Cold outreach has a math problem. You send 1,000 emails. 20 people open them. 5 reply. 1 books a meeting. That is a 0.1% meeting rate, and it is getting worse every quarter as spam filters tighten and buyers become numb to generic pitches. Intent-based outreach flips this equation. Instead of casting a wide net and hoping, you reach out only to people who have already shown they are in a buying cycle. Someone posted on Reddit asking for tool recommendations. Someone tweeted about frustration with your competitor. Someone on LinkedIn announced they just started a role that requires your product category. When you reference that specific signal in your outreach, everything changes. Reply rates jump to 15-30%. Meeting booking rates hit 5-10%. And the conversations start warmer because the prospect knows you are reaching out for a relevant reason, not just because they appeared on a purchased list. This guide shows you exactly how to write intent-based outreach messages, with templates for every signal type, timing rules based on data from thousands of campaigns, and before/after examples that demonstrate the difference.
Why intent-based outreach converts at 3x (or more)
The 3x number is not marketing fluff. It comes from aggregated data across hundreds of B2B teams using Buska to capture social intent signals and then reaching out based on those signals. The median improvement in reply rate is 3.2x compared to the same team's cold outreach baseline. Some teams see 5-8x improvement. The lowest improvement we have recorded is 1.8x. The reason is straightforward: relevance. Cold email fails because the message is irrelevant to the recipient's current priorities. They are not thinking about your product category when your email arrives. Intent-based outreach succeeds because the message connects to something the prospect is actively doing or thinking about. You are not interrupting. You are joining a conversation they have already started.
Three factors drive the conversion advantage. First, timing. You reach out when the prospect is actively researching, not 6 months before or after. Second, personalization. You reference their specific situation, not a generic pain point. Third, trust. Mentioning a specific post or signal shows you did homework instead of blasting a template. If you want to understand the full spectrum of signals you can act on, our guide on intent signals covers 12 types with examples.
Outreach templates by signal type
The biggest mistake teams make with intent-based outreach is using the same template for every signal. A recommendation request requires a completely different approach than a competitor frustration post. Here are templates for the five most common intent signal types, with the reasoning behind each approach.
Signal 1: Recommendation request
The prospect posted something like: "Looking for a project management tool for a 30-person remote team. Budget around $15/user. Need Slack integration." This is the highest-intent signal. They are actively shopping and they have told you their requirements.
Why this works: it mirrors their exact requirements (remote team, 30 people, Slack, budget), positions your product as a fit, and closes with a low-pressure offer. The "no pressure either way" matters. Recommendation request responders who are pushy get ignored. Respond on the platform first (public reply or comment), then follow up via DM or email if they engage.
Signal 2: Competitor frustration
The prospect posted something like: "We have been using [Competitor] for a year and the reporting dashboard is basically useless. Considering switching but dreading the migration."
Why this works: it acknowledges both problems (bad reporting AND migration fear), offers a solution to each, and provides social proof ("connect you with a team who made the switch"). Never trash the competitor. Empathy converts. Aggression does not.
Signal 3: Job change announcement
Someone on LinkedIn posted: "Excited to share that I am joining [Company] as their Head of Revenue Operations. Ready to build the sales stack from scratch."
Why this works: it celebrates their milestone first (builds rapport), positions you as helpful rather than salesy, and offers genuine value (a reference document) instead of a demo. New hires in relevant roles are one of the strongest buying signals because they need to make tool decisions quickly to prove impact.
Signal 4: Funding announcement
A company announced: "We just closed our $15M Series B led by [Investor]. Time to scale the team and invest in infrastructure."
Why this works: it ties your product to a specific moment in their company's journey, uses social proof ("most Series B companies"), and offers a low-friction alternative to a meeting. Funding signals indicate budget availability and growth intent simultaneously.
Signal 5: Technical evaluation discussion
Someone posted on Hacker News or Reddit: "We are evaluating [Tool A] vs [Tool B] for our engineering team. Both seem to have tradeoffs. Has anyone used both?"
Why this works: it demonstrates deep domain expertise by honestly comparing the alternatives they are already considering. It positions your product as a third option only after showing you understand the landscape. Technical buyers value expertise over salesmanship.
