Talk notes
Cold VC outbound averages roughly an 8 percent reply rate in our subscriber data. The template we recommend averages roughly 32 percent — about 4× the baseline. The difference is not gimmicky. It's that founders reply when they feel seen. The template forces the sender to demonstrate they actually looked at the work before they sent the email.
Sentence one is the specific-commit reference. 'I noticed your team merged PR #847 last Thursday refactoring the rate limiter — the new sliding-window implementation looks much cleaner than the previous token bucket.' Two things happen in that sentence. The founder knows you're not running a list-based outbound campaign, because you can't fake a real PR reference. And the founder feels seen, because someone actually read the work. That single sentence is roughly half the reply-rate lift.
Sentence two is your thesis. One sentence. Not three, not a paragraph. 'I invest in developer-tools companies at the seed stage with a focus on infrastructure-first products.' The founder needs to know in one read whether you're a relevant counterparty. If your thesis takes three sentences to explain, your fund is too unfocused to explain in cold email — fix the thesis, not the email.
Sentence three is one specific question you actually want answered. Not 'would you like to chat'. 'How are you thinking about pricing the open-source tier versus the managed tier?' or 'What's the founding-team plan for adding a head of platform in the next 12 months?' Specific questions get specific answers. Generic asks get ignored. What to leave out: a deck attachment, a calendar link, a mention of your fundraising, your fund's capital under management. The whole point of the template is to demonstrate you've read the work — adding sales-y boilerplate undoes that signal.