Cold Email Template for First Client
You have the skills. You want your first client. But you have no idea what to say in an email.
Sound familiar?

Most beginners never send a cold email because they are terrified of writing the wrong thing. They worry about sounding desperate. They worry about being ignored. They worry about looking unprofessional.
Here is the truth: Your first cold email does not need to be perfect. It just needs to be sent.
In this guide, I will give you 5 cold email templates you can copy and paste today. Each template is written for a different situation. All you have to do is fill in the blanks.
By the end of this post, you will have no excuse to send your first cold email.
Let us begin.
What Is a Cold Email? (And Why It Works for Beginners)
A cold email is an email you send to someone you do not know. You are not responding to a job post. You are not following up on a referral. You are reaching out to a stranger and offering value.
Why does cold email work for beginners?
| Reason | Explanation |
|---|---|
| No competition | Most freelancers are afraid to cold email |
| No platform fees | You keep 100% of what you earn |
| Direct access | You talk directly to decision-makers |
| Fast results | You can send 10 emails in 30 minutes |
| Free | It costs nothing but your time |
Cold email is the great equalizer. A beginner with no portfolio can beat an experienced freelancer simply by sending a better email.
The 5 Essential Parts of Every Cold Email
Before I give you the templates, you need to understand the structure. Every cold email that gets a reply has these 5 parts:
1. A Short Subject Line
Your subject line decides if your email gets opened. Keep it under 8 words. Make it personal.
Bad subject line: “Freelance services offering web design and development at competitive rates”
Good subject line: “Quick question about your website”
2. A Personalized Opening Line
Show that you actually looked at their business. Mention something specific.
Example: “I saw your post about launching the new product last week.”
3. A Clear Value Statement
Explain what you can do for them. Focus on their problem, not your skills.
Example: “I can help you write blog posts so you can focus on closing deals.”
4. A Small Ask (Not a Sale)
Do not ask for a meeting or a contract in the first email. Ask for something small.
Examples of small asks:
- “Would you be open to a 10-minute chat next week?”
- “Can I send you 3 ideas for your homepage?”
- “Do you know anyone who might need my help?”
5. A Professional Signature
Include your name, what you do, and a link to your portfolio (even if it is just a Google Doc).
Cold Email Template #1 – The Simple Offer
Use this template when you are contacting a small business owner or solo entrepreneur. It is short, direct, and works for any service.
Subject Line
Quick question about [Business Name]
Email Body
text
Hi [Name], I have been following [Business Name] for a few weeks. I love what you are doing with [specific thing you noticed]. I am a [your service, e.g., freelance writer / virtual assistant / graphic designer] looking for my first client. I noticed you might need help with [specific problem you can solve]. I would love to help you with [one small task] for a fair price. No pressure. No long-term commitment. Would you be open to a quick 10-minute chat next week? Here is a link to my simple portfolio: [link to Google Doc or Notion] Best, [Your Name] [Your Service] [Your Phone Number]
Fill in the Blanks Example
Hi Sarah,
I have been following Sarah’s Bakery for a few weeks. I love what you are doing with your Instagram reels.
I am a freelance social media manager looking for my first client. I noticed you might need help with responding to comments and DMs.
I would love to help you with social media engagement for a fair price. No pressure. No long-term commitment.
Would you be open to a quick 10-minute chat next week?
Here is a link to my simple portfolio: [link]
Best,
Jessica
Social Media Manager
555-123-4567

Cold Email Template #2 – The Free Value First
Use this template when you want to prove yourself before asking for money. It works very well for designers, writers, and marketers.
Subject Line
A quick idea for [Business Name]
Email Body
text
Hi [Name], I am a [your service] based in [your city]. I am looking for my first client and I came across your business. I noticed [specific problem or opportunity]. For example, [give one specific observation]. I would like to offer you something completely free: [one small task you will do for free, e.g., write one blog post / redesign one page / create 3 social media captions]. If you like my work, we can talk about working together. If not, you lose nothing. No catch. No spam. Just a freelancer trying to prove himself/herself. Would you be open to this? Best, [Your Name] [Your Service] [Link to sample work]
Fill in the Blanks Example
Hi Mark,
I am a freelance copywriter based in Chicago. I am looking for my first client and I came across your business.
I noticed your website homepage could be clearer. For example, your headline does not explain what you actually sell until the third paragraph.
I would like to offer you something completely free: I will rewrite your homepage headline and first paragraph.
If you like my work, we can talk about working together. If not, you lose nothing.
No catch. No spam. Just a freelancer trying to prove myself.
Would you be open to this?
Best,
David
Copywriter
[Link to sample]
Cold Email Template #3 – The Referral Ask
Use this template when you do not think the person needs your service, but they might know someone who does. This is a great low-pressure approach.
Subject Line
Quick referral request
Email Body
text
Hi [Name], I hope this email finds you well. I am a [your service] based in [your city]. I am currently looking for my first client. I know you are probably not looking for [your service] yourself. But I was hoping you might know one or two people who are. If anyone comes to mind, I would be very grateful if you could forward this email or introduce us. Thank you either way. Best, [Your Name] [Your Service] [What you help with in one sentence] [Link to portfolio]
Fill in the Blanks Example
Hi Rachel,
I hope this email finds you well.
I am a freelance virtual assistant based in Austin. I am currently looking for my first client.
I know you are probably not looking for a virtual assistant yourself. But I was hoping you might know one or two entrepreneurs who are.
If anyone comes to mind, I would be very grateful if you could forward this email or introduce us.
Thank you either way.
Best,
Marcus
Virtual Assistant
I help busy founders manage their inbox and calendar
[Link to portfolio]
Cold Email Template #4 – The Job Board Follow-Up
Use this template when you see a job post on Upwork, LinkedIn, or a Facebook group — but you want to email the client directly instead of applying through the platform.
Subject Line
Re: Your post about [job title]
Email Body
text
Hi [Name], I saw your post in [Facebook group / LinkedIn / job board] looking for [job title]. I am a [your service] and I am currently looking for my first client. Your post caught my eye because [specific reason]. I can help you with: - [Specific task 1] - [Specific task 2] - [Specific task 3] I am happy to start with a small paid test project so you can see my work first. Here is my portfolio: [link] Are you open to a quick call this week? Best, [Your Name] [Your Service] [Phone number]
Fill in the Blanks Example
Hi Tom,
I saw your post in the SaaS Founders Facebook group looking for a content writer.
I am a freelance content writer and I am currently looking for my first client. Your post caught my eye because I have been following your SaaS product for months.
I can help you with:
- Blog posts that explain your features
- Email newsletters for your subscribers
- Case studies from your existing customers
I am happy to start with a small paid test project so you can see my work first.
Here is my portfolio: [link]
Are you open to a quick call this week?
Best,
Sophia
Content Writer
555-987-6543

