Everything you need to go from zero to booked meetings. Step by step, with every tool and template included.
You’re a B2B company. You sell to other businesses. So start there.
Aerosend helps companies with cold email infrastructure. So technically, every B2B company that sends cold email is a potential customer. That’s millions of businesses.
But that’s not how you do it.
We started by eliminating. We looked at our “all B2B companies” list and asked: who should we NOT sell to?
That one exercise cut our target market by 80%. What was left were companies that actually needed us and could afford us.
Then we segmented. We realized not everyone who was left had the same problem. An agency managing 30 clients has a completely different pain than a solo founder sending their first campaign. So we split them:
Same product. Three completely different pitches. The email we send to an agency talks about managing deliverability at scale. The email we send to a solo founder talks about making it simple.
Then we divided further. As small as it made sense. For example, “high-volume senders” with 1-10 employees is a very different company than “high-volume senders” with 10-50 employees. The pitch changes when that happens. A 5-person startup needs simplicity. A 40-person sales org needs scale and reliability. So we segmented further.
In the end, we had 8-10 ICP combinations. Each one gets its own campaign with its own messaging. That’s the level of specificity that gets replies.
That’s the process. Start broad, eliminate, segment, then keep dividing until the pitch changes. If it doesn’t change, you don’t need a new segment.
Your ICP tells you which companies to target. Your personas tell you which people inside those companies to email.
A persona is a specific type of person at your target company. Their title, seniority, department, and what they care about. Different personas get different emails because they have different problems.
Remember our three ICP segments? Agencies, high-volume senders, and low-volume senders. Within each one, we broke it down further by persona.
Take our “high-volume senders” segment. These are companies with 16-50 employees that send a lot of cold email. But who do we actually email there? Three different people:
Same company. Same ICP segment. Three completely different emails.
The email to the founder talks about pipeline and ROI. The email to the ops manager talks about automated setups and burn alerts. The email to the sales lead talks about reply rates and inbox placement.
Here’s the real Aerosend email we send to ops managers at companies with 16-50 employees:
See how specific that is? It references their role (“you manage operations”), their pain (“domains burning”), and offers something concrete (“alerts when domains need replacement”). That’s what happens when you define your persona before you write your email.
Each persona becomes its own campaign. Build them one at a time. Perfect the first one, then move to the next.
Forget contacts. Build a list of companies first. Different tools are better for different types of companies. Pick the one that matches your ICP.
Clutch has the best directory of agencies by type, size, location, and reviews. Build a filtered URL and scrape it through Aerosend.
Crunchbase lets you filter by funding round, industry, employee count, and more. Best source for funded SaaS companies.
Barbers, dentists, restaurants, local services. These businesses aren’t on LinkedIn or Crunchbase. Google Maps is where they live.
Store Leads has every Shopify, WooCommerce, and BigCommerce store. Filter by revenue, traffic, tech stack, and more.
Try to find a directory specific to your industry and scrape it. If you’re stuck, reach out to Aerosend support. We’ll help you figure out where your companies live.
Before you move on, your company list needs to be clean. You probably scraped hundreds or thousands of companies. Not all of them belong.
Now you’ll find the actual people to email using the companies you found and the ICP/personas you built earlier.
Non-negotiable. Bounces destroy your sender reputation. Every email on your list needs to be verified before you send anything.
Your list is built and verified. Before you write a single email, do one final check.
Every cold email you write should follow this structure. Not every email needs every piece, but this is the skeleton you build from.
Here’s how we apply this framework. This is the actual email we send to ops managers at companies with 16-50 employees.
Keep them short, lowercase, and boring. They should look like a real email from a real person.
| Don’t | Do |
|---|---|
| “EXCLUSIVE: 10x Your Revenue!” | “cold email infrastructure” |
| “Quick question for you {{firstName}}” | “{{company}} + Aerosend” |
| “I found something about {{company}}” | “outbound for {{company}}” |
| “GUARANTEED results inside” | “{{company}} deliverability” |
| “RE: Our conversation” | “what we did for [competitor]” |
How many emails you send per lead depends on how big your list is. Most replies come from email #1. Every follow-up has diminishing returns.
Rotate words that don’t change meaning. Helps deliverability at scale because each email is slightly unique. Use ChatGPT to add spintax. Read it before sending. Remove anything that sounds off.
Generate domain ideas for cold email
Check your inbox placement score
Validate your email authentication
Check if your domain or IP is blacklisted
Test if your email lands in spam