How to Write a Cold Email That Gets Replies (Templates for Freelancers)
Every freelancer knows that Upwork and Fiverr are not the only places to find clients. The business owner who needs a content writer for their SaaS blog, the e-commerce brand that needs product descriptions rewritten, the consultant who needs their LinkedIn presence professionalised — none of them are necessarily sitting on Upwork waiting to receive proposals. Many of them are simply running their business, and the right cold email is the only thing standing between them and hiring you.
Cold email has an unfair reputation. Most people associate it with spam — the generic, mass-sent, impersonal emails that fill inboxes and get deleted without reading. That version of cold email doesn’t work. But a carefully written, genuinely personalised, respectful cold email to the right person at the right time absolutely does work — consistently, measurably, and often faster than platform-based outreach.
This guide covers the anatomy of a cold email that gets replies, eight ready-to-use templates for different freelance services, the subject lines that get opened, the follow-up sequence that triples your response rate, and how to find the right people to email in the first place.
Why Most Cold Emails Go Straight to Trash
The failure of most cold emails comes down to a single problem: they’re written from the sender’s perspective instead of the recipient’s. They announce qualifications, describe services, and make requests — all before establishing any reason why the recipient should care. The reader opens the email, sees it’s about what someone wants to sell them, and deletes it. The whole thing takes three seconds.
A cold email that gets a reply is written differently. It opens with an observation about the recipient’s specific situation. It identifies one specific problem they might have. It offers a specific, relevant solution. And it asks for one easy thing — not a commitment to hire, but a low-friction next step. The whole thing is under 100 words and leaves the recipient thinking “this person actually looked at my business before emailing me.”
That’s the standard. Everything in this guide is built around it.
The Anatomy of a Cold Email That Gets Replied To
Subject Lines That Get Opened
Your subject line determines whether the email gets opened or deleted. The rules are counter-intuitive — the more it sounds like marketing, the less likely it is to get opened. The more it sounds like a normal human being writing a specific email, the more likely it is.
- “Freelance writer available for hire”
- “Professional content writing services”
- “Can I help with your content needs?”
- “Exciting opportunity for your business”
- “Following up on my previous email”
- “Your blog on [topic] — quick thought”
- “Rewrote one of your product descriptions”
- “Question about [company name]’s Instagram”
- “[Their company] + content — idea”
- “Noticed something on your website”
The pattern in the winning column: specific reference to their business, curiosity-gap structure, and human rather than corporate phrasing. “Rewrote one of your product descriptions” gets opened because it’s intriguing and specific — what did you rewrite? Is it good? Let me see. That curiosity does the work.
8 Copy-Paste Cold Email Templates by Service Type
Why it works: The specific article reference proves you actually read their content. The observation is empathetic (“time problem”) rather than critical. The question at the end is low-stakes — they can answer “yes” or “actually it’s paused” without feeling pressured.
Why it works: “I walked past” establishes you as a real local person, not a bulk emailer. The compliment is specific and genuine. The service description is brief and concrete. The 7-day sample calendar you’ve prepared (take 20 minutes to actually make one in Canva) gives them something real to look at.
Why it works: This is the strongest cold email template because you’ve already done something useful — the rewrite proves the concept before they’ve spent a minute considering it. The “if the direction looks right” ending is low-pressure and easy to say yes to.
Why it works: Opening as a subscriber is immediately disarming — you’re not a cold stranger, you’re in their world. The insight (“leaving money on the table”) is specific and valuable, not generic. The closing question is easy to answer with a simple yes or no.
The in-email rewrite: Including a rewritten version of their own About section directly in the email is a powerful technique for LinkedIn profile work. They read it immediately and compare it to their own. The contrast does the selling.
How to Find the Right People to Email
The best cold email template fails if it goes to the wrong person. Here’s how to find good prospects for each service type:
Finding prospects by service type
- Content writing: Google your target niche + “blog” → find sites with infrequent or outdated blogs. Check their About page for an email or contact form. LinkedIn search for “content manager” or “marketing manager” at small companies in the niche.
- Social media management: Search your target industry on Instagram, Facebook, or Google Maps. Find businesses with few posts, low engagement, or the last post months ago. Most local businesses list a contact email on Google Business Profile.
- Product descriptions: Browse Etsy or Shopify stores in your niche. Look for shops with good products but sparse or supplier-copied descriptions. Etsy shows contact options; Shopify stores usually have a contact page.
- VA work: Search LinkedIn for coaches, consultants, or solopreneurs in your niche. Look at their profiles — do they seem overwhelmed? Are they doing everything themselves? Many list their email in the About or Contact sections.
- LinkedIn profiles: Search LinkedIn itself for professionals in your niche with outdated or minimal profiles. Many have email in their contact info, or you can message via LinkedIn InMail.
- YouTube scripts: YouTube search in your niche, filter by “This year,” sort by view count. Channels with solid subscriber counts but infrequent uploads are perfect targets. Find their email in the About tab of their YouTube channel page.
The Follow-Up Sequence That Triples Your Response Rate
Most cold emails that convert do so after a follow-up, not the initial email. Research on cold email consistently shows that 50%+ of positive responses come from follow-up emails, not the first contact. Most people who don’t follow up leave the majority of their potential responses on the table.
The Claude Prompt for Personalising Any Cold Email
Once you have a template, use this prompt to adapt it precisely to any specific prospect:
Frequently Asked Questions
What response rate should I expect from cold emails?
A well-targeted, genuinely personalised cold email to the right prospect typically generates a 10–30% reply rate. Generic mass emails get 1–3%. The difference is entirely in the personalisation — which is why the “attached sample created specifically for their business” technique is so powerful. It demonstrates you did real work before contacting them, which filters the response rate dramatically upward.
Is cold emailing legal?
Yes, with some caveats depending on your country. In the UK and EU, GDPR applies to marketing emails to individuals, but B2B cold email to business addresses (as opposed to personal addresses) is generally permitted under legitimate interest grounds if the email is relevant to the recipient’s business and includes an opt-out option. In the US, CAN-SPAM rules apply — include your business address and an unsubscribe option. When in doubt, consult current local regulations or focus on LinkedIn outreach instead, which has clearer rules for professional prospecting.
How many cold emails should I send per day?
Quality over quantity — always. Five genuinely personalised emails with specific samples attached will outperform 50 templated emails with minor name changes. In practice, creating a good personalised email including the sample work takes 20–40 minutes. Ten per day is ambitious and probably the maximum that maintains real quality. Most successful freelancers using cold email send 3–5 genuinely personalised emails per day alongside their other client acquisition activities.
What if I don’t hear back from anyone?
First check: are you following up? Most replies come from the second or third email, not the first. Second check: is your sample work genuinely impressive? The attached sample is the conversion mechanism — if it’s not high quality, nothing else in the email compensates. Third check: is your targeting right? Emailing a business that clearly has a content team already, or one that’s too large to be reachable by a single freelancer cold email, wastes your personalisation effort. Refine the target before the template.
The Cold Email That Changes Your Pipeline Starts With One Good Prospect
Cold email works when it doesn’t feel like cold email. When a business owner receives a short, genuine, specific message that demonstrates you actually looked at their business and created something useful for them before contacting them — that’s not spam. That’s a professional introduction. And professional introductions get replies.
Choose one template. Find one genuinely good prospect. Create one real sample specifically for their business. Write the email in your own voice. Send it. Follow up twice. That’s the whole system — and it’s repeatable every day.
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