Meeting Request Email
Write effective meeting request emails that get responses and calendar bookings
автор: VibeBaza
curl -fsSL https://vibebaza.com/i/meeting-request | bash
Meeting Request Email
Craft meeting requests that prospects actually accept.
Prompt Template
Create a meeting request email for:
**Context:**
- Relationship: [Cold/Warm/Existing customer]
- Previous Contact: [Any prior interaction]
- Meeting Purpose: [What you want to discuss]
- Meeting Length: [15/30/45/60 minutes]
**Recipient:**
- Name/Title: [Who you're reaching]
- Company: [Their company]
- Relevant Trigger: [Why now]
**Value Proposition:**
- What's In It For Them: [Why they should meet]
- Agenda Items: [What you'll cover]
- Expected Outcome: [What they'll gain]
Generate:
1. Subject lines (3 options)
2. Cold meeting request
3. Warm meeting request
4. Follow-up if no response
Meeting Request Frameworks
Value-First Approach
Subject: "15 minutes to discuss [specific value]?"
"Hi [Name],
I've been researching [Company] and noticed [trigger/observation].
I'd love to share how we've helped similar companies [specific outcome]—including [named customer] who achieved [result].
Would you have 15 minutes this week for a quick conversation? I promise to keep it focused and valuable.
[Link to calendar / Suggest 2-3 times]"
Referral Approach
Subject: "[Mutual connection] suggested we connect"
"Hi [Name],
[Mutual connection] mentioned you're working on [initiative/challenge]. They thought it might be valuable for us to connect.
We recently helped [similar company] with [similar situation], and I have a few ideas that might be relevant.
Do you have 20 minutes this week to explore?"
Direct Ask
Subject: "Quick call about [topic]?"
"Hi [Name],
[One sentence about why you're reaching out]
I'd like to share [specific thing] that's helped teams like yours [specific outcome].
15 minutes—[Day] or [Day] work for you?"
Best Practices
- Propose specific times (2-3 options)
- Include calendar link
- State the time commitment clearly
- Give them an easy out
- Follow up once, respectfully