100 personalized outbound emails for one B2B offer.
Some offers do not need another social post. They need a clean first batch. We split this out as a fixed-scope $99 service so a founder can buy one niche, one angle, and one set of outbound emails without hiring a full agency or waiting for a vague campaign to materialize.
The result is deliberately narrow: research, writing, reply forwarding, and CSV handoff for one offer and one audience. If the service already has traction, this page gives it a search-friendly explanation and a direct path to the checkout.
When a social channel is blocked, low-signal, or simply not the right fit, an owned article can still move the offer forward. This page is the substitute surface: readable, indexable, and linked straight to the live checkout path.
What the batch includes
We start with one offer and one audience
The service works when the buyer can describe what they sell and who should hear about it. We use that to narrow the search, shape the angle, and keep the batch consistent instead of mixing unrelated niches.
We write the outbound messages, not a template pack
Each email is written as a usable draft for the target niche. The job is to create a first send, not just hand over a stack of generic prompts or a marketing deck.
Reply forwarding and CSV handoff are part of the package
The handoff is built so the buyer has a practical next step: a file they can reuse, a reply path they can track, and a short note about what was sent.
One batch is enough to learn if the angle is alive
The service is intentionally not a retainer. It is the smallest useful version of outbound for a founder who wants a fast read on whether the offer gets any motion at all.
How the first batch is assembled
| step | what happens | why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | We reduce the offer to one clean sentence and one audience. | The outbound batch stays legible. If the brief is fuzzy, the emails will be fuzzy too. |
| 2 | We look for the proof points that can survive in a short message. | Short outbound needs evidence that fits inside one screen, not a long pitch document. |
| 3 | We draft the sequence and make sure the language matches the buyer, not the studio. | It reads like a real outreach batch instead of internal product copy. |
| 4 | We return the batch with reply-forwarding and a CSV handoff. | The buyer can start sending, tracking, and iterating immediately. |
Who this fits
Good fit
- founders with one B2B service offer and no working outbound batch yet
- small agencies that need a focused first prospecting list
- consultants, studios, and productized services that want a first reply path
- operators who can explain the offer in one sentence and move fast
Not a fit
- spam lists with no real niche
- huge enterprise campaigns that need a long sales process
- buyers who want a vague strategy call instead of a deliverable
- offers that cannot be described cleanly in one batch
Why this sits on an owned page
Search can still work when social is paused
A public article gives the service a durable landing surface. That matters when the social lane is blocked, stale, or not the right channel for the current window.
The checkout path already exists
There is no point in pretending the product is a future idea. The service page and checkout host are already live, so the article simply points traffic to the right route.
It gives the offer a cleaner story
Site rescue and outbound batch are different jobs. Keeping them on separate pages makes the pitch easier to understand and easier to click.
It stays small enough to trust
The narrow scope is the point. Buyers can see what they get, what they do not get, and how the batch maps to one real offer.
Frequently asked questions
Does this replace the main urweb site rescue offer?
No. The cold email service is for buyers who already have an offer and need first conversations. Site rescue is for people whose homepage or first screen is the bottleneck.
What do I need before buying?
A clear offer, the audience you want to reach, and any proof points that should be referenced. If those pieces are missing, the batch will be harder to use well.
Is this a retainer or a long contract?
No. It is a fixed-scope first batch with a flat price. The goal is to make the first outbound move easy to buy and easy to use.
Can I ask for help after the batch is delivered?
Yes. Support goes through support@voiddo.com, which is the correct public contact route for edge cases and follow-up questions.
Need the first batch now?
If the offer is already clear, the fastest path is the live service page and checkout. If you need the exact scope first, the pricing page spells it out without any marketing haze.