Why most cold subject lines fail
The single biggest reason cold emails get ignored isn't bad targeting or weak copy — it's that the subject line sounds like a cold email. Buyers learn to recognize the patterns within the first half-second of inbox triage. 'Quick question', 'Following up', '5 minutes?', and anything that starts with the prospect's first name in title case all trigger the same reflex: this is from a vendor, swipe to delete.
The cold subjects that get opened do the opposite. They sound like a one-off note from a colleague, a customer, or someone the prospect already half-knows. Lowercase first letter is fine and often better. Specificity beats curiosity. And the body of the email has to deliver on whatever the subject implied — open-rate tricks that lead to a generic pitch destroy your sender reputation faster than they help.
The four patterns that consistently win
1. Specific reference that proves you did the homework
If the subject line mentions a real fact about the prospect or their company — a launch, a hire, a metric they shared on a podcast, a side project — the open rate compounds. The prospect's brain registers 'this person knows something' before it registers 'this is a sales email.' Don't fake this. If you don't have a real reference, use one of the other patterns instead.
2. Quiet, low-stakes ask
A subject line that sounds like a small question gets opened because answering feels free. 'thoughts on the new pricing page?' beats 'Quick demo of our pricing tool?' every time. The implicit promise is: I'm not going to ask for 30 minutes; I want a sentence.
3. Pattern interrupt
Subject lines that don't look like marketing — single lowercase words, fragments, the recipient's name in lowercase, a date — slip past the filter. Used sparingly and only when the body lives up to it, these consistently produce the highest open rates. Used reflexively, they erode trust.
4. Plain benefit, plainly stated
For senior buyers who triage by ROI, sometimes the cleanest thing is to lead with the outcome. 'cut deploy times by 70%' is more interesting than 'a quick chat about your deploy pipeline'. Only works when the claim is concrete and credible.
What to avoid in cold subject lines
- Anything that looks templated: 'Hi [Name], quick question', 'RE:', fake 'Fwd:'
- All caps, multiple exclamation points, or emojis on the first send to a buyer
- Vague benefit claims ('Grow your business', 'Increase revenue')
- Anything that sounds like 'I want to sell you something'
- Subject lines longer than 50 characters — they get cut on mobile mid-promise
How to test cold subject lines without burning your list
Hold one variable constant per test. Same body, same send window, same audience segment — vary only the subject line. You need at least 200 sends per variant before the open-rate difference is statistically meaningful, and most B2B sequences never hit that volume per cell. If you're sending fewer than 1,000 cold emails a week, don't bother with A/B tests on a single send — instead, run a different subject pattern each week and track 30-day reply rates. That's the metric that matters anyway.
Subject lines for each step of a cold sequence
Most replies come from emails 2-4 in a sequence, not email 1. Each step's subject should feel different. Step 1: hyper-specific or pattern interrupt. Step 2: a question with no preamble. Step 3: short value claim or social proof. Step 4: breakup email — 'closing the loop' is fine here because the implied 'I'll stop emailing' is genuinely useful information for the prospect.