You may have invested hours into researching a potential client, then spent a few more coming up with the perfect introductory email. Maybe you want to follow up on a meeting with someone or after sending an invoice.
Whatever your reason might be, the truth is coming up with a polite and effective follow-up email that doesn’t make you look pushy or desperate is challenging.
That is why you have come to the right place.
In this article, I will walk through how to write a follow-up email that boosts your response rate, helps you land those deals, and puts your targets back on track.
How to Write a Follow Up Email
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It does not matter if you have been writing follow-up emails that get you zero response or you are jumping into the fray for the first time. There are mistakes to avoid and best practices to follow.
Here are the definitive things to consider when crafting that email.
1. Add Context
Most people open and reply to an email on the day they receive it. If they were going to reply, you would have gotten an answer.
That means when you eventually send a follow-up email, they have most likely forgotten about the original mail.
Try and jog the recipient’s memory by referencing the initial email or interaction to improve your chances of a response.
Even if they still can’t place you, establishing a previous interaction proves you’re not a complete stranger and makes it more likely for you to get a positive response.
2. Avoid using “Follow Up” in the subject line
A lot, if not most people, naturally use “Follow Up” in the subject line when they are crafting a polite follow-up email. I have done that myself a couple of times.
There are a few reasons why it is a wrong move. One, it does not provide any value. Two, it makes the reader feel like you’re blaming them for the non-answer. Not a motivator.
According to Invesp, 47% of email recipients open an email based on the subject line. Another 22% are more likely to open when it is personalized.
Instead of ‘Follow Up,” write a subject line that reflects the intention of your email or a previous conversation. It makes you stand out from the crowd.
3. Provide Value
Generally speaking, it is good advice never to seem desperate and always let your value do the talking. It is even more so when it comes to follow-up emails to a prospective client.
Use the follow-up email as an avenue to demonstrate your worth. It transforms the recipient’s opinion of you from someone who wants something from them to someone who can help them.
Overall, it makes it worth their while to open and respond to your email.
Lines like “Just touching base” or “I apologize for bothering you, but…” do nothing to improve your standing and ultimately capture their attention.
4. Include a Call to Action
How many times have you received a text that left you unsure of how to reply? I bet you ended up sending nothing. It is no different with emails.
To get a response, craft your follow-up email in a way that makes it easy for the recipient to respond. That starts with explaining why you are emailing, concisely and directly, and a call to action.
Make it clear what you want from the recipient. Do you want them to call you back? Fill out a form? Set up a meeting? Be specific.
It is also helpful when you distill your preferred response to a single word or short phrase.
5. Follow up quickly
Finally, it doesn’t matter how great your email is if it is too late. A general rule is to send the first follow-up email two to three days after the first email or interaction. That way, your request or subject is still fresh in their mind.
Also, you will most likely need more than one follow-up mail. This study from Yesware shows that while your chances of a reply are highest with the initial follow-up mail, it stays within double-digits well into the eighth email.
So, as long as there is still a chance, keep sending the follow-ups at reasonable intervals.
Anatomy of the Perfect Follow Up Email
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Now you know what to do and what not to do. Here are the elements of the perfect polite follow-up email
- State who you are (contextual reminder)
- Add value – could be a compliment, a service/product, or valuable information
- Be specific about how you can help
- Make an explicit call to action
- Write the subject line last
Here is a template with these elements in action
Subject Line: Let’s work on [problem to solve]
Hi [Name],
It was great meeting you at [name of event]! It was fascinating hearing about [something they mentioned they’re struggling with.].
I’d love to help you [problem you can solve] so you can [the benefit they want to achieve].
Are you available next week to chat?
Email me back and let me know when it works for you.
Looking forward to hearing from you,
[Your Name]
Also Read: Best Hunter.io Alternatives
Examples of Polite Follow Up Email
Here are 15 examples of excellent follow-up emails for different scenarios to inspire you.
1. Following up after a meeting
Let’s say you just had a meeting with a potential customer or client. This follow-up email is polite and provocative in equal measure.
The beginning of this email makes it feel like a conversation between friends, disarming any tension or anxiety of formality. Next, it establishes context, triggering the recipient’s memory and pulling them into the mind state of the author.
Also, the show of concern and straightforward call to action gives the recipient an invitation to have a conversation. By rounding out the body with added value, the entire email doesn’t even feel sales-y.
Finally, the email signature includes a link to the author’s website. It is a passive way to encourage the prospect to visit their website and a chance to collect marketing and engagement data.
