My first five cold emails got zero replies.
Subject line: "AI Automation Services For Your Business"
Looking back, I cringe. What does that even mean? It's like saying "I do computer stuff."
Then I changed my approach completely. Instead of selling automation, I started selling solutions to specific document problems.
NEW EMAIL TEMPLATE:
Subject: "Process 120 invoices/week in 2 hours instead of 12?"
Body: One paragraph about THEIR problem. One sentence about my solution. One question asking if they want to see it.
THE TURNING POINT:
I found a small logistics company on LinkedIn. Their job posting said "Hiring Data Entry Clerk - Process shipping manifests and BOLs."
I didn't apply for the job. I emailed the owner:
"Saw your posting for data entry. What if those manifests processed themselves? I can show you a system that extracts all BOL data automatically and posts it to your TMS. 10-minute demo?"
He replied in 30 minutes. Demo the next day. Contract signed by end of week.
WHAT I BUILT:
Email receives shipping docs → PDF Vector Parse Document → Extract structured data using JSON Schema → Post to their TMS via API Setup fee: $1,400
Monthly cost to run: $18 (PDF Vector Pro plan)
Their savings: Avoided $36,000/year data entry hire
The biggest mistake beginners make is positioning themselves as generalists. "I do automation" means nothing. "I automate invoice processing for accounting firms" is a business.
REFRAME YOUR POSITIONING:
Instead of: "AI Automation Agency"
Try: "I automate document processing for [specific industry]"
Instead of: "I can help your business"
Try: "I can process your [specific document type] automatically"
The template workflow I used is here Stop selling automation. Start solving document problems. Your first client is looking for solutions, not services.
What specific document problem can you solve better than anyone?