Entrepreneurship··5 min read

Why Cold Outreach Is a Founder's Most Underrated Skill

Most founders treat cold outreach as a necessary evil — something to survive until referrals take over. I think that's exactly backwards. Cold outreach is a discipline that, done well, compounds faster than almost anything else a founder can build.

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Manas Majhi
Manas Majhi

Founder, Majhi Group & Majhi OS

Why Cold Outreach Is a Founder's Most Underrated Skill

I sent 184 messages before I got my first meaningful response that led anywhere. Not 184 cold emails in a spray-and-pray campaign. 184 carefully written, individually researched messages to people I had genuine reasons to contact.

I know the number because I kept track. Not out of obsession — out of the conviction that if I understood the pattern of what worked and what didn't, I could improve. Which, eventually, I did.

Cold outreach is the skill that built Majhi Group's early client base. Not referrals, not inbound, not a partner network. Direct, researched, specific outreach to people I had reason to believe needed what I could offer. And the thing I learned over those 184 messages and everything that came after is that cold outreach is not a numbers game. It is a writing game. The founders who understand this build something durable. The ones who don't spend years wondering why their conversion rate doesn't improve no matter how many more messages they send.

The writing frame, not the sales frame

The single most important shift in how I approached outreach was moving from a sales frame to a writing frame.

In the sales frame, the metric is whether the message converts. Did they reply? Did they book a call? Did they become a client? These are legitimate outcomes, but they're the wrong thing to optimize for in the message itself — because optimizing for conversion in the message produces messages that feel like they're optimizing for conversion. Recipients can feel it. They delete those messages.

In the writing frame, the metric is whether the message is good. Is it specific to this person? Does it demonstrate that I actually looked at their situation? Is it concise enough that reading it costs less than a minute of their time? Does it offer something before it asks for something?

When I started evaluating my outreach the way I evaluated my writing — asking whether each sentence earned its place, whether the opening line would make someone want to read the next one — my response rate changed. Not because I found a hack. Because the messages got genuinely better.

The specific observation is the whole game

Every effective cold outreach message I've sent has one thing in common: it opens with a specific, accurate observation about the recipient's situation.

Not a compliment. Not "I've been following your work." Not "I noticed you recently joined [company]." An observation that demonstrates actual attention — something that could only be true for this person, in this situation, at this moment.

For executive search outreach: "You've had a VP of Sales role open for 90+ days at the same time you're expanding into two new markets. That's the kind of mandate most search firms are least equipped to close quickly." That's specific. That tells the CEO I've looked at their job board, their press releases, and their LinkedIn. It tells them I've thought about their situation, not just sent them a template.

For hiring outreach — when I'm reaching a candidate: "You've built the exact kind of enterprise sales motion that [company] is trying to replicate in APAC, and you've done it in a smaller organization where you had to build the infrastructure before you could build the team. That combination is harder to find than most job descriptions acknowledge." That's specific to what their career actually shows, not what their title suggests.

The specific observation is the whole game. Everything else is just execution.

Brevity is not a constraint. It's respect.

One of the patterns I noticed across my 184 early messages was a correlation between length and non-response. The longer the message, the lower the response rate — with a few exceptions where the length was justified by the depth of specific content.

This makes sense when you think about the recipient's position. They receive more messages than they can respond to. Every message they open is a competition for their attention with every other claim on their time. A long message signals, implicitly, that you value your own words more than their time. A short message signals the opposite.

My current discipline: LinkedIn DMs under 150 words. Cold emails under 200. Not because there's magic in those numbers, but because those constraints force the editing that produces better messages. When you have to say it in 150 words, you cut everything that doesn't earn its place. What remains is usually more specific, more direct, and more persuasive than the original draft.

The sequence matters as much as the message

Cold outreach is a conversation, not a single message. The sequence matters as much as the individual touch.

My standard approach — for Majhi Group outreach — is a three-touch sequence over eight to ten days: a LinkedIn connection request with a short note, a DM three days after connecting, and an email five days after that. Each touch builds on the last. The DM references the connection. The email references both.

The sequence works because it creates familiarity without pressure. By the time the email arrives, I'm not a stranger. I'm someone they've already let into their network, who's sent them a message that demonstrated genuine thought about their situation, and who's now following up with more substance. The relationship exists before the ask.

The mistake most founders make in sequences is repeating themselves. "Just following up on my last message." That's not a sequence — it's a nagging loop. Each touch in a good sequence adds something new: a new observation, a specific case study, a different angle on the same underlying offer.

What 184 messages actually built

My early outreach was not efficient in the sense that most people mean when they use that word. It was time-intensive, frequently unrewarded, and occasionally humbling.

What it built was a craft. By message 50, I understood what didn't work. By message 100, I had a clearer sense of what did. By message 150, I was writing messages I would have been happy to receive myself. By message 184 and the response that changed the trajectory — a CEO who said "this is the most thoughtful outreach I've received in a year" — I had something I could build on.

The craft is the asset. The craft is what makes the next 184 messages worth sending, because you're not starting from zero each time. You're starting from everything you learned.

Cold outreach, done this way, is not a numbers game. It's a compounding writing practice with commercial consequences. That's the frame that changed everything for me.


Manas Majhi is the founder of Majhi Group and Majhi OS. He built both businesses through direct outreach before referrals took over.