Business
Business Email Subject Line Generator
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
A business email subject line generator takes the guesswork out of one of the highest-leverage decisions in any email campaign. Open rates swing wildly based on those 6 to 9 words — a sharp subject line can push a 5% open rate past 30%. This tool generates ready-to-use subject lines matched to your email purpose: cold outreach, follow-ups, meeting requests, newsletters, and more. Just set the purpose and how many lines you need. Each generated set applies proven copywriting patterns — benefit-led openers, curiosity hooks, relevance triggers — so you get a shortlist worth testing, not a pile of filler. Generate six options, pick two or three with different angles, and run them as A/B splits in Mailchimp, HubSpot, or Klaviyo.
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How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Select the email purpose from the dropdown — options include follow-up, cold outreach, meeting request, and more.
- Set the number of subject lines you want generated, six is the default and a good batch size for testing.
- Click Generate to produce a full list of subject lines matched to your chosen purpose.
- Review the results and shortlist two or three that best match your audience's tone and seniority level.
- Copy your chosen subject lines and paste them directly into your email platform or A/B test setup.
Use Cases
- •A/B testing cold outreach subject lines across 3 LinkedIn prospect segments in HubSpot
- •Writing a 5-email follow-up sequence after a SaaS demo with no reply
- •Drafting meeting request emails to C-suite buyers at enterprise accounts
- •Planning weekly Substack or newsletter sends that compete in a crowded inbox
- •Generating renewal or upsell subject lines for account managers working a book of 50+ clients
Tips
- →Generate subject lines for two different purposes (e.g. follow-up and cold outreach) and compare — sometimes a follow-up frame works better for a first email to a warm lead.
- →Pair your chosen subject line with a strong preview text snippet; many email clients show 60-90 characters after the subject, and that space is wasted by most senders.
- →For sales sequences, use different psychological angles across touches — curiosity on email one, social proof on email two, urgency or deadline on email three.
- →If a subject line uses a question format, make sure the first sentence of the email body answers or reinforces that question — mismatches kill trust fast.
- →Benchmark your chosen subject lines against your industry's average open rate (typically 20-30% for B2B) so you have a meaningful baseline before declaring a winner.
- →Avoid front-loading your subject line with your company name — recipients open emails for their own reasons, not yours. Lead with value or relevance instead.
FAQ
what makes a cold outreach subject line actually get opened
Specificity beats cleverness every time. Lines that reference the prospect's industry, a recent company move, or a shared contact outperform vague openers like 'Quick question' by a wide margin. Use this generator to produce multiple angles — curiosity-led, benefit-led, relevance hook — then test at least two variants before committing to one.
how long should a professional email subject line be
Aim for 40 to 60 characters (roughly 6 to 9 words) so the line displays in full on desktop and mobile clients. Very short lines of 3 to 5 words can work well for follow-ups; slightly longer lines give newsletters enough context to earn the click. Don't forget preview text — it adds another 40 to 90 characters of persuasion space right after your subject.
should i use the same subject line for every audience segment
Rarely without editing. A subject line tuned for a startup founder often falls flat with an enterprise procurement manager because seniority, risk tolerance, and familiarity with your brand all shape what feels relevant. Generate a fresh batch per segment and adjust tone — more ROI-focused for executives, more conversational for SMB owners.