Follow Up Email Examples for B2B Sales, Outreach, and Lead Generation
Most B2B opportunities do not come from the first message. Prospects may be busy, evaluating priorities, or waiting for the right moment. A well-timed, well-written follow-up keeps the conversation alive without forcing a decision. These 10 examples cover the most common follow-up scenarios for technology companies — with notes on timing, approach, and why each one works.
Concise
Readable in a few seconds — shorter than the original message, not longer
Relevant
Connected to a real problem, previous conversation, or useful resource
Specific
References something about the prospect — not a generic reminder
Low pressure
Gives a simple next step without requiring immediate commitment
10 examples
Follow Up Email Examples
Replace the placeholders in {{curly braces}} with specific details for each prospect. The more specific the replacement, the better the result.
After No Response
Subject line
Quick follow up
Email body
Hi {{FirstName}},
I wanted to follow up on my earlier note about {{topic}}.
This may not be a priority right now, but I thought it could be relevant if your team is working on {{problem or initiative}} this quarter.
Would it make sense to briefly compare notes?
Best,
{{Name}}Why it works
Simple, polite, and non-pressuring. Acknowledges that timing may not be right while giving a low-friction reason to reply. The phrase 'compare notes' reduces the ask significantly compared to 'book a call.'
Best for
First follow-up to any cold email or LinkedIn message that received no reply
Value-Add Follow-Up
Subject line
Useful example on {{topic}}
Email body
Hi {{FirstName}},
I came across a practical example related to {{problem}} and thought it might be useful for your team.
The main takeaway is that companies often struggle with {{specific issue}} before they realise it is affecting {{business outcome}}.
Happy to send it over if relevant.
Best,
{{Name}}Why it works
Gives the prospect something useful rather than simply asking for their time again. The conditional offer ('if relevant') keeps the pressure low while still moving the conversation forward.
Best for
Second or third touch in a cold outreach sequence; works well for technology companies with useful guides, benchmarks, or case studies to share
After a Meeting
Subject line
Follow up from our conversation
Email body
Hi {{FirstName}},
Thanks again for speaking with me today.
Based on our conversation, the main areas worth exploring seem to be:
1. {{Challenge 1}}
2. {{Challenge 2}}
3. {{Opportunity or next step}}
I will send over the information we discussed. Please let me know if I missed anything important.
Best,
{{Name}}Why it works
Demonstrates active listening and creates shared structure for the next step. The numbered format is quick to scan and signals that the sender understood the conversation. Asking whether anything was missed invites the prospect to correct the record — which keeps them engaged.
Best for
Immediately after any discovery call, demo, or exploratory meeting
After Sending a Proposal
Subject line
Following up on the proposal
Email body
Hi {{FirstName}},
I wanted to follow up on the proposal I sent over.
The main recommendation is focused on helping {{Company}} improve {{business outcome}} through {{solution area}}.
Would it be useful to review the proposal together and discuss any questions?
Best,
{{Name}}Why it works
Reminds the prospect of the business value framing rather than simply asking whether they read a document. Offering to review together reduces the risk of misinterpretation and opens the door to objection handling before a decision is made.
Best for
3–5 business days after sending a proposal or formal quote
Break-Up Email
Subject line
Should I close the loop?
Email body
Hi {{FirstName}},
I have not heard back, so I assume this may not be a priority right now.
Should I close the loop for now, or would it be better to reconnect later when {{topic}} becomes more relevant?
Best,
{{Name}}Why it works
Gives the prospect two easy options: close the loop or agree to a future reconnect. Neither requires immediate commitment. This format is one of the highest reply-rate messages in a cold outreach sequence because it removes pressure entirely and respects the prospect's time.
Best for
Final message in any cold outreach sequence after two or three prior touches with no response
LinkedIn Connection Follow-Up
Message body
Hi {{FirstName}},
Thanks for connecting.
I noticed your team is active in {{industry or topic}}. We work with B2B technology companies on {{problem area}}, and I thought there might be some overlap.
Would you be open to exchanging a few ideas?
Best,
{{Name}}Why it works
Short, conversational, and non-sales-focused. 'Exchanging ideas' is a lower-friction ask than 'booking a meeting.' The brief relevance signal — 'I noticed your team is active in...' — shows the message was not sent to thousands of contacts.
Best for
First follow-up after a LinkedIn connection is accepted
After an Event or Conference
Subject line
Great meeting you at {{Event}}
Email body
Hi {{FirstName}},
It was great meeting you at {{Event}}.
I enjoyed our conversation about {{topic}}, especially your point about {{specific detail}}.
If useful, I would be happy to continue the discussion and share a few examples related to {{problem or opportunity}}.
Best,
{{Name}}Why it works
References a real, shared interaction with a specific detail — which signals genuine attention rather than a templated message. Event follow-ups are among the highest-converting formats in B2B outreach because the familiarity barrier has already been crossed.
