A stranger emailed me twice this week offering to build my website. Same pitch both times. Local guy, building sites for local businesses, keeping the price low, quick call sometime? The first copy had his signature filled in. The second copy still had the template showing, brackets and all, the place where his name was supposed to go sitting there empty like a costume sent with the hanger still in it.
I’ll admit something: I sometimes respond to these emails.
Part of it is curiosity about whether there’s actual value buried in there. The cost is one minute of my life, and let’s be honest, I waste minutes in far worse ways. Part of it is something closer to coaching instinct. I read these pitches the way a chef reads a bad menu, half annoyed, half rooting for the kitchen.
Because this one was close. Achingly close. One line in his prompt would have changed everything. Something like: “before you write the email, actually look at the website and shape a POV.”
Then the opener stops being “I build affordable websites” and becomes “your website is already killer, and I think I can make a few improvements you haven’t thought of yet.” That version gets a reply from me the same morning. Not because it flatters me, but because it’s accurate, and accuracy is the cheapest available form of respect.
My old CMO once joked he should just put me in charge of the company site after seeing what I’d done with mine. The guy in my inbox could have known that too. The evidence was one click away. He had a research assistant that works for free and he didn’t ask it to look.
You know the old line about outrunning a bear. You don’t need to be the fastest runner alive, just faster than the guy next to you. Differentiation works like that more often than anyone selling differentiation will admit.
The inbox is not a footrace against the whole category. It’s a footrace against the other four cold emails that landed that same Tuesday, every one of them wearing the same template.
We pour ourselves into becoming the fastest. New positioning, new brand, new everything, chasing some imagined gap of fifty miles per hour. Then you put real pressure on the problem and find out the gap was never fifty. You weren’t thirty-seven layers away from a yes. You were one. Maybe two.
He’ll never know how close he was. That’s the part that stays with me.
(Or, maybe, if he’s smart enough, he’ll read this post and try again. One layer smarter.)
Stay Positive & Fill In Your Signature
– GarthBox
