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How-to

Email templates

Networking email subject lines that get opened

Most networking emails fail before they're opened. Learn the subject line formats that change that, with examples for cold outreach and follow-ups.

Written by

Tassia O'Callaghan
Tassia O'Callaghan

June 23, 2026

Networking email subject lines that get opened

A good networking email subject line is short and specific, referencing something real: a mutual contact, similar experiences, a piece of work you read, or an event you both attended. Aim for under 50 characters, front-loaded with the detail that matters.

Most networking emails fail before they're opened. The body copy, the ask, the tone; none of it matters if the subject line doesn't get the email read. And yet it's sometimes one of the last things written, in the 30 seconds before hitting send.

This guide covers the formats that work, why they work, and some examples you can adapt for different situations.

Why networking email subject lines decide so much

The person receiving a networking email didn't ask for it. They're looking at an inbox full of things with a stronger claim on their time, making split-second decisions about what gets opened and what doesn't. The subject line is the whole of that decision.

A study by Belkins, analyzing over 5.5 million cold emails sent across business domains, found that personalized subject lines achieved a 46% open rate compared to 35% for non-personalized ones. That's a 31% difference in visibility before the email body has been seen at all.

The same study found that question-format subject lines also hit 46% open rates, outperforming statement-based formats. Short lines of 2 to 4 words performed similarly well. What didn't work: urgency language, generic openers, and subject lines padded past 7 or 8 words.

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The data reflects something fairly intuitive: a subject line that signals relevance gets opened; one that tries to be interesting without being specific usually doesn't.

What makes a networking email subject line work

The difference between a subject line that gets opened and one that doesn't usually comes down to one thing: whether the recipient can tell it was written for them.

It references something real

The strongest networking subject lines contain a specific detail: a mutual contact, a piece of work you genuinely read, an event you both attended, a role or company mentioned by name. This signals that the email isn't a template blast. It takes five seconds to register and changes how the recipient reads everything that follows.

LinkedIn is the most practical place to find that detail before sending a cold outreach email. A recent post, a comment they made in a thread, a role change, a shared connection: any of these gives you something concrete that signals the email was written for them specifically.

It's short enough to read in full on a phone

Most professional email is opened on mobile first. Subject lines get cut off at roughly 40 to 50 characters on most screens. "Following up on our shared interest in growth marketing strategy" disappears before anyone reaches the interesting part. Keep it under 50 characters and front-load the information that matters.

It doesn't try too hard

Subject lines with urgent language ("ASAP," "Don't miss this"), vague flattery ("Love your work!"), or over-engineered hooks tend to underperform. They read as template behavior, and recipients recognise the pattern quickly. A subject line that sounds like a person wrote it for this specific email performs better than one that sounds optimized.

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Networking email subject line formats that work

These are starting points. Adapt them to the specific context rather than sending them verbatim.

The mutual connection

Best for: cold introduction emails where you have a shared contact

  • "James Park suggested I get in touch"
  • "Via [Name]: quick intro"

A shared contact is the highest-trust entry point in any networking email. If you have one, lead with it. The name is the hook; keep everything else short enough that it's the first thing they read.

The specific reference

Best for: cold outreach to someone whose work you've followed

  • "Your LinkedIn post on account expansion"
  • "Re: your talk at [Event]"
  • "Your piece in [Publication]: Quick question"

This works when the reference is real and specific enough that it couldn't apply to anyone else. "Loved your content" doesn't work. "Your framework for reducing churn in SaaS" does. LinkedIn is usually where you find the reference; the subject line is where you use it.

The direct question

Best for: any networking email where the ask is clear

  • "Open to a 20-minute intro call?"
  • "Worth a quick chat about [topic]?"

Question-format subject lines consistently outperform statement formats in large-scale send data. They set expectations clearly and invite a simple yes or no, which is easier to respond to than an open-ended opener.

The shared context

Best for: alumni outreach, event follow-ups, industry connections

  • "Fellow [University] alum: Quick intro"
  • "Both in [City] fintech: Worth connecting?"
  • "We were both at [Conference] last week"

Shared context answers the implicit question ("why is this person emailing me?") before they've opened anything. It works particularly well for introduction emails where you have no mutual contact but do have a genuine common ground.

