Riflebird Cold Email Generator
Transform SEO micro-audits into high-converting cold emails with zero jargon.
Purpose
Generate personalized cold outreach emails for Riflebird Agency that:
- Lead with business impact, not technical SEO terms
- Position agency as "lean team of experts"
- Include specific numbers and competitor comparisons
- Keep emails under 200 words
- Offer 2-3 variations to choose from
How to Use This SKILL
# From project root
/skill riflebird-cold-email
Workflow
When this SKILL is invoked, follow these steps:
Step 1: Get Audit File Path
Ask the user for the path to the micro-audit markdown file (e.g., leads/Riflebird/one-six-eight-london-micro-audit.md).
Read the audit file and extract:
- Company name and domain
- Business type and industry
- Location (city, suburb, state)
- Issues found (technical problems)
- Positive findings (USPs, existing strengths)
- Competitive landscape info
- Recommended email approach section
Step 2: Interactive Refinement
Ask the user these questions:
- Recipient name and role (if known) - for personalization
- Include paid ads vs organic case study?
- Yes: Reference the Ahrefs screenshot (leads/Riflebird/result.jpg) showing paid traffic spikes vs sustainable organic growth
- No: Focus purely on audit findings
- Primary goal for this email:
- Book discovery call
- Offer free fix/value
- Start conversation
- Tone preference:
- Friendly (warm, personal)
- Professional (polished, corporate)
- Bold (direct, provocative)
Step 3: Extract and Translate Issues
From the audit, identify the top 3 most compelling issues based on:
- Business impact (revenue/traffic loss)
- Easy fix potential (low effort, high return)
- Competitor comparison opportunity
- Quantifiable metrics
For each issue, translate from SEO jargon to business language using the reference guide at reference/jargon-translation.md.
Translation Examples:
- "Title tag only 20 chars" → "Your Google listing is using 1/3 of the billboard space"
- "16 images missing alt text" → "70% of your products are invisible in Google image searches"
- "Meta description 30 chars" → "Your search result doesn't mention your 5-year warranty or price match"
Step 4: Generate 3 Email Variations
Create three distinct emails using different approaches:
Variation A: Customer Perspective
- Opening: "I was searching [their keyword]..." hook
- Shows empathy and real-world search behavior
- Best for: E-commerce, local businesses
Variation B: Competitor Comparison
- Opening: "[Competitor] ranks #1 for [keyword] and here's why..."
- Creates competitive urgency
- Best for: Competitive markets, ambitious prospects
Variation C: Benefit-First
- Opening: "Quick question - did you know [shocking stat]?"
- Leads with curiosity and opportunity
- Best for: Prospects who may not know they have a problem
Step 5: Email Structure (All Variations)
Each email must follow this structure:
Subject: [6-10 words, specific and curiosity-driving]
Hi [Name],
[OPENING HOOK - 1-2 sentences]
- Choose from templates/opening-hooks.md
- Personalize with their specific business/location
[CONTEXT - 1 sentence]
- Why you're reaching out
- Keep it human and relatable
[MAIN ISSUE - 2-3 sentences]
- Present the #1 most impactful issue
- Use business language (zero jargon)
- Include specific numbers
[SUPPORTING ISSUES - 2-4 bullets]
- Issue #2 and #3 as concise bullets
- Each bullet = impact statement
- Use → or • for formatting
[IMPACT/OPPORTUNITY - 1-2 sentences]
- What they're missing out on
- Reference competitors or market position
- Create urgency without being pushy
[CASE STUDY - OPTIONAL - 1-2 sentences]
- If user selected "yes" to paid ads case study
- Reference the screenshot showing paid traffic (green spikes) vs sustainable organic growth (orange line)
- "We helped a client reduce their Google Ads dependency - the green spikes show their paid traffic attempts to compensate for poor organic rankings. After fixing their SEO, the orange line shows sustainable organic growth without the ad spend."
