"I hope this email finds you well" is the most overused email opener. Recipients skip it. This guide explains why it hurts your email and what to write instead.
How to Write a Better Email Opening
1. Cut the filler opening entirely
The fastest improvement: delete the opener and start with your actual point. "I saw your post about X โ I wanted to share Y" is stronger than any pleasantry.
2. Reference something specific
Mention something real and recent about the recipient: a post they wrote, a company milestone, a shared connection. Specificity proves you're not sending a template blast.
3. Open with value or context
If you need a transition, lead with what the email is about. 'Following up on our call about X' or 'Quick question about your Q2 plans' tells the reader immediately why to keep reading.
4. Match the tone to your relationship
Existing clients and colleagues can handle direct, casual openers. Cold outreach benefits from a warmer but still specific hook. Formal contexts (legal, executive) call for professional but still purposeful openings.
Better Alternatives
- "Just following up on [specific item]..."
- "Saw your recent announcement about [X] โ congratulations."
- "Quick question about [specific topic]."
- "[Mutual contact] suggested I reach out."
- "I read your piece on [topic] and wanted to share a related thought."