You picked a template. Now what?
This page shows what each one does, step by step. Each template has a job. Pick the right job for your prospect.
π¦ Cold Outreach (The Default)
Who it's for
Cold prospects. They don't know you. You don't share connections. You're starting from zero.
When to use it
- You scraped a list from Sales Nav or Apollo.
- You're targeting a new market.
- You're not sure which template to pick. Start here.
What happens
Day 1 β Send connection request (empty, no note)
Day 3 β Message 1: Open a peer-level chat
Day 7 β Message 2: Spot a problem they probably have
Day 12 β Message 3: Ask if it matches their world
Day 18 β Message 4: Share a real example
Day 22 β Message 5: Suggest a 15-min call
β A good message 3
Hi James, most cybersecurity leads I talk to at 500-person shops say the same thing: shadow IT eats 30% of their detection backlog. Sound about right for Acme, or is your team further along?
β A bad message 3
Hi James, hope this finds you well! I noticed Acme is doing great things in cybersecurity. Would love to connect and explore synergies.
π‘ Pro tip
The first connection request is empty on purpose. It costs zero LinkedIn credits. Your prospect visits your profile before your first real message lands.
π Cold Outreach with Note (Personalized Connection)
Who it's for
Same cold prospects as standard Cold Outreach, but you want to add a personalized note to the initial connection request instead of leaving it blank.
When to use it
- You have a strong reason they'll accept: similar background, a mutual connection, or a compelling observation.
- You're willing to use one of your 10 weekly personalized-note credits.
- You want to stand out from the 80% of connection requests with no note.
- You're targeting high-value accounts where the extra touch matters.
What happens
Day 1 β Send connection request (personalized AI note)
Day 3 β Message 1: Open a peer-level chat
Day 7 β Message 2: Spot a problem they probably have
Day 12 β Message 3: Ask if it matches their world
Day 18 β Message 4: Share a real example
Day 22 β Message 5: Suggest a 15-min call
β A good connection note
Hi James, your recent post on shadow IT hit home. We help security teams at 500-person shops cut the detection backlog. Quick question β is that something on your radar at Acme?
β A bad connection note
Hi James, would love to connect! I have a great solution for your cybersecurity needs. Let me know if you're interested!
π‘ Pro tip
A personalized connection note works best when it's specific and short (25-40 words). LinkedIn truncates at about 300 characters. Mention one concrete thing β their post, role, or company β and end with a soft question. No pitches, no URLs, no em-dashes. And don't ask for a meeting yet; that's what the follow-up messages are for.
π’ Warm Outreach
Who it's for
Cold prospects with a small warm signal:
- They posted something you can react to.
- They changed jobs recently.
- A mutual connection sent them your way.
- Their company is on your "I follow this brand" list.
When to use it
You want a softer ramp than full cold. The template starts by following their profile (a tiny social ping) before the connection request. They get a notification. They check you out. You're not a total stranger anymore.
What happens
Day 1 β Follow their profile
Day 3 β Send connection request (empty)
Day 6 β Message 1: Reference the warm signal
Day 10 β Message 2: Ask one short question
Day 16 β Message 3: Share a quick observation
Day 22 β Message 4: Suggest next step
β A good message 1
Hi Sarah, your post on rev ops automation hit a nerve. The bit about 12 disconnected tools per team. We see that a lot. How are you stitching it together at Globex?
π‘ Pro tip
The "follow" step works best if your profile shows real activity. If your last post was 2 years ago, that's the wrong impression. Post something useful first.
π£ Connected Outreach
Who it's for
1st-degree LinkedIn connections you've never properly engaged with. You've been "connected" for months. You've never DM'd them.
When to use it
- Old conference contacts.
- Person you accepted but never spoke to.
- A list of 1st-degrees you exported from LinkedIn.
What happens
Day 1 β Message 1: Warm opener, reference the connection
Day 5 β Message 2: Soft question about their work
Day 10 β Message 3: Light value drop
Day 15 β Message 4: Direct question
Day 20 β Message 5: Meeting suggestion
β A good message 1
Hi Maria, we connected back when you were at Initech. Saw you're now leading marketing at Globex. How's the new chapter going?
β A bad message 1
Hi Maria, long time no talk! I wanted to reach out because we have an amazing product that I think will be perfect for you.
π‘ Pro tip
No connection step here. You're already in. Skip the small talk and bring something useful to the conversation.
π‘ Reactivation
Who it's for
Old 1st-degree connections you've completely lost touch with. They went quiet 90+ days ago. Maybe they replied once, then disappeared.
When to use it
- Cleaning up your dormant network.
- Re-engaging old leads who never converted.
- Bringing back cold replies from the past.
