Skip to main content
SALE Heroic Inbox 3: A Faster, Reliable & Affordable Shared Inbox Solution

40 B2B Email Subject Lines: Examples and Best Practices - Page 2

Imagine your next outreach email landing at the top of every Inbox. No gimmicks. Just clear, compelling lines that address real needs. Learn how to craft effective subject lines from successful B2B campaigns that welcome long-lasting clients.
Tap Copy on any line to grab it for your next campaign.

Email subject line examples

Friendly reminder, office closed on [holiday date]

Type
Holiday, Internal, B2B, Operations
Tone
Neutral, courteous

Holiday emails like this one are important for service providers, agencies, and support teams who handle sensitive work.

Clearly communicating that the office is closed reduces frustration when clients or customers expect real-time responses outside of service hours.

Correction on [topic] from earlier today

Type
Business, B2B, Client update
Tone
Direct, respectful, professional

Client relationships need slightly more formality, subjects such as this give a B2B flavor to oops email subject lines.

This subject line fits account managers, consultants, and agencies who sometimes share slides or numbers, then realize that a metric or link needs adjustment.

Say hello to the latest version, built for you

Type
SaaS, B2B, Product Update
Tone
Professional, optimistic

“Say Hello” humanizes the release. “Latest Version” emphasizes its relevance. “Built for You” underscores the customer focus.

Tips

Include a bullet list of the top three features in the first fold of the email, each linked to deeper docs for self-serve readers.

Still good for [next step/date]?

This one lives in follow-up sequences after a call, demo, or intro where the prospect gave a soft signal, and then silence arrived.

The phrasing sounds like a real human checking in, not a canned “just following up” push.

Tips: Use it when you had a decent conversation, the prospect said something like “let’s circle back,” and then nothing came.

Example Email

Subject: Still good for Tuesday’s review?

Hi [Name],

We talked about aligning on the integration plan last week, and I wanted to check if Tuesday at 3pm still works, or if a different slot fits better.

If plans shifted, send over a time that does.

Thanks,

[Your Name]

Proposal inside, decision by [date]?

This one goes on proposal email subject line use cases. It combines content and timeline information, so the reader knows what the email contains and the timeframe for action.

The bracketed date creates a sense of urgency without pressuring the reader, who can adjust as needed.

Tips: Match body copy to the deadline, and include a clear summary of value, pricing, and next step. 

Example Email:

Subject: Proposal inside, decision by June 12?

Hi [Name],

Attached is the proposal we discussed, showing the phased rollout, costs, and projected metrics.

Review before June 12 if possible, so the team can lock in the current rate.

If that date is too soon, let me know and I’ll adjust accordingly.

Best,

[Your Name]

We helped [similar company], here’s what happened

This subject line uses social proof as its hook. It’s ideal for re-engaging recipients who know the problem but haven’t acted yet.

Replace “[similar company]” with a real peer, industry name, or recognizable reference.

Quick check, are you still evaluating [solution or topic]?

This is a perfect subject line to use when a prospect goes quiet mid-evaluation. The phrase “quick check” keeps it lightweight, “are you still evaluating” names the status without assumption.

People often ghost when priorities shift. A gentle inquiry about the status of the evaluation process invites honesty, and the “quick check” reduces the cognitive load of reaching out.

Example Email:

Subject: Quick check, are you still evaluating the onboarding flow?

Hey [Name],

We haven’t heard back from you since the last demo. Are you still evaluating the onboarding improvements, or should I pause the follow-up?

If something changed, a one-line update works.

Thanks,

[Your Name]

Any thoughts on our last conversation?

This line is effective immediately following a discovery call, demo, or introductory chat. Assuming contact has already occurred, the message is a soft nudge that respects the buyer’s time.

It’s a gentle post-meeting follow-up that works well when you need feedback or clarity after a promising conversation.

Circling back on [project/topic]—thoughts?

This is a low-pressure nudge. Replace the project name or topic with something like, “Circling back on vendor review—thoughts?” This approach avoids the phrase “just following up” and makes it sound like you’re already part of the process.

Best for recurring B2B workflows where multiple stakeholders are involved and momentum is slow.

Can you help me connect with the right person?

If your message landed with the wrong person, this subject makes it easy for them to forward it to the right one. There’s no ego here. Just a clear, honest request.

You mentioned [pain point], want to revisit?

A personalized callback to a prior conversation. It shows that you’re listening and makes the email instantly relevant.

It’s great for check-ins after an objection or “not now” reply, or when a prospect stops responding after mentioning a challenge.

Five years of trust, let us thank you properly

Type
Anniversary appreciation, B2B outreach.

Trust ranks high in B2B, so “years of trust” resonates. Promising to “thank you properly” implies a meaningful gesture, such as a dedicated case study, a personalized gift, or an exclusive webinar.

Tips

  • Deliver a custom report or ROI analysis as your “thank you.”
  • Schedule a brief call with an account manager to strengthen the relationship.

How [Client] boosted [Metric] by [%] in [Time]

Type
Results-Driven, B2B, SaaS Tone: Clear, Curious, Achievable

I recommend this subject line to clients who value hard numbers. It includes three key elements: a recognizable client, a tangible metric (such as “conversions” or “ROI”), and a timeframe.

For instance, “How Shopify Scaled Support Capacity by 40% in 6 Months” immediately signals relevance to eCommerce brands.

When to Use It

It’s perfect for cold outreach or nurturing leads familiar with your product. Avoid using it if the metric isn’t impressive or verifiable.

A quick screen share could speed this fix, free tomorrow?

Type
Real‑Time Assist, Escalation, B2B SaaS
Tone
Collaborative, Friendly, Action‑Oriented

When back‑and‑forth messages drag on, offer synchronous help.

Phrases like “speed this fix” promise a payoff, while ending with “free tomorrow?” invites scheduling without pressure.

You position the live call as a time saver, not an obligation.

Include a scheduling link in the message. Be clear about time zones and perhaps add a suggested time slot.

Meet Your Support Crew, Ready To Guide You

Tone
Reassuring, Human‑Centric

For new users, silence can be frightening. Naming the “support crew” eliminates doubt and signals proactive care with the message, “We’re ready to guide.”

Quick Tips

  • Include headshots of two agents with real first names.
  • Offer a 15‑minute onboarding call link, boosting retention for high‑ACV accounts.

Proposal inside, a quick win for your team

Tone
Clear, Upbeat

Why It Works

The phrase “quick win” hints at fast value. Adding a tangible benefit can increase open rates by 15% (Litmus study).

When to Use

Use this kind of subject line right after you finish tailoring the proposal. The promise of speed fits early-stage discussions where decision makers want rapid impact.

Example Email

Hi Sam,

I attached a one-page proposal that trims onboarding time by 25%.

Take a peek when you have five minutes. If you like it, we can lock in next steps by Friday.

Best,

Aisha

Browse all 102 categories

Find proven subject lines for any campaign, season or audience.