I want to be clear about the state of cold email outbound in 2026, because the discourse has gotten loose. Most playbooks circulated in 2021–2023 are now actively counterproductive. A few specific tactics still work. The economics of the channel have shifted in ways that mean the right approach depends on your specific business.

What has broken

What still works

Three distinct outbound patterns are still effective. They have very different cost structures:

1. Genuinely-researched one-off emails to a small list

The senior-AE approach: identify 80 target accounts per quarter, research the buyer thoroughly (their LinkedIn writing, their recent press, their company’s recent funding/hiring/product launches), and send a single highly specific email referencing something they recently said or did. Reply rates of 12–22%. Cost per email is ~$40 in AE time. Total program is a couple hundred touches a quarter, not thousands.

The math: 80 accounts × 18% reply rate = ~14 conversations per quarter from a fully-loaded $80K-OTE rep doing this part-time. Not high volume but very high quality.

2. Trigger-based outbound on observable buying signals

Detect a buying signal (job posting referencing a tool category, recent funding round, executive hire from a known-fit company), reach out within 48 hours with specific reference to the trigger. Reply rates of 8–15%. Better than #1 on cost-per-touch; worse on quality.

The infrastructure costs: a few hundred dollars a month in signal tooling, plus the team to act on signals quickly. The reason most companies fail at this is operational, not strategic — they detect signals on Tuesday but don’t reach out until the following Tuesday, by which point the signal is cold.

3. Warm intros via founder/exec network

Not technically outbound, but functionally the highest-ROI outbound channel for early-stage SaaS. The founder makes 5–10 introductions per month through their network. Conversion to conversation is ~60%. Conversion to qualified opportunity is ~25%.

Most founders underutilize this because they think it doesn’t scale. It doesn’t, but for the first $5M–$10M ARR it produces enough pipeline that scale isn’t the constraint.

What I’d build today

If I were standing up an outbound function today for a $2M–$8M ARR SaaS company, I’d:

If you already have an SDR team running the broken playbook, the question is how to wind it down without losing too much momentum. That’s a longer post.

— Daniel