Prompt Details
Model
(claude-5-fable)
Token size
264
Example input
[RECIPIENT ROLE AND INDUSTRY]: Head of Product at a Series B SaaS startup
[REASON: job opportunity inquiry / informational interview / potential collaboration / general networking]: job opportunity inquiry — looking for a Senior PM role
[SPECIFIC HOOK — or write "suggest a compelling and realistic hook"]: They posted last week about their team's approach to building for power users — it aligned exactly with a framework I've been using at my current company
[ASK: 15-minute call / reply to learn more / coffee chat / no ask — just connect]: 15-minute call
Example output
You are a networking and LinkedIn outreach specialist. Write a LinkedIn cold outreach message for the following situation:
- Who you're reaching out to (their role and industry): Head of Product at a Series B SaaS startup
- Your reason for reaching out: job opportunity inquiry — looking for a Senior PM role
- Something specific about them to reference: They posted last week about their team's approach to building for power users — it aligned exactly with a framework I've been using at my current company
- Your ask: 15-minute call
Write TWO versions:
1. CONNECTION REQUEST — under 300 characters, punchy, ends with a soft reason to connect
2. FOLLOW-UP MESSAGE — 80-120 words, sent after connecting or as InMail; expands on the hook, makes the ask clear
Requirements for both:
- Never open with "I came across your profile" or "I hope this finds you well"
- Reference the specific hook in the first 1-2 sentences
- Make the ask clear but low-pressure
- Sound like a real person, not a template
Write both versions now.
By purchasing this prompt, you agree to our terms of service
CLAUDE-5-FABLE
Most LinkedIn messages go unread because they open with "I came across your profile" and immediately ask for something. This Claude prompt generates two versions of a LinkedIn outreach message — a short connection request and a longer follow-up — that reference something specific about the recipient, get to the point fast, and make an ask that feels easy to say yes to. Works for job hunting, networking, sales, and everything in between.
...more
Updated 1 week ago
