I have close to 1000 support/info email addresses from a particular niche. Need to pitch a product to them which is super useful (validated)
I'm going to send these leads a cold email campaign. Problem is, I don't have the names of the people. So I lose the chance to personalize it with a: Hey {{Name}}.
Any tips on how to not turn someone off coming in cold and not knowing their name?
I would use https://www.hunter.io (Free credits for 50 I think) to enrich your email addresses and get names, etc. The more personalized the better the chances are of any response.
I've been using Hunter.io for years and it's really great, can vouch that it's helped us a lot at OpinionX
Lots of good advice here. I used to manage e-commerce operations for an amazon seller and your assumption about founders checking support emails is valid.
But it's also true sellers receive a ton of spam in the form of website design to a host of other services and tools.
So it's ideal to send at least the first 25-50 emails manually (try a few different message samples) and validate the results. If a message consistently clicks and you're super confident then maybe do a mass outreach with a batch of 50.
Mass emailing in the early stages will result in the domain getting flagged spam.
I wouldn't use that list
I'd build 2 to 4 personas based on assumptions, reach out to 100 to 200 of each with an AB test of 50/100 for each version.
This process should take you a full week if done properly
We're also launching makesales.io soon if you want to chat ;)
Having read the comments it sounds like these are very small businesses , with few employees (you mentioned founders will be looking at the support requests). With that in mind if you know the founder is the sole employee, spend some time figuring out their name, and then apply that if you'd like it to be personalised.
I'd also highly recommend giving something of value in your email (a resource, some free content etc). As even if your product is super useful, most people (not all) don't respond well to cold sales pitches; but many will appreciate you giving them some value first.
At the very least I'd recommend putting some time into researching the prospects and tailoring your email and content to their business, rather than taking a spray and pray approach. It could be as little as telling them why you like their product. It's going to make it feel far less like a standardised cold email.
There are some really good episodes on the IH podcast in relation to making emails warm, rather than cold, which would be worth a listen.
Simply structure your emails in a way where content connects ith the use case and they can relate to.
In case you need to generate another 1000 targeted emails then use this tool https://prospectrole.com (launching soon)
YOu're emailing their support email with your pitch? Isn't that a bit mean? You're creating a support ticket in their system, they'll be forced to reply to you. Best case scenario you get a support person who actually wants to help you. Worst case you get marked as spam.
Are you a user of their tool? IF you are, you should email their support with a support request.
How do you know the tool is super useful? why not use hunter or some other tools to find real email addresses? or pay for ads to them on FB. Use the email addresses to build lookalike audiences.
What content are they consuming to find solutions to the problem you're solving?
Umm, ok. These are Shopify stores selling fitness products. The support or info email won't create a support ticket. It's usually used for order/delay inquiries by their customers.
These stores are recently created, so (most likely) one of the founding team members would be doing the support work. So I am confident that the email would be read by one of the founders.
The product I'm pitching(for a client) is useful because it's directly tied to the Shopify store's revenue, have case studies to back it up.
Can I build lookalikes with the support/info/contact addresses? I was assuming FB requires personal email addresses(gmail, yahoo, etc.) and not company addresses to do the retargeting or lookalike campaigns, correct?
So your intent is to email someone who is checking their email to support their customers... and you are not a customer. Absolute No-Go for me.
You will ruin your email by getting tagged as spam. You will piss off shopify store owners.
Publish those case studies where shopify stores look for case studies.
Get in front of shopify store owners who want to increase their revenue.
Got it, thanks!
For what it's worth, I think I agree with Andrew.
A few ideas:
I hope this helps :-p
Oof! comprehensive. Good points on contextualization over personalization.
I'll have a look at your blogs. Thanks!
Happy to (hopefully) help :-)
This comment was deleted 5 months ago.