Timing rules: when to reach out after detecting a signal
Timing is the second most important factor in intent-based outreach, right after message quality. Respond too slowly and someone else gets there first. Respond too aggressively and you seem like you are monitoring them (even if you are). Here are timing guidelines based on signal type.
| Signal Type | Ideal Response Time | Maximum Window | Channel |
|---|---|---|---|
| Recommendation request (Twitter) | < 30 minutes | 2 hours | Reply on Twitter, then DM |
| Recommendation request (Reddit) | < 2 hours | 12 hours | Comment on thread, then DM if appropriate |
| Competitor frustration (any platform) | < 4 hours | 24 hours | Reply on platform, then email |
| Job change (LinkedIn) | 1-3 days | 2 weeks | LinkedIn message, then email |
| Funding announcement | 1-5 days | 30 days | Email or LinkedIn |
| Technical evaluation (HN, Reddit) | < 4 hours | 24 hours | Comment in thread |
Notice the pattern: social platform signals require fast responses because conversations move quickly. Career and funding signals allow more breathing room because the buying window is longer. The single biggest conversion killer we see at Buska is teams that capture signals on Monday and respond on Friday. By then, the prospect has 15 other replies and may have already started evaluating a competitor who responded Tuesday morning.
A/B test results: what actually moves the needle
Over the past year, we have analyzed response patterns from thousands of intent-based outreach campaigns run by Buska users. Here are the variables that produce the largest differences in conversion.
Referencing the signal vs. generic personalization
Messages that specifically reference the intent signal ("Saw your Reddit post about needing a CRM with Slack integration") get 2.4x higher reply rates than messages with generic personalization ("Noticed you work in sales ops at a growing company"). The signal reference proves you are reaching out for a specific reason, not mass-emailing everyone with a matching job title.
Value-first vs. demo-first CTA
Messages that offer a resource (comparison doc, case study, reference architecture) before asking for a meeting get 1.8x higher positive reply rates than messages that lead with "Want to book a 15-minute demo?" The resource offer lowers the commitment threshold. The prospect can evaluate your product on their own terms first. Many of those resource conversations convert to demos organically.
Short vs. long messages
For intent-based outreach, shorter is better. Messages under 100 words outperform messages over 200 words by 1.5x in reply rate. The intent signal already provides context. You do not need three paragraphs of setup. Get to the point: what signal you noticed, why you are relevant, and what you are offering.
First response on platform vs. immediate DM
For social signals (Reddit, Twitter, LinkedIn posts), responding publicly on the platform first and then following up via DM or email produces 2.1x higher conversion than going directly to a private message. The public response builds context and credibility. The prospect sees your helpful reply, checks your profile, and then receives your DM with existing context. Skipping the public response and going straight to DMs feels surveillance-like.
Before and after: cold vs. intent-based outreach
Here is what the same outreach looks like with and without intent data. The difference is not subtle.
Example 1: SaaS CRM company
Cold version: "Hi [Name], I am reaching out from [CRM Company]. We help B2B sales teams close more deals with our AI-powered CRM. Would you be open to a 15-minute call to see how we could help [Company]?" Response rate: 1.2%.
Intent version (based on Reddit post asking for CRM recommendations): "Hey [Name], saw your post on r/sales about finding a CRM that handles both outbound sequences and inbound lead routing. That is literally our main thing. We built the sequencing engine because our founder had the same gap you described with [competitor they mentioned]. Happy to show you a 5-min walkthrough or just send you a comparison doc. Whatever is easier." Response rate: 18.5%.
Example 2: Marketing analytics platform
Cold version: "Hi [Name], [Company] seems like a great fit for our marketing analytics platform. We help marketing teams measure ROI across channels. Interested in learning more?" Response rate: 0.8%.
Intent version (based on LinkedIn post about attribution challenges): "Hey [Name], your post about multi-touch attribution resonated. The '3 different numbers from 3 different tools' problem is real. We built [Product] specifically to solve that. One dashboard, one source of truth, connected to all your existing tools. A few marketing teams your size are using it. Want me to share their setup?" Response rate: 22.3%.
Building an intent-based outreach workflow
Intent-based outreach only works when you can move fast. Here is the workflow that the best-performing teams at Buska use.
- Configure Buska to monitor your buyer intent keywords across social platforms and route high-intent signals to a dedicated Slack channel.
- Assign an SDR or account executive to own the channel. Their job is to respond to high-intent signals within the timing windows above.
- Build a template library with 5-8 templates covering the major signal types. Each template is 80% written and 20% personalized per signal.
- Respond publicly on the platform first (where applicable). Then follow up via DM or email within 24 hours.
- Log every response in your CRM with the signal source, signal type, and response time. This data lets you optimize over time.
- Review conversion data weekly. Which signal types convert best? Which templates produce the highest reply rates? Double down on what works.
The entire workflow can be set up in under an hour. The ongoing time investment is 30-60 minutes per day for a single SDR, and the pipeline output typically exceeds what they would produce with 4-6 hours of cold outreach. For the keyword selection that powers Step 1, our guide on buyer intent keywords covers exactly which phrases to track. And for the broader context of how outreach fits into a full B2B lead generation strategy, see our pillar guide.
Buyers are telling you what they need on social media right now. Capture their signals, craft a relevant message, and watch your reply rates triple.
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