B2B inboxes run on ruthless triage
A VP or director gets dozens of vendor emails a day, and they've learned to pattern-match the sales template in a fraction of a second. The subject line is where they decide: is this a person who knows something specific about my world, or another rep running a sequence? Everything generic — 'Boost your revenue', 'Quick question', 'Improve your workflow' — gets sorted into the mental trash before the body is ever seen. The opens go to subjects that prove relevance fast.
What earns the open from a decision-maker
Specific reference to their business
A named competitor, a recent funding round, a job posting, a product change — any concrete detail signals you did the homework. 'saw you're hiring 5 AEs' opens because it proves you looked, and it implies relevance to their actual situation.
The question their role is already asking
Subject lines that name the buyer's live problem get opened because they feel like internal email. 'the renewal question your CFO will raise' lands because it's the thing actually on their mind.
Peer and proof framing
B2B buyers move in herds. 'what your peers at Datadog did' or 'the playbook 3 of your competitors use' borrow social proof to earn the open. Reference real, relevant companies.
Quiet, human, lowercase
For senior buyers, a lowercase fragment that reads like a colleague's note outperforms a polished marketing subject. 'quick thought on your pricing page' beats 'Transform Your Pricing Strategy.'
Subject lines across the B2B funnel
Cold outbound
Lead with a specific, researched hook. The first three lines of any sequence should sound like a one-off human note, not a templated pitch.
Nurture and content
Lead with the single most useful idea, not the asset type. 'the chart that reframes your CAC' beats 'Download our whitepaper.'
Account-based (ABM)
Hyper-personalize. When you're targeting a named account, the subject can reference their exact situation, which is the whole point of ABM. 'an idea for the Acme rollout' is doing ABM right.
Renewal and expansion
Existing customers read like warm contacts. Quiet check-in subjects beat hard-sell expansion pitches. Save the upsell for the body.
What kills B2B open rates
- Generic value props: 'Boost revenue', 'Increase efficiency', 'Drive growth'
- Templated personalization tokens, especially ones that misfire
- 'Quick question' and 'Touching base' — the most ignored phrases in B2B
- Title-case marketing subjects sent to senior buyers who prefer human tone
- The same subject line repeated across an outbound sequence