What happens
Day 1 β Message 1: Bridge the gap, acknowledge the silence
Day 8 β Message 2: Bring fresh, relevant context
Day 16 β Message 3: Open the door for a call
β A good message 1
Hi Alex, it's been a while. Saw your new role at Vandelay. We chatted about pipeline forecasting back when you were at Initech. Curious if it's still on your radar in the new seat.
π‘ Pro tip
Short sequence on purpose. If they don't bite in 3 messages, they're not ready. Don't push it to 6 messages and burn the relationship.
π Champion
Who it's for
End-users, not decision-makers. The person who actually uses the tool every day. They feel the grind. They have influence but no signing power.
Examples:
- A sales rep (not the VP of Sales)
- A marketer (not the CMO)
- An engineer (not the CTO)
When to use it
- You're targeting bottom-up adoption.
- Your decision-maker contact is blocked or unreachable.
- You sell a tool people love. Your champion will sell it internally for you.
What happens
Day 1 β Send connection request (empty)
Day 3 β Message 1: Validate the daily grind they face
Day 9 β Message 2: Share a time-relief angle
Day 15 β Message 3: Arm them with a useful resource
Day 21 β Message 4: Suggest a chat about their workflow
β A good message 1
Hi Dani, you're running 4 SDRs at Initech. How are you keeping the pipeline forecast tight without an analyst on your team?
β A bad message 1
Hi Dani, we help companies like Initech achieve 3x ROI on sales pipeline. Worth a quick call?
π‘ Pro tip
No ROI talk. No exec-speak. Talk about their hands-on workflow. They'll do the internal sell for you, but only if you sound like one of them.
π΄ Web Visit Triggered
Who it's for
Prospects who visited your website but didn't fill out a form. They showed intent. Now you act fast.
You'll see this signal from your RB2B integration or another intent tool.
When to use it
- Hot intent signal.
- You want to move fast. This is a 10-day sequence, not 3 weeks.
- The prospect is in research mode.
What happens
Day 1 β Send connection request (empty)
Day 2 β Message 1: Acknowledge the visit, light touch
Day 4 β Message 2: Match their research to a real outcome
Day 7 β Message 3: Offer the next step (demo, resource, call)
Day 10 β Message 4: Last call, gentle exit
β A good message 1
Hi TomΓ‘s, saw Acme was looking at our pricing page yesterday. Happy to answer questions if you're early in your research, or send the case study if you're further along. Which fits?
π‘ Pro tip
Move fast. Hot signals cool in days. Don't drag this out into a 3-week sequence.
π€ Direct
Who it's for
You don't want to send a connection request. You just want to message them. This works when:
- You have InMail credits (LinkedIn Premium or Sales Nav).
- You're going through a different channel (email-style).
- You hate the connect-first pattern.
When to use it
- You want pure messaging, no connection step.
- The prospect is unlikely to accept connections from strangers.
- You have a short, sharp pitch and you've earned the right to make it.
What happens
Day 1 β Message 1: Direct hook, name a specific problem
Day 5 β Message 2: Sharper question
Day 10 β Message 3: Hard offer (resource or call)
Day 14 β Message 4: Soft exit
β A good message 1
Hi Priya, quick one: most CFOs running multi-entity rollups lose 3 days a month to reconciliation errors. Is that what's happening at Vandelay too?
π‘ Pro tip
This template is more direct than the others. Use it when you've earned the right (real expertise, real signal, real ask). Don't use it for spray-and-pray.
βͺ Empty
Who it's for
You want to build a sequence from scratch. No starter steps. You add each one yourself.
When to use it
- You have a very specific use case the other 8 don't cover.
- You're an advanced user with your own playbook.
- You're testing a new sequence pattern.
What happens
Nothing. The sequence is blank. You add every step.
π‘ Pro tip
Start from a template that's almost what you want, then edit it down. Starting from Empty is hard. Starting from a template and trimming is easy.
π§ Can I Switch Templates Mid-Campaign?
No. Once a campaign launches, the template is set. But you can:
- Stop the campaign and start a new one with a different template.
- Edit individual messages in an active campaign.
- Duplicate the campaign and apply a different template to the copy.
π What All Templates Have in Common
| Thing | What It Means |
|---|---|
| Empty connection request (default) | No personalized note by default. Saves your weekly note credits. Cold Outreach with Note sends a personalized note. |
| Short messages | Each message is capped at about 50 words. Long messages get ignored. |
| One question per message | More than one question kills reply rates. |
| No em dashes | Em dashes feel AI-written. Real humans use periods and commas. |
| No "I noticed" | Same reason. It's the most-flagged AI tell. |
| Anchor each message | Every message after the first names something specific about your prospect (company, team, role). |
π What's Next
- Pick Your Template β Back to the quick guide
- Campaign Creation: Step-By-Step Guide β Full setup walkthrough
- Understanding How Campaigns Work β Conditions, delays, replies