Subject Line Optimization
The subject line determines whether the email gets read. The data is counterintuitive: short, boring, internal-looking subject lines win decisively.
Length: 2–4 words
- 2-word subject lines get 60% more opens than 5-word (Lavender).
- Going from 2 to 4 words reduces replies by 17.5%.
- 2–4 words yield 46% open rates vs 34% for 10 words (Belkins, 5.5M emails).
- Mobile truncates at 30–35 characters — brevity is practical necessity.
Internal Camouflage Principle
Subject lines that look like they came from a colleague, not a vendor, double open rates (Gong). Buyers mentally categorize before opening — if it looks like sales, it's filtered.
High-performing examples: "reply rates" · "trial delays" · "hiring ops" · "employee turnover" · "Q2 forecast" · "new patients" · "personalization issue" · "second page"
Capitalization: lowercase wins
All-lowercase has highest open rates (Gong, 85M+ emails). Lowercase looks more personal/internal. For cold outreach specifically, lowercase beats title case.
Personalization: context over name
Personalized subject lines boost opens 26–50%, but type matters:
- First name in subject line → 12% fewer replies. Signals automation.
- Contextual personalization works: pain points, competitors, trigger events, industry challenges.
- Use {{painPoint}}, {{competitor}}, {{commonGround}} — not {{firstName}}.
Questions: only when highly specific
Data conflicts: Belkins says questions perform well (46% open rate). Lavender says questions lower opens by 56%. Resolution: specific pain questions work ("Need help with {{challenge}}?"), generic questions fail ("Quick question?" / "Have 15 minutes?"). Default to statements.
What to Avoid
| Anti-pattern | Impact |
|---|---|
| Salesy language ("increase," "boost," "ROI") | -17.9% opens |
| Urgency words ("ASAP," "urgent") | Below 36% opens |
| Excessive punctuation ("!!!" or "??") | -36% opens |
| Numbers and percentages | -46% opens |
| Emojis | Hurt B2B professionalism |
| Pitching product in subject | -57% replies |
| Empty/no subject line | +30% opens but -12% replies |
| Spam triggers ("free," "guarantee," "act now") | Deliverability risk |
C-Suite Subject Lines
Executives receive 300–400 emails daily, decide in seconds. They respond 23% more often than non-C-suite when emails pass their filter (6.4% reply rate).
What works: ultra-concise, human, understated. "{{companyInitiative}}" · "thank you" · "an update" · "a question" · reference to a specific project or trigger event.
Anything "salesy" is immediately rejected.