Writing
Cold Email Opener Generator
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
A cold email opener generator solves the hardest part of outreach: that first sentence. Most cold emails are deleted before the second line because the opener is generic — "I hope this finds you well" tells the reader nothing interesting follows. This tool takes one specific detail about your recipient (a podcast launch, a funding round, a job change) and your goal — booking a meeting, pitching a service, requesting a favour, or building a connection — then produces an opening line that feels researched and human. Use it to generate several variations and pick the one that matches your tone. Even a marginal lift in opener quality compounds across a full outreach campaign.
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How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- In the 'Something About the Recipient' field, enter one specific, verifiable detail about the person you're emailing.
- Select your outreach goal from the dropdown — such as booking a meeting, pitching a service, or requesting a favour.
- Click Generate to produce a personalized opening line tailored to both inputs.
- Copy the output and paste it as the first line of your cold email, adjusting the recipient's name as needed.
- Generate additional variations by tweaking the context field and comparing which line feels most natural for your tone.
Use Cases
- •Opening a pitch to a SaaS founder the week their product launches on Product Hunt
- •Proposing yourself as a guest to a podcast host after their latest episode drops
- •Contacting a journalist who just published a piece in your exact industry vertical
- •Reaching out to a hiring manager after their company announces a Series B funding round
- •Reconnecting with a dormant LinkedIn lead after they announce a new role or promotion
Tips
- →The more granular your context input, the better the output — 'they just raised a Series A' beats 'they run a startup'.
- →If you're running a large outreach campaign, group recipients by shared trigger events and generate one strong opener per group.
- →Avoid using compliments as your context ('their company is impressive') — specifics about actions outperform adjectives about status.
- →Test a question-format opener against a statement-format opener for the same campaign; questions often perform better with senior decision-makers.
- →Combine the generated opener with a second sentence that bridges to your value proposition without hard-selling — the opener earns trust, the second line earns interest.
- →If the recipient recently posted on LinkedIn, referencing the post topic rather than saying 'I loved your post' avoids sounding hollow.
FAQ
what makes a cold email opener actually get a reply
The opener needs to reference something specific and verifiable about the recipient — a post they wrote, a milestone they hit, a public decision they made. This specificity signals you're not mass-emailing and creates a brief moment of recognition. Pair it with an implicit hint at why you're reaching out and you've earned the next sentence.
should the first line of a cold email mention my company or product
No — the opener should be entirely about the recipient. Introducing yourself or your company in the first sentence shifts focus before you've earned the reader's attention. Save your value proposition for the second or third sentence, once the opener has done its job.
does the goal I pick actually change the opener the generator writes
Yes, meaningfully. An opener calibrated to book a meeting tends to be direct and implies clear value. One aimed at building a connection is softer and conversational. Requesting a favour requires a warmer, more humble tone. The generator adjusts framing and language to match your selected goal.