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Client Check-In Message Generator

Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.

A client check-in message generator solves a small but persistent problem: you know you should reach out, but staring at a blank draft kills the impulse. These messages keep you visible between projects, surface new needs before a competitor does, and remind clients why they liked working with you. Freelancers use them after project wrap-up; account managers send them before quarterly reviews; consultants schedule them to warm up lapsed contacts before a new proposal. Choose warm, formal, or casual tone and generate up to four ready-to-personalise messages at once. Paste one into Gmail, LinkedIn, or your CRM in under a minute. Small habit, compounding returns.

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How to use

  1. Choose your options above
  2. Click Generate
  3. Copy your result

Detailed instructions

  1. Choose a tone — warm, formal, or casual — to match the relationship.
  2. Set how many message variations you want.
  3. Click Generate to produce professional check-in messages.
  4. Pick one, personalise it with a specific detail, and send it.

Use Cases

  • Sending a warm-tone follow-up to a client 60 days after project delivery
  • Reactivating a dormant account before pitching a new service or retainer
  • Preparing four LinkedIn message variants for a quarterly relationship review
  • Dropping a casual check-in into a CRM sequence triggered by contract anniversary
  • Generating formal outreach templates for an account manager's weekly client calls

Tips

  • Always add a specific, personal detail so the message never reads as a template.
  • Match the tone to your existing relationship with the client.
  • Lead with their interests, not a sales pitch — a check-in is about goodwill.
  • Keep it short; a check-in should feel easy to reply to.
  • End with a low-pressure question or offer to keep the conversation open.

FAQ

how often should you check in with clients between projects

Once a month works well for active relationships; quarterly is enough to stay relevant with less frequent contacts. The key is consistency — a short, genuine message beats a long one sent only when you need something.

what should a client check-in message actually say

Keep it under five sentences: acknowledge the time since you last spoke, reference something specific to them or their industry, and close with a low-pressure offer to catch up. Avoid leading with a pitch — curiosity about their situation lands better than a product push.

is it awkward to message a client you haven't spoken to in a year

Rarely. Most clients appreciate a thoughtful nudge and won't remember the gap as clearly as you do. A casual or warm tone works best here — acknowledge the time lightly, then move straight to genuine interest in how things are going.