Cold email is a game of iteration. The first version is a draft. The 10th version is a product. The operators who win are the ones who run the feedback loop weekly and compound learnings over months.
15-30 minutes per week. Compound effect over 12 weeks is dramatic.
Rotate through your Tier 1 variables (see what to test):
Each cycle, keep the winners. Replace the losers. Over 12 weeks your control email is 12 improvements ahead of where you started.
Once a month, step back:
Sometimes the answer isn't copy. It's list quality, deliverability, or a new segment.
Every 90 days:
Keep a running doc of every experiment. Format:
Date: [YYYY-MM-DD] Campaign: [name] Hypothesis: [what I thought would happen and why] Variable changed: [one specific thing] Control version: [exact text or ID] Challenger version: [exact text or ID] Sample size per variant: [number] Duration: [days] Result: - Control: [reply rate, positive rate] - Challenger: [reply rate, positive rate] - Winner: [control / challenger / inconclusive] - Effect size: [percentage lift] What I rolled forward: [did challenger become new control?] What I learned: [one-sentence takeaway]
After 6 months you have an experimental archive specific to your audience. It's worth more than any playbook, it's the ground truth of what actually works for your segment.
Most experiments are inconclusive. Most changes don't materially move the needle. You find the 10% that do and scale them. The discipline is in running the process consistently, not in making every experiment a winner.
Operators who iterate for 90 days outperform operators who launch-and-forget by 3-5x on pipeline per email sent. The compounding is real.