Best for
Any post-conference, post-webinar, or post-event outreach within 48 hours of meeting
Partnership Idea Follow-Up
Subject line
Following up on partnership ideas
Email body
Hi {{FirstName}},
I wanted to follow up on the partnership ideas we discussed.
There may be a few practical ways to collaborate — joint content, referral opportunities, webinars, or market education around {{topic}}.
Would it make sense to schedule a short call to identify one simple next step?
Best,
{{Name}}Why it works
Converts a vague partnership conversation into specific, actionable collaboration formats. Listing concrete options gives the prospect something to react to — which is easier than responding to 'let me know if you're interested in partnering.'
Best for
Following up after an initial partnership exploration conversation
Case Study or Example Follow-Up
Subject line
Example that may be relevant
Email body
Hi {{FirstName}},
I thought this example might be relevant to your team.
A company in a similar space was facing {{problem}} and improved {{outcome}} by changing how they approached {{strategy or process}}.
Would you like me to share the short version?
Best,
{{Name}}Why it works
Uses social proof at a micro scale — one specific outcome rather than a full case study. The offer to share 'the short version' is intentionally low-effort for the prospect to accept, which improves the reply rate even before they know the full story.
Best for
Second or third follow-up where a social proof reference is more persuasive than a repeated ask
Re-Engagement After Long Silence
Subject line
Reconnecting
Email body
Hi {{FirstName}},
We spoke a while ago about {{topic}}, and I wanted to reconnect.
A few things have changed in the market since then — particularly around {{trend or challenge}}. It may be worth revisiting the conversation if this is still relevant for your team.
Would you be open to a short update call?
Best,
{{Name}}Why it works
Gives a genuine reason to restart a cold conversation: something has changed. This avoids the passive-aggressive feeling of 'just following up again' and gives the prospect new information to react to rather than the same ask presented slightly differently.
Best for
Leads who engaged weeks or months ago but went quiet; prospects who said 'not now' and a reasonable amount of time has passed
How Many Follow-Up Emails Should You Send?
For most B2B outreach campaigns, three to five follow-ups are enough. The right number depends on audience, deal size, urgency, and relationship strength. A simple five-touch cadence for cold outreach:
| Touch | Timing | Goal |
|---|---|---|
| Initial message | Day 1 | Introduce relevance and open a conversation |
| First follow-up | Day 3–4 | Re-introduce without pressure; add a new angle or light value |
| Second follow-up | Day 8–10 | Add genuine value — insight, example, resource, or case study |
| Third follow-up | Day 14–16 | Social proof reference or a sharper problem framing |
| Break-up email | Day 20–25 | Close the loop gracefully; offer to reconnect when timing is better |
For high-value enterprise accounts, the follow-up process can extend further and should include LinkedIn engagement, content sharing, and event touchpoints. The cadence above is a starting baseline — adjust based on what your specific audience responds to.
Follow-Up Tips for Technology Companies
Technology buyers typically need more context before committing to a meeting. They may have concerns about integration, security, implementation risk, internal buy-in, or technical fit. Follow-ups that address these concerns outperform repeated asks for time.
Technical explainers
Help buyers understand implementation, integration, or security implications without requiring a call
Migration checklists
Reduce perceived switching risk — a major barrier in infrastructure and platform sales
Comparison guides
Answer the 'how do you compare to X' question before the prospect has to ask
ROI calculators
Give internal champions the numbers they need to build a business case for approval
Case studies
Show specific, verifiable outcomes in contexts the buyer recognises as relevant to their situation
Market insights
Demonstrate that you understand the buyer's environment — not just your own product
Common Follow-Up Mistakes
Writing 'just checking in' with no additional value
Replace with a specific insight, example, resource, or question that gives the prospect a genuine reason to re-engage
Following up too aggressively
Space messages at least 3–5 business days apart; stack too many touches and you risk being marked as spam or blocked
Sending long follow-ups that require effort to read
Follow-ups should be shorter than the original message, not longer — the prospect's attention has already been tested once
Repeating the same message with minor wording changes
Each follow-up should introduce a new angle: different value framing, different format, different ask
Generic messages with no prospect-specific detail
Include at least one reference to the prospect's company, role, recent activity, or industry context
Asking for a full meeting commitment too early
Use lower-friction asks in follow-ups: a question to answer, a resource offer, or a yes/no relevance check
Frequently asked questions
Follow-Up Email FAQ
Related resources
More outreach guides and tools
Work with us
Want better follow-up sequences for your B2B outreach?
Mustard Seed Solutions helps technology companies improve cold outreach, LinkedIn outreach, email sequences, content strategy, AI Search visibility, and international GTM execution. We work with SaaS vendors, cybersecurity companies, cloud infrastructure firms, and IT services teams.
