: short, boring, internal-looking. 2–4 words, lowercase. Looks like an internal forward, not a marketing blast.

Email 1 — Observation + Problem + Proof + Ask

Subject: [2–4 word lowercase line]

[Personalized observation about their company/role/situation]

[Bridge to the problem you solve — connect the observation to the pain]

[One sentence: what you do + proof point or result]

[Soft CTA: "Worth a quick look?" or "Relevant?"]

[Name]

Email 2 — Different angle or proof

Subject: [re: or new 2–4 word line]

[Acknowledge you're following up — one phrase, not a paragraph]

[New angle: a different pain point, a specific result, or a case study]

[CTA: same or slightly more specific — "15 minutes this week?"]

[Name]

Email 3 — Clean close

Subject: [re: same thread or "last note"]

[Last touch — close the loop, leave the door open]

Example: "Last email on this — didn't want to leave it hanging. If timing's off, happy
to reconnect later. Just reply 'later' and I'll reach back out in 90 days."

[Name]

Personalization: the 3-minute system

For every email, identify one specific signal about this person before writing:

  • Recent LinkedIn post → "Your post on X caught my eye"
  • Job posting on their site → "Noticed you're hiring SDRs — outbound scaling?"
  • Company funding → "Congrats on the raise — growth stage usually creates X challenge"
  • Tech stack → "I see you're on HubSpot — most teams at your stage hit a ceiling with X"

The personalization must logically connect to the problem you solve. If you remove the opening and the email still makes sense, the personalization isn't working.

See references/email-sequences.md for full templates + subject line data.


Phase 4: Send the Sequence

Gmail / SMTP setup

  • Use a separate sending account, not your primary inbox
  • Warm the account for 2 weeks before sending cold: send 5–10 real emails/day to friends, colleagues, lists you're subscribed to. Get replies if possible.
  • After warming: start at 10–20 emails/day, increase by 10/day over 2 weeks to a max of 50/day on Gmail free tier

Scheduling

  • Send emails Tuesday–Thursday, 9–11 AM (recipient's timezone if known, yours if not)
  • Space batch sends: don't send 40 emails at 9:00:01 AM — stagger by 2–5 minutes each

Manual tracking (no automation)

Update your tracking sheet after each send:

  • Status → "emailed-d0"
  • Update to "emailed-d3" after touch 2, "emailed-d7" after touch 3
  • Log any out-of-office replies immediately (status → "ooo", note return date)

With n8n automation

If you're running this via n8n:

  • Workflow 2 (Email Sequencer) reads your Google Sheet, sends on schedule, logs status back
  • Runs daily at 9 AM — only sends to rows where Status = "new" or queued for next touch
  • See references/tools-free-tier.md for n8n setup

Phase 5: Handle Replies

Reply categories

Every reply falls into one of five buckets. Handle each the same way every time:

Category Signal Action
Interested "Tell me more," "let's chat," "send me info" Move to "hot" tab, respond within 1 hour, book the call
Not now "Reach out in Q3," "timing isn't right" Log the timeframe, set a reminder, reply with a graceful close and re-contact date
Not interested "No thanks," "not relevant," "don't contact me" Status → "unsubscribed," add to suppression list, do not follow up
Objection "We already use X," "too expensive," "how is this different" Respond with one specific answer to their objection, re-ask the CTA
OOO Out of office auto-reply Note return date, reschedule touch to day after return

The hot lead response (within 1 hour)

Subject: re: [same thread]

Great — I'll keep it short.

[One sentence: the specific thing you do, framed for their situation]

[Booking link or: "Any time Wednesday or Thursday work for a 15-min call?"]

[Name]

Suppression list management

Maintain one suppression sheet (tab or separate file):

  • Every unsubscribe request goes here immediately
  • Before importing any new batch, cross-reference against suppression list
  • Never re-contact a suppressed email — even if they show up in a new Apollo export

See references/reply-handling.md for full response playbooks.


Phase 6: Measure and Iterate

Metrics that matter (per 100 emails sent)

Metric Benchmark If Below Benchmark
Open rate 30–50% Subject lines weak — test new ones
Reply rate 5–15% Copy weak or ICP off — rewrite Email 1
Positive reply rate 1–5% Offer not resonating — check ICP or value prop
Unsubscribe rate <3% If above: message is spam-feeling or ICP wrong

Iteration cycle

After every 50 emails sent, review:

  1. Which subject lines had highest opens?
  2. Which emails got replies (positive or otherwise)?
  3. Which ICP segment responded most?

Change one variable at a time. Don't rewrite the whole sequence — you'll lose the signal.


Tool Stack (all free tier)

Tool Role Free Limit
Apollo.io Lead sourcing 75 verified leads/month
Hunter.io Email verification 25 searches/month
Gmail Email sending 500 emails/day (free), 2,000/day (Google Workspace)
Google Sheets Lead tracking + status Unlimited
n8n (optional) Workflow automation Free self-hosted, free cloud tier

No paid APIs required. This entire methodology runs at $0/month.

See references/tools-free-tier.md for setup notes per tool.


Want the Pre-Built Workflows?

This skill gives you the full methodology — everything above works without any automation.

If you'd rather skip the manual sending and have n8n handle the sequencing, scheduling, and reply categorization automatically:

Cold Outreach System — $19

Three pre-built n8n workflow files. Import, configure 3–5 variables, launch. Runs on the same free tools above. One-time purchase, runs forever.


Quick Reference

Phase sequence: ICP → Source → Write → Warm → Send → Handle → Measure

Weekly rhythm (solo sender, no automation):

  • Monday: source 20 new leads, clean list, import to sheet
  • Tuesday–Thursday: send 10–15 emails/day (new + follow-ups)
  • Friday: check replies, update statuses, plan next week

Red flags to fix immediately:

  • Open rate drops suddenly → check if emails are landing in spam (send a test to yourself)
  • Reply rate drops → your ICP shifted or the market is saturated for your offer
  • Bounce rate above 5% → your email verification is broken, pause and re-verify the list

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Pricing

Free

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