This Experiment Reveals the Best Way to Send a Cold EmailLook at your own inbox. The answer is staring at you.

ByJason Feifer

tolgart | Getty Images

Cold emails are one of business's greatest paradoxes. We all know what bad cold emails look like -- after all, we receive and delete themall the time-- but we can't seem to stop ourselves from sending bad ones, either. We see mistakes, and then we repeat them.

It's time to stop that cycle. Cold emails are an unfortunate necessity; we'll always need to reach people we're not connected to. But the secret to sending a great email isn't hidden: It's sitting right there in your own inbox. All you need to do is look, consider what makes you respond to emails and then repeat that for other people.

Related:3 Cold Email Strategies With High Response Rates

来illustrate this, I recentlyran an experiment on LinkedIn. I asked my followers to tell me two things:

1. What people cold-email them about the most.

2. What someone can cold-email them about that will always make them reply.

The responses followed a pattern. See if you can spot it.

Lauren Hattendorf, who works in marketing in Los Angeles, said that she mostly gets cold emails about "software or a program that's irrelevant to me or the company." The emails she's most likely to respond to, however, are "personalized and sent to me exclusively; not a mass email filled in by a mail merge. The email should prove that the writer has done their research and has looked at my LinkedIn profile."

Matt Van Hoven, co-founder of Raven Public Relations in Nashville, said he mostly gets cold emails about "technology to support my business," but the ones he responds to the most are "something that specifically supports making my work better/more efficient that is directly relatable."

Andrea Hecker, an account and project manager in Grand Rapids, Mich., said she gets cold emails mostly about "new raw materials/componentry in the manufacturing world," but the emails she's most likely to respond to are "non-carded, personalized and sincere emails that are followed up with a LinkedIn request."

Consider what's happening here. The emails these people receive the most are focused on thesender'sneeds; they all want something. The emails people respond to the most are focused on therecipient'sneeds; they all give something.

Related:The Keys to Writing Reminder Emails That Work

This is true for me, too. The emails I get the most ask some variation of "Can I be a contributor to Entrepreneur.com?" But the emails I'm most likely to respond to include a specific compliment about my work, whether it's狗万官方magazine, apodcast, anarticle, mynovelor something else. I ignore the repetitive emails in which many people want the same thing from me. I reply to the ones that show a genuine interest in what I do. (For the record: I'm not the guy to talk to about contributing to the website. Check ourguidelines.)

What can we learn from this? Simple: When you reach out cold, be generous and personal. Provide value, and make someone feel valued. When you give someone what they want, you're closer to getting what you want.

Now, of course, we don't cold email people just to be nice. We need things! But before you hit send, imagine the inbox of the person you're about to contact. Will your email be part of their noise -- just another similar request, another easy thing to ignore? If so, stop. Play better odds. Think about their needs, not just yours. Open a dialog. Get that response. Then, once you've connected, you'll have a better shot at getting what you want, too.

Wavy Line
Jason Feifer

Entrepreneur Staff

Editor in Chief

Jason Feifer is the editor in chief of狗万官方magazine and host of the podcastProblem Solvers. Outside of狗万官方, he is the author of the bookBuild For Tomorrow, which helps readers find new opportunities in times of change, and co-hosts the podcastHelp Wanted, where he helps solve listeners' work problems. He also writes a通讯叫一个好,每个星期给你one better way to build a career or company you love.

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