Also Read: Ways To Increase Email Subscriptions On Your Wordpress Site
2. A follow-up email to acknowledge interest
One of the spoken rules of follow-up emails is to keep the message short. But it is not a hard rule, and this is one of the scenarios where a lengthy body can be beneficial.
If you use an email tracking software and the recipient clicks a link, you can register that as a show of interest and send a follow-up based on that.
In this scenario, it is better to use the action to start a potential conversation, which the second paragraph does well. It gives the recipient something to reply to, even if it is to decline the interest.
Even though it is best to avoid creating a sense of urgency in follow-up emails, a subtle one like the third paragraph works.
Finally, the call to action is distinct and exists in its own line, completely unmissable.
3. Polite follow-up email after a referral
As you probably know and I’ve established, the conversion journey is never linear. Sometimes, a client or an account gives you the runaround. It may not be pleasant, but you are the one with a goal.
In this scenario, there are two things you need to establish with the new contact. One, that you are not a total stranger.
You can do with something akin to the first line of the body in this sample. You should also CC the initial recipient of your email, i.e., the referee.
After that, provide value. Show how your service or product can help solve a significant pain point. Keep it brief. Keep it specific to the recipient’s role in the organization.
For an even higher chance of a response, do the leg work of setting up the meeting. The final line here works, but there is no harm in attaching a calendar invite too.
4. Follow up email after a networking event
Here is one thing to always have in the back of your mind when writing follow-up emails. No one loves emails. It is necessary, but no one enjoys dealing with them.
That is why your focus should be making it as friendly and relaxing as possible whenever you are writing a follow-up email. Follow-up emails after a networking event are a great chance to do that.
In this sample, the author takes the recipient’s mind back to a fun memory before diving into the point of their email. That’s good. It says, “this is not (just) about work. This is a potential friend.”
The second paragraph is pretty standard, but the third keeps things interesting by leveraging a previous discussion. A+.
Lastly, by attaching their resume, you give the recipient additional information to make a decision.
5. Follow up email to promote a single benefit
Not every one of your follow-up emails has to be an exhaustive list of the benefits the prospect client stands to gain from your solution. Sometimes, it is okay to zero in on the most relevant value proposition.
This strategy is best after two or three follow-up emails, and there are a couple of advantages to it.
One. Keeping things shorter. As the follow-up emails increase, this keeps you from becoming a nuisance. It can be hard to shake off a negative impression once it is formed.
Two. This is the most critical advantage and it is far more compelling. Don’t talk about your product or company or yourself. Just that precious benefit.
Of course, this only works if you do substantive research on your recipient or company.
6. Follow up email to turn a maybe into a yes
Sometimes, a follow-up email isn’t about starting a conversation but securing a deal. In scenarios like this, focusing on how others have benefited from the product or service can get you the “yes” you want on the spot.
As always, start by reminding the recipient who you are. They may not necessarily have forgotten, but it gives them the proper context to process the point of the email.
This sample by an SEO agency does something incredibly brilliant by conveying value with a picture. Images are worth a thousand words, and it is a foregone conclusion that images are effective in email marketing.
With a picture like that, everything else fades away. Your prospect is left to imagine what a similar effect can do for their company.
Job done.
7. Following up on a request
It is pragmatic to avoid pointing accusing fingers when you are not trying to land a client but maintain your relationship with one.
No one wants the blame, even when it is their fault. Instead of accusing your client of failing to respond to a request, repeat the ask.
Start with the why, which this sample does brilliantly by checking the temperature of the relationship. If the client hasn’t responded to the request, it could be because they didn’t like your performance.
Then proceed with the ask—no reference to the initial email. Request as though you were asking for the first time.
It will still serve the purpose of a reminder without making the recipient feel bad they forgot in the first place.
8. Follow-up sales email
Few people regularly get an email that starts with “Okay.” Most people get the standard Hey or Hi, which makes this follow-up sample stand out right from the jump.
Even better, everything that follows is sheer brilliance.
The first sentence acknowledges what the recipient is probably thinking and taps into their fear of missing out. It is a strong opening.
The rest of the body goes on to tick every box of a convincing sales email.
Provide value to the potential customer? Check. Social proof? Check. Anticipates objections? Check. A solid call to action with the bonus of introducing scarcity? Double-check.
There are very few guarantees in life. But unless the service is entirely irrelevant to the recipient, this sample works especially when you send it after the first or second follow-up email.
9. Follow-up email after a trigger event
One of the points I mentioned in the How to Write a Follow-Up email section earlier is the importance of the subject line. This example is an excellent application of it, especially after a trigger event.