- Offer to share the Ahrefs screenshot
[SOLUTION PREVIEW - 1 sentence]
- Hint at fix without giving it all away
- Mention time required (e.g., "2-3 hours to fix")
[CTA - 1 sentence]
- Low-friction next step
- Choose from templates/closing-ctas.md
[SIGNATURE]
Ali Fathieh
Digital Marketing Specialist
Riflebird Agency
Melbourne
[Phone - leave placeholder]
P.S. [Objection handler or bonus value]
- Choose from templates/ps-lines.md
- Personalize with specific observation about their business
Step 6: Quality Checklist
Before outputting emails, verify each one includes:
Required Elements:
- [ ] Mention their city/suburb/location
- [ ] Name at least 1 specific competitor
- [ ] Include 2-3 hard numbers from audit
- [ ] Reference a specific search term/keyword
- [ ] State time/effort required
- [ ] Personal touch about their business
- [ ] "Lean team" positioning in signature or body
Constraints:
- [ ] Body text under 200 words
- [ ] Subject line 6-10 words
- [ ] Maximum 3 issues mentioned
- [ ] Paragraphs 2-3 sentences max
- [ ] Zero SEO jargon (use business language)
- [ ] Scannable (bullets, short lines)
Tone Check:
- [ ] Conversational, not robotic
- [ ] Helpful, not salesy
- [ ] Specific, not generic
- [ ] Confident, not arrogant
Step 7: Output Format
Present the three email variations clearly:
# Cold Email Variations for [Company Name]
**Audit Source**: [file path]
**Industry**: [e-commerce/local service/B2B]
**Top Issues**: [3 issues in business language]
---
## Variation A: Customer Perspective
**Subject**: [subject line]
[full email]
**Why This Works**: [1-2 sentence explanation]
---
## Variation B: Competitor Comparison
**Subject**: [subject line]
[full email]
**Why This Works**: [1-2 sentence explanation]
---
## Variation C: Benefit-First
**Subject**: [subject line]
[full email]
**Why This Works**: [1-2 sentence explanation]
---
## Recommendations
**Best Choice**: [Which variation and why]
**A/B Test**: [Suggest testing two variations]
**Follow-Up**: [When to send if no response]
Key Principles
Zero Jargon Rule
Never use these terms without translation:
- Title tag, meta description, H1, H2
- Alt text, image optimization
- Schema markup, structured data
- SERP, organic ranking, backlinks
- Domain authority, page authority
- Canonical, redirect, crawl
Always translate to business impact:
- "Your Google listing"
- "Your search result"
- "Image search visibility"
- "Where you show up on Google"
The "Lean Team of Experts" Positioning
Include this positioning in signature or body:
- "I'm Ali from Riflebird Agency - a lean Melbourne team specializing in [industry] SEO"
- "We're a lean team of experts focusing on increasing traffic and bringing more business"
- Emphasizes efficiency, specialization, and local presence
Paid Ads vs Organic SEO Case Study (Optional)
When user selects to include the case study, reference the Ahrefs performance screenshot (leads/Riflebird/result.jpg):
What the screenshot shows:
- Green line: Paid traffic - temporary spikes when ads are running, drops when ads stop
- Orange line: Organic traffic - sustainable growth after SEO fixes
- Key insight: Client was "renting" traffic through ads instead of "owning" it through organic rankings
How to reference it in emails:
Version 1 - Direct comparison: "I can share a case study screenshot that tells the story perfectly: the green spikes show a client's paid ad traffic trying to compensate for poor organic rankings. After we fixed their SEO, the orange line shows sustainable organic growth - no more ad dependency."
Version 2 - Cost focus: "We helped a client cut their Google Ads spend by 60% while growing overall traffic. I have an Ahrefs chart showing the before/after - the difference between renting traffic (green spikes) and owning it (orange growth line) is dramatic. Happy to share it."
Version 3 - Sustainability angle: "One of our clients was spending $2K+/month on ads just to maintain traffic (you can see the green spikes in our case study chart). We fixed their SEO and now they get that traffic organically - permanent results vs temporary fixes."
When to use it:
- Prospect appears to be running paid ads heavily
- E-commerce businesses with tight margins
- Local businesses with limited marketing budgets
- Any prospect concerned about ongoing costs
- Follow-up email if no response to first email
Personalization Depth
Go beyond name/company. Include:
- Specific product they sell ("Your ELSA wall clocks")
- Local suburb ("Cheltenham shoppers")
- Unique selling point ("5-year warranty")
- Recent observation ("Just opened your Melbourne showroom")
- Competitor in their niche ("Temple & Webster")
The P.S. Strategy
P.S. lines serve three purposes:
- Objection Handling: "Not trying to sell you a huge retainer - these are simple fixes you could do in-house"
- Value Add: "I'll send you the exact title tag to use - no strings attached"
- Personal Touch: "Your ELSA clocks are gorgeous - criminal they don't show up in Google Images"
Choose based on prospect type and tone.
Common Patterns
E-Commerce Businesses
- Focus on product visibility in image search
- Reference shopping keywords ("designer wall clocks")
- Emphasize competitor comparison
- Mention seasonal opportunities
- Highlight missing product schema
- Paid ads angle: Cost per acquisition vs organic traffic value
Local Service Businesses
- Lead with local search terms ("plumber Cheltenham")
- Reference Google Business Profile issues
- Mention Google Maps visibility
- Compare to nearby competitors
- Emphasize "near me" searches
- Paid ads angle: Local Services Ads cost vs organic local pack rankings
B2B/SaaS Companies
- Focus on thought leadership keywords
- Reference comparison pages ("X vs Y")
- Mention buyer intent keywords
- Compare to industry leaders
- Emphasize trust signals and credentials
- Paid ads angle: High CPC for industry keywords vs organic authority
Professional Services
- Lead with credential/expertise keywords
- Reference "best [service] in [city]" searches
- Mention trust elements (reviews, awards)
- Compare to established competitors
- Emphasize E-A-T factors (without jargon)
- Paid ads angle: Building long-term reputation vs paying for each lead
Examples
See the examples/ directory for complete cold email examples:
ecommerce-example.md- Based on One Six Eight London auditlocal-service-example.md- For service-based businessesb2b-example.md- For B2B/SaaS companies
Templates Library
Reference these template files during generation:
templates/opening-hooks.md- 10 proven opening hook patternstemplates/body-frameworks.md- Issue presentation structurestemplates/closing-ctas.md- Call-to-action variationstemplates/ps-lines.md- P.S. objection handlers and value-adds
Jargon Translation Reference
Use reference/jargon-translation.md to convert technical SEO findings into business language that prospects understand and care about.
Success Metrics
A successful cold email should:
- Get opened (compelling subject line)
- Get read (scannable, short, personalized)
- Get replied to (low-friction CTA, value-first)
- Position expertise (specific findings, numbers, tools)
- Build trust (transparent, helpful, not pushy)
Emails that follow this SKILL framework should achieve:
- 40-60% open rates (personalized subject lines)
- 15-25% reply rates (value-first approach)
- 5-10% conversion to calls (strong audit foundation)
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