Cold Email Template #5 – The Ultra-Short Version
Use this template when you want to send as many emails as possible in a short time. It is direct, respectful of busy people, and easy to read on a phone.
Subject Line
[Service] help for [Business Name]
Email Body
text
Hi [Name], I help [type of business] with [one specific result]. Example: [one sentence case study or sample]. Need this? Let me know. Happy to hop on a quick call. Portfolio: [link] Best, [Your Name]
Fill in the Blanks Example
Hi Lisa,
I help e-commerce stores write product descriptions that actually sell.
Example: I rewrote one store’s descriptions and their conversion rate went up 15%.
Need this? Let me know. Happy to hop on a quick call.
Portfolio: [link]
Best,
Alex
Where to Find Email Addresses (For Free)
You have the templates. Now you need email addresses to send them to. Here is where to find them for free:
| Source | How to Find Emails |
|---|---|
| Company website | Look for “Contact” or “About” page |
| Use Sales Navigator free trial or search “founder” + “your industry” | |
| Twitter/X | Many founders put email in their bio |
| Facebook Groups | Check group member profiles |
| Hunter.io | Free searches per month |
| Gmail trick | Try firstname@company.com or firstname.lastname@company.com |
Pro tip: When you cannot find an email, use LinkedIn messaging instead. It works just as well.
Common Cold Email Mistakes (And How to Avoid Them)
Avoid these mistakes to get more replies:
| Mistake | Why It Is Bad | The Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Sending to the wrong person | They cannot hire you | Find the decision-maker (founder, owner, head of department) |
| Talking only about yourself | They do not care about you | Focus on their problem |
| Asking for too much too soon | They say no immediately | Ask for something small (reply, chat, feedback) |
| No clear next step | They do not know what to do | End with a specific question |
| Forgetting to follow up | Most replies come from follow-ups | Send a follow-up after 3-5 days |
Cold Email Follow-Up Template
Most people do not reply to the first email. That is normal. Send this follow-up 3 to 5 days later.
Subject Line
Following up | [Business Name]
Email Body
text
Hi [Name], Just bumping this to the top of your inbox. Still looking for help with [problem]? No worries if not. Just wanted to check one last time. Best, [Your Name]
Your Action Plan (Next 48 Hours)
Do not just read this guide. Take action.
| Time | Task |
|---|---|
| Today (1 hour) | Choose 10 businesses you want to contact |
| Today (30 minutes) | Find email addresses for all 10 |
| Tomorrow (1 hour) | Personalize Template #1 for each business |
| Tomorrow (30 minutes) | Send all 10 emails |
| Day 3 (15 minutes) | Send follow-ups to anyone who did not reply |

Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Is cold email legal?
A: Yes, in most countries. In the US, you can freely email business email addresses. In Europe, be careful with GDPR. Always include an “unsubscribe” option when sending bulk emails.
Q: What if no one replies?
A: Send more emails. 10 emails are a test. 100 emails is a strategy. Keep going.
Q: What should I charge my first client?
A: Start low ($50-$200) to get a testimonial and case study. Raise prices after your first 3 clients.
Q: Do I need a website to cold email?
A: No. A Google Doc or Notion portfolio works perfectly for your first few clients.
Q: How long should my email be?
A: Short. Under 150 words. Busy people read emails on their phones.
Q: Can I use these templates on LinkedIn?
A: Yes. Just shorten them further and send them as LinkedIn DMs.
Conclusion
Getting your first client feels impossible until you send your first cold email.
The templates above take away the hardest part: what to say.
Your only job now is to fill in the blanks and click send.
Will every email get a reply? No.
Will you get rejected? Probably.
Will you eventually land your first client if you keep sending? Absolutely.
Your next step:
Open your email account right now.
Find 5 businesses.
Copy Template #1.
Fill in the blanks. Send.
Your first client is waiting for someone to reach out. Make that person you.
