Tuesday, November 12, 2019
The 3 rules of writing successful pitch emails
The 3 rules of writing successful pitch emails The 3 rules of writing successful pitch emails Whatâs something that you want in your career? More clients? A new job? Attention for your app? More readers?Whatever it is, before you get it, you need to pitch it to the person who can give it to you. Iâve been pitching all kinds of things during my career: Myself, my ideas, and my products. My pitches have failed more times than I can count my successes.Follow Ladders on Flipboard!Follow Laddersâ magazines on Flipboard covering Happiness, Productivity, Job Satisfaction, Neuroscience, and more!But those failures have been good to me. As renowned Brazilian jiu-jitsu instructor, Carlos Gracie Jr., once said:âThere is no losing in jiujitsu. You either win or you learn.âThe only way to survive your career is to not acknowledge failure as a setback. Instead, look at every failed pitch as a lesson. After âfailingâ many times, I created 3 rules for sending pitch emails that actually work.When you apply these rules correctly, I guarantee you will get more replies.Rule 1: Neve r use the âHey, youâre awesome!â techniqueMost cold emails you get from strangers start something like this:âHey, Darius!Really like your work. Iâve been reading your articles for a while. I especially enjoyed your article about Topic X.It really resonates with my app/article/product.âThatâs what I call the âHey, youâre awesome!â technique. You open the email by saying something nice about the other person. And then, you find a way to transition into your âask.âItâs a sophisticated technique that requires research and effort. Iâm not criticizing it. I know how much time it takes to craft one of these emails. And it works in many cases. However, it will NOT work when you email people who get dozens of pitches per day.Investors, journalists, bloggers, venture capitalists, C-level executives, or other people that get a lot of requests are good at detecting patterns.Instead, be genuine and get to the point. Thereâs no need to say something flattering if yo u donât mean it. And if you do, why not say it to somebody without asking for something in return?Rule 2: Spend 80% of your time on crafting the subject lineI say that for a different reason than you might think. Most people say that the subject line is important because it âgrabs the attention.âTrue. Iâll give you that. But itâs not why I spend 80% of my time on crafting a subject line. Hereâs the reason I do it:When you nail the subject line, you automatically nail the rest of the email.Why? Well, if youâre able to describe exactly what your email is about in one short sentence, youâve already accomplished your task.When someone reads your subject line, there should be no surprise what the email is about. Thatâs why I avoid subject lines like: Quick question A request Introducing âblah blah blahâ Guest post about âno one caresâ And yes, Iâve used all of these in the past. So has every single other professional. And thatâs the problem. If you want to stand out from the crowd, guess what, YOU HAVE TO STAND OUT FROM THE CROWD.Just donât use all caps in your subject lines. Other than that, you can do whatever you want as long as it tells you what the email is about and you make it about the recipient.Rule 3: Never âfollow-upâMost pitch emails you send will not get a response. Thatâs the nature of the game. But itâs not the end of the world. And you shouldnât give up after the first try. After all, you know that other people have a lot on their plate.If you donât get a response, that doesnât mean itâs an automatic no. However, if you screw up the âfollow-up,â youâre done.This is something most people donât get. I often get a follow-up email within 24 hours! Thatâs just too much.Hereâs why. Following up is for annoying salespeople. So please keep this in mind: NEVER âFOLLOW U Pâ WITH PEOPLE.âWhat?â Yes, never mention in your emails that youâre following up. Remove those two combined words from your vocabulary.Following up has a negative association. It means âhey, I emailed you before, you didnât respond. Whatâs up?!â No one likes that.One of the most successful salespeople I know once told me:âI never refer to a failed pitch attempt. Instead, I give it some time and reach out again. But the next time, I try an entirely different approach. Itâs clear the first time didnât work. So you need to be creative.âThe problem with following up is that people just do more of the same. And that hardly ever works.Be patient. Do your research. And be creative with your emails.And that, my friend, is the key to sending good pitch emails. Thereâs no one size fits all. Thereâs no template that always works.Itâs hit and miss. But with every miss, you learn something new that increase the chance of your hit the next time.This article first a ppeared on DariusForoux.com.
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