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openclaw skills install outreach-and-prospectingRun cold and warm outreach campaigns to find and engage potential customers or partners. Use when building a prospecting pipeline, writing cold emails or Lin...
openclaw skills install outreach-and-prospectingOutbound outreach is one of the most powerful but most abused channels. Done well, it surfaces high-value opportunities that inbound alone will never find. Done poorly, it damages your reputation. This playbook gives you a repeatable system: who to target, how to find them, what to say, and how to follow up — all tuned for a solopreneur doing this alongside everything else.
Before reaching out to anyone, know exactly who you're looking for. A vague ICP = wasted outreach on the wrong people.
ICP template:
COMPANY / PERSON PROFILE:
Industry: [specific — not "tech"]
Company size: [e.g., 10-50 employees] (if B2B)
Job title / role: [the person who feels the pain AND has budget authority]
Location: [if relevant]
Revenue range: [if B2B — indicates budget capacity]
PAIN SIGNALS (how to know they need you):
- [Observable behavior that indicates they have the problem]
- [Tool they currently use that you can improve upon]
- [Content they publish or engage with that reveals the pain]
- [Life event or business event that triggers the need]
DISQUALIFIERS (do not reach out if):
- [Signal that means they're not a good fit — saves time]
- [Signal that means they can't afford you]
- [Signal that means they already have a perfect solution]
Lead sources (ranked by quality for solopreneurs):
Qualification checklist — only outreach leads that pass ALL of these:
Most cold emails fail because they're about the sender. Flip it: make every sentence about the recipient.
The anatomy of a cold email that works:
SUBJECT LINE: Specific, curious, not salesy.
Avoid: "Quick question", "Synergy opportunity", "Intro"
Good: "[Specific observation about them]", "Saw your [thing] — thought of something"
LINE 1 (the hook):
Show you did research. Reference something specific about THEM.
"I noticed you just hired 3 new sales reps at [Company]."
"Your blog post on [topic] mentioned [specific challenge]."
This proves you're not mass-blasting.
LINES 2-3 (the bridge):
Connect their specific situation to a problem you solve.
"That usually means [specific pain that comes with their situation]."
One sentence. Don't over-explain.
LINE 4 (the value):
State what you do in terms of THEIR outcome. Not your features.
"I help [company type] [achieve specific result] in [timeframe]."
One sentence.
LINE 5 (the ask):
Make it tiny. Low commitment. Easy to say yes to.
NOT: "Can we hop on a 30-min call this week?"
YES: "Would it be worth a quick 10-min chat if this is relevant?"
YES: "Want me to send over a quick example of how I did this for [similar company]?"
SIGN-OFF:
First name only. No title. No company logo. Keep it human.
Subject line formulas that work:
[Specific observation about their business][Their competitor] is doing [X] — are you?Question about [specific thing on their site/profile][Mutual connection] suggested I reach outLength rule: Under 100 words in the body. If you can't make your case in 5 sentences, you haven't distilled it enough.
LinkedIn messages get higher open rates than email but have stricter formatting constraints.
Connection request message (if not already connected):
After connection is accepted — the message:
LinkedIn outreach mistakes:
One message rarely converts. Build a sequence of 3-5 touchpoints across different channels over 2-3 weeks.
Example sequence:
Day 1: LinkedIn connection request (with personalized note)
Day 3: LinkedIn message (value-first, no ask)
Day 5: Cold email (the main pitch — references the LinkedIn interaction)
Day 10: LinkedIn comment on one of their posts (genuine, helpful comment)
Day 14: Follow-up email ("Just wanted to bump this — still relevant?")
Day 21: Final email ("Last note from me — if the timing isn't right,
totally understand. Happy to reconnect later.")
Rules:
Outreach without tracking is guesswork. Use a simple system (spreadsheet or CRM):
COLUMNS:
Lead Name | Company | Source | Date First Contacted |
Last Touchpoint | Stage | Notes | Next Action | Next Action Date
STAGES:
Identified → Contacted → Replied → In Conversation → Proposal Sent →
Closed Won → Closed Lost → Not Now (re-nurture later)
Pipeline hygiene rules:
As a solopreneur, you can't prospect full-time. Time-box it.
Recommended cadence:
Volume targets:
If outreach is taking more than 45 min/day, you're spending too much time on research. Use better tools or tighter ICP criteria to reduce the search time.