Craft Compelling Emails
That Get Results

From cold outreach to nurturing sequences, our intelligent prompt generator helps you create professional emails that get opened, read, and drive action across all business contexts.

32,500+ prompts generated
50+ email types
20+ tone options
4.9/5 from 3,250+ users
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Choose Your Communication Path

Start with professional templates or unlock AI-powered email marketing

Email Starter

$0 forever
  • Professional template prompts
  • No login required
  • 50+ email types
  • Basic tone & relationship options
  • AI-powered generation

Email Marketing Pro

$0.15 / generation
  • Advanced AI generation (Gemini 2.0)
  • A/B testing variations
  • Subject line optimization
  • Drip campaign sequences
  • Conversion-focused copy

Create Your Email Prompt

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Normal Mode: Smart defaults selected for professional emails. Toggle Pro mode for advanced marketing controls.

Email Type Required

Relationship & Industry

Tone & Objective

πŸ‘”
Professional
😊
Friendly
⚑
Direct
❀️
Empathetic
🎯
Persuasive
πŸŽ‰
Enthusiastic
πŸ›οΈ
Formal
πŸ’¬
Conversational

Value Proposition

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Additional Instructions

Quick add:

How to get better email prompts without sounding stiff or pushy

Email works best when the message is clear, relevant, and easy to act on. If the prompt only says β€œwrite a professional email,” the draft usually ends up generic, over-explained, or too formal to feel natural. A stronger prompt tells the AI who the reader is, what the email needs to achieve, what value is being offered, and what tone fits the relationship. That usually creates a much cleaner first draft with less rewriting.

Start with the purpose

Emails perform better when the intention is obvious. Whether you are following up, asking for a meeting, nurturing a lead, or resolving an issue, the prompt should make that goal explicit from the start.

Match the relationship

A cold outreach message, a support reply, and an internal business email should not sound the same. Telling the AI who the recipient is helps it choose the right level of warmth, formality, and detail.

Keep the CTA simple

Strong emails usually ask for one clear next step. If the prompt defines the call to action early, the result is more focused and less likely to wander into filler.

What to include in a stronger email prompt

Quick answers before you generate

What makes an email prompt more effective?

A better prompt includes the audience, email goal, value being offered, tone, and the action you want the reader to take. That makes the draft easier to use in a real campaign or conversation.

Should I include the CTA and subject line in the prompt?

Yes. The best prompts define the CTA clearly and often ask for subject line suggestions, especially when the email is part of outreach, sales, or marketing activity.

Can this help with different email formats?

Yes. You can use it for cold emails, newsletters, follow-ups, support responses, announcements, onboarding sequences, and relationship-building emails with different tones and urgency levels.

Examples you can copy and tweak

Cold outreach

Useful when you want a short email that feels relevant instead of spammy.

Write a cold outreach email to a marketing director at a mid-sized ecommerce brand. Keep the tone professional but human, mention one likely pain point around campaign reporting, explain how our analytics service saves time and improves visibility, and end with a low-pressure CTA to book a short intro call.

Client follow-up

Helpful when you need clarity and professionalism without sounding robotic.

Create a follow-up email for a consulting client after a strategy meeting. Summarize the key decisions, outline the next steps, confirm the delivery timeline, and keep the tone warm, organized, and confident. Include a clear request for approval on the next milestone.

Newsletter intro

Good for marketing emails that need a stronger opening and better reader flow.

Write an email newsletter intro for a SaaS audience about improving customer onboarding. Use a smart but friendly tone, keep the opening tight, explain why the topic matters now, and lead naturally into three useful insights with a CTA to read the full guide.

Common mistakes that make AI-generated emails feel weak

Related tools worth exploring

Example Email Prompts Our AI Can Generate

❄️ Cold Outreach Email

Type: Prospecting

Tone: Professional

"Write a compelling cold outreach email to a marketing director at a mid-size SaaS company. Subject line should be about improving content marketing ROI. Include personalized opening referencing their company's growth, specific pain point (inconsistent content performance), brief solution overview, social proof, and soft CTA for 15-minute call. Keep under 150 words, professional tone."

πŸ“ž Follow-up Email

Type: Sales Follow-up

Tone: Persistent

"Create a follow-up email for a sales conversation that went well but no decision was made. Reference previous conversation, address common objections, provide additional value (case study or resource), create slight urgency, and include clear next steps. Use friendly but persistent tone, keep it brief, and make it easy to respond to."

πŸ“° Newsletter

Type: Monthly Newsletter

Tone: Engaging

"Write a monthly newsletter for a digital marketing agency. Include: engaging subject line, personal message from founder, company updates, industry insights, featured client success story, upcoming events/webinars, and subtle promotion of services. Use conversational tone, include actionable tips, and end with clear value-driven CTA."

🀝 Customer Support Email

Type: Issue Resolution

Tone: Empathetic

"Write a customer support response email to a frustrated customer experiencing technical issues with your software. Include sincere apology, acknowledgment of frustration, step-by-step solution, timeline for resolution, compensation or goodwill gesture, and personal contact information for follow-up. Empathetic tone, clear language, proactive approach."