The role-specific opener

Best for: targeted outreach where you've done research on the recipient's role

  • "Quick question for the team at [Company]"
  • "Re: your work in [specific area] at [Company]"

Using the company name or role signals that the email is addressed to them specifically. It works best when the body follows through with the same specificity. If the subject line promises relevance, the email needs to deliver it.

Subject lines to avoid

A few formats appear so often that most recipients have stopped reading them properly.

  • "Connecting" or "Introduction" alone: Too vague to give the recipient any reason to open. Even adding one specific detail, for example a name, a company, or an event, improves it considerably.
  • "Hope this finds you well": A body copy opener that has wandered into the subject line field. It signals a template and tells the recipient nothing.
  • "Quick question": Can work when followed by the actual question ("Open to a 20-minute intro call?"), but as a standalone subject line it's become too generic to do any work.
  • "I came across your profile": Signals mass outreach. Replace it with what specifically you saw and why it caught your attention.

Anything longer than 8 or 9 words: the end will get cut off on mobile, and the part that gets cut off is usually the part that made it specific.

Follow-up subject lines: Cold and post-event

A follow-up is a different task to the original outreach. You either have no response to work with, or you have a real conversation to reference. In both cases, the subject line carries most of the work of making the email feel relevant rather than routine.

Following up on an unanswered email

"Following up" alone is weak as a subject line. A follow-up that reframes or adds something new performs better than one that just restates the original request.

Some that work:

  • "Still worth a quick chat?"
  • "One more thought on [topic]"
  • "Circling back: [Specific reason]"

If you have something new to add, lead with it. If you don't, keep it short.

Following up after a meeting or event

A post-event follow-up is a different situation. You have shared context now, which makes the subject line easier to write but raises the bar: a generic "Great meeting you!" reads as perfunctory when you've just had a real conversation. Reference something specific from it.

Some that work:

  • "Your point on [topic] from [Event]"
  • "Good talking at [Event]: [Specific thing] you mentioned"
  • "Following up on our [Event] conversation"

The goal is to make the email feel like a continuation of the conversation. The subject line should confirm to the recipient which conversation you're referring to before they've opened anything.

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When you're sending a lot of networking emails

For sales reps and account managers who send outreach in volume, the networking subject line problem scales. Twenty cold emails with generic openers means 20 missed opportunities before anyone's read a word of your pitch.

Email is already the number one time-wasting task for US office workers, according to the Fyxer Admin Burden Index, 2026, a survey of 5,000 UK and US office workers. When you're adding 20 or 30 networking emails on top of a full inbox, the overhead compounds fast.

The subject line and the opening sentence of any email require the most original thinking, and they're the slowest part when you're writing 30 of them.

Networking email subject line FAQs

What is a good subject line for a networking email?
The strongest networking email subject lines are short, specific, and reference something real: a mutual contact, a piece of work you read, an event you both attended. Generic openers like "Connecting" or "Introduction" tend to underperform because they give the recipient no reason to prioritize the email. Anything under 50 characters that tells the recipient something specific about why you're reaching out will outperform a longer, vaguer alternative.
How long should a networking email subject line be?
Under 50 characters is a reliable ceiling, since most mobile email clients cut off subject lines around that length. Short subject lines of 2 to 4 words also tend to perform well in large-scale send data. Whatever length you use, the key information should appear at the start, not the end.
Should I use the recipient's name in a networking email subject line?
Using a name can help, but the more reliable personalization signal is a specific reference: their company, their role, something they published or said, a mutual contact. A name alongside a generic message still reads as a template. A specific reference without the name can perform just as well. If you have both, use both.
What's a good subject line for an introduction email?
The same principles apply: short, specific, and honest about the purpose. For a cold introduction with no prior connection, the subject line should signal relevance immediately; a mutual contact's name, shared experience, their company, or a specific reference to their work. "Introduction" alone is too vague. If you're introducing yourself after meeting at an event, reference the event or something from the conversation.