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How to Run a Cold Email Campaign Targeting Companies with Conference Signals & No Events Team (2026)

Step-by-step guide to refine your list of conference-going companies without an events team, build a 3-touch email sequence, and launch automated outreach directly from Origami's built-in sequencer.

Charlie Mallery
Charlie MalleryUpdated 8 min read

GTM @ Origami

Quick Answer

You’ve got a list of companies with conference signals and no events team sitting in your Origami account. To turn that into meetings, fire up Origami’s built‑in email sequencer — it lets you refine, message, and send directly from the same platform. Paste your own templates, let the AI generate a personalized sequence, then launch multi‑touch outreach with automatic tracking, all without exporting a single CSV.

If you haven’t built the list yet, read how to build a list of Companies with Conference Signals No Events Team first.


Step 1: Refine and segment your list

A raw download won’t get you meetings. Before you write a single word, spend 10 minutes in Origami turning your conference‑signal list into a laser‑targeted campaign.

1. Remove the obvious bad fits

Sort by company name and role. Blow away anyone who isn’t relevant:

  • Vendors selling to the same audience you are
  • Holding companies with no active operating business
  • Contacts with titles that clearly don’t touch events (e.g., Backend Engineer, Accounts Payable)

Origami’s list view gives you a quick preview of each contact’s enriched profile — title, tools used, seniority — so you can scan fast.

2. Segment by who actually feels the pain

Inside these companies, who is drowning in conference logistics? On average, you’ll see three persona groups:

  • Marketing generalists (“Marketing Manager,” “Demand Gen Lead”) — they got voluntold to handle the booth.
  • Sales leaders (“VP Sales,” “Head of Growth”) — they own the revenue number and hate seeing leads leak.
  • Founders / CEOs in sub‑50‑person companies — they’re personally printing booth graphics at 11 p.m.

Tag each contact with a persona category — Marketing, Sales, or Exec — directly in Origami. You’ll use these tags to route different email variants later.

3. Add event‑specific context

Go one level deeper. If you have multiple conferences in your list (SaaSter, INBOUND, Dreamforce, etc.), create a segment for each event. Someone scrambling for a 200‑person booth has vastly different problems than someone speaking at a 50‑person roundtable.

What “qualified” looks like for this audience:

  • Company is attending a named conference in the next 30–60 days
  • Contact is a decision‑maker or primary doer for event execution
  • No evidence of an internal events team (no “Event Manager” in LinkedIn, company size small enough that it’s plausible)

Once you’ve trimmed and tagged, you’re ready to message people who are actively searching for a life raft.


Step 2: Create the email sequence (the only copy you’ll need)

Origami gives you two ways to build a sequence:

  1. Paste your own templates — Write a 3‑touch cadence, drop the messages into the sequencer, set your delays, and hit launch.
  2. Let the AI agent write it — Describe your offer in plain English, and Origami’s agent will generate a personalized sequence for every contact, pulling from their enriched profile data (title, company, industry) so each message feels custom.

Both options live inside the same sequencer. No separate tool. No CSV gymnastics.

Below is an exact 3‑touch sequence you can steal. It’s written for an offer that helps companies manage conference logistics — a platform, a service, a fractional event manager — but you can swap the benefit line to match whatever you sell. Each message is under 100 words, zero fluff.

Day 1 — First touch

Subject line: Managing [Conference] without an events team?

Preview text: Saw you’re heading to [Conference] — here’s a thought

Body:

Hi [First Name],

I noticed [Company] is sponsoring [Conference] — and that you don’t have a dedicated events person internally.

I’ve been in that exact spot. The back‑and‑forth with the venue, last‑minute booth changes, and the post‑show follow‑up that never happens — it eats into the ROI of showing up.

Our team runs the ops side so your reps can focus on conversations. Worth 15 minutes to see if we’re a fit?

[Signature]

Day 3 — Follow‑up (different angle)

Subject line: Re: [Conference] logistics

Preview text: A real example from last quarter

Body:

Hi [First Name],

Quick follow‑up. One B2B client in a similar spot saw a 2x bump in qualified meetings at their last conference after we took coordination off their plate. No extra hires, no chaos.

I’d be happy to share the exact workflow so you can see if it applies to [Company] — no pitch, just the playbook.

Open to a 10‑minute call this week?

[Signature]

Day 7 — Final breakup

Subject line: Last note re: [Conference]

Preview text: Wrapping up — and a free resource

Body:

Hi [First Name],

I know you’re heads‑down prepping for [Conference]. If you ever want to offload the logistics and make sure no lead slips through, my inbox is open.

Even if now isn’t the right time, reply “checklist” and I’