Instead of a generic subject line that might get your email marked as read without getting opened, leverage an event in the potential client’s industry or company.
This subject line taps into the receiver’s curiosity, significantly improving their likelihood to read the email.
The email then doubles down by using a combination of competition and value proposition to deliver a compelling message. Smart.
Want to take things further? Add a snippet of your service or product’s solution.
10. Follow-up email sample with humor
After the fourth or sixth follow-up email, the conversation might start feeling stale. In fact, the prospect might be annoyed by your persistence already. Using humor in your follow-up email can be effective at diffusing the tension.
There are a couple of great things about this sample. First, it is scannable and requires little effort to read.
Second, you give the prospect options, allowing them to reject you without having to feel bad about it. You get to move on.
Finally, the humor and sense of understanding humanize you.
If timed right, say you send it on a busy and stressful afternoon, the laugh could provide a relief that finally gets you a positive reply.
11. When you follow-up for status checking
Remember when I said a good follow-up email should have a clear call to action that specifies the type of reply you want? Here is an example with great use of it.
Niles has two clear options. Say they are not interested or finally commit to the service. But that is not the only thing that makes this an example worth emulating.
The phrasing allows Niles to send a quick reply. Not interested? He can simply reply yes. Interested? He gets to write whatever he’s comfortable with at the time.
And that is the second thing that makes this sample effective. It allows Niles to go from being a passive recipient to the protagonist of the conversation. You are not marketing to him. He’s making an active choice according to his needs.
12. Follow-up email for a late invoice
As a freelancer or contractor, you will have to deal with late invoice payments in your career. Being polite doesn’t mean you have to project desperation or frustration. Be brief and direct, and it starts with the subject line.
In this sample, the subject is confident, impersonal, and captures the entirety of the issue.
As for the message itself, it is more effective to ask a question than repeat the obvious fact that you’ve not received payment. Unless your contact is not directly in charge of payment, it adds nothing to the conversation.
Also, being understandable and reasonable makes you more likely to get an answer about the delay.
Finally, deliver a straightforward call to action as a standalone line.
13. Follow up email after an interview
The interview itself is the best place to showcase your value and stand out among other applicants. But a follow-up email after gives you a second chance.
Not only because you may not have performed well, but it is an extra opportunity to connect with the interviewer(s) and keep you top of mind.
In your follow-up email, as shown by this sample, recap a part of the conversation. It shows you were listening.
Use a paragraph to reinstate how you would fit into the team. Something akin to the second paragraph here.
Finally, and perhaps the most important, personalize the content. This could be anything from a compliment about something the interviewer wore or a detail they shared with you during the interview.
NOTE: Don’t send the same email to everyone if different colleagues interview you. Always personalize your follow-up email for each person.
14. After an interview with no response
Being proactive could help you get a second or third consideration if a prospective employee hasn’t responded after an interview.
An email that restates the obvious (non-)development is boring and makes you seem entitled. A follow-up email like this one is better. It is polite and touches on all the things you may want to know without a sense of entitlement.
Start by referencing the interview, triggering the memory of the experience in the recipient. Follow up by reiterating your interest in the position and why.
Finally, offer to help with a gentle call to action. Sometimes, you haven’t gotten a response because the decision-maker(s) needs more information. It is also an opportunity to make a more convincing case for the role.
15. The final follow-up email
It is always best to know when a sale or deal will not happen and cut your losses, and six to eight unreplied emails seem like a good time.
But it doesn’t have to be a unilateral decision. Sending a final follow-up email tells the recipient that the game is over.
A breakup email like this ticks all the boxes. First, you introduce yourself and state the point of the email.
Then you give the recipient a clear and simple call to action to know their position. In this format, all it takes is three button presses. One to hit reply, another to answer, and the last to send.
Who knows, your show of empathy might be the thing that finally converts them. After all, even at 7%, there is still a chance for the first reply.
Conclusion
Whether you are in sales or a freelancer, customer and client acquisition lies in persistence. That is why follow-up emails are necessary.
When crafted with care, a follow-up email is an effective way to draw your prospects out of their reluctance and improve the probability of them taking a chance on you.
These polite follow-up email samples are helpful references when you are crafting your own. Use and iterate on them.
With the tips we’ve discussed, you can start creating follow-ups with high response rates and get you where you want to be.
Cassie Riley has a passion for all things marketing and social media. She is a wife, mother, and entrepreneur. In her spare time, she enjoys traveling, language, music, writing, and unicorns. Cassie is a lifetime learner, and loves to spend time attending classes, webinars, and summits.