Write Your Outreach
What you'll be able to do
- Understand the difference between “cold” and “warm” outreach, and when to use each
- Use AI to draft a personal first message for every prospect on your sheet
- Edit each draft so it sounds unmistakably like you before it goes out
▶ Video coming soon
Walkthrough for this lesson
KEY TAKEAWAYS
- “Cold” means no prior connection; “warm” means a shared contact or a place you met. Use the matching prompt for each
- Personalized, specific messages get replies; generic templates get ignored
- AI gives you a strong first draft in seconds, but you add the human touch before sending
What this step does
You now have a sheet full of qualified prospects. In this lesson, you write the first message to each one. Done by hand, this is the part that grinds most owners to a halt, staring at a blank box, rewriting the same opening twenty times. AI removes that wall by drafting a personalized message for every prospect in seconds. Your job shifts from “writer” to “editor,” which is far faster and far less draining.
Cold vs. warm: pick the right tool
Not every prospect is a stranger, so you'll use two different prompts depending on the relationship:
- •Cold message: for someone who has never heard of you. It has to earn attention quickly by opening with a problem they actually feel, then briefly showing how you help. Use the Cold LinkedIn Message prompt.
- •Warm message: for someone you share a connection with, or met at an event. There's already a little trust, so you can mention that connection and get to the point sooner. Use the Warm LinkedIn Message prompt.
Sending a stiff, cold pitch to someone you actually chatted with at a mixer feels off, and sending an overly familiar note to a total stranger feels presumptuous. Matching the message to the relationship is half the battle.
Why these messages work
Look closely and you'll see the prompts bake in the rules of good outreach: open with the customer's pain point in their own words (that comes straight from your ICP), reference your real services instead of vague claims, keep it short, and end with one easy, low-pressure ask. They even ban the tired lines that scream “mass template”, no “I hope this message finds you well,” no corporate buzzwords. That's what makes the drafts sound like a real person wrote them. Because a real person is about to: you.
Step by step
- •For each prospect, run the matching prompt, Cold for strangers, Warm for connections.
- •Read the draft out loud. If it doesn't sound like how you actually talk, tell the AI: “make it warmer,” “less salesy,” “shorter.” Keep nudging until it sounds like you.
- •Add one specific, human detail the AI couldn't possibly know, a line about their recent post, a local reference, a genuine compliment. That single touch is what separates a reply from a “delete.”
- •Customize, then send, and log it in the “Outreach Sent” column of your sheet.
You are the final editor
This is the golden rule in action. The AI writes a great first draft, but it has never met this person and doesn't know the small thing that will make your message land. So never send an AI draft completely untouched. A 30-second personal edit dramatically lifts your reply rate, and keeps you from firing off the same robotic note that everyone else is sending.
Put it into practice
Draft a message for your top 5 prospects (cold or warm, whichever fits), add one specific personal detail to each, then send them, logging each one in your sheet.
PROMPTS FOR THIS LESSON
Copy these into your AI tool. They auto-fill with your business profile. Browse the full library.
Cold LinkedIn Message Generator
Generate a single cold LinkedIn outreach message grounded in your actual business, ICP, and value proposition, not a generic template.
Warm LinkedIn Message Generator
Generate a warmer LinkedIn message for prospects you've been introduced to or met at an event, opens with the shared connection, gets to value faster, ends with a low-friction next step.
What's next
Next: turn all of this into a light weekly routine that keeps new leads flowing without taking over your week.
Launch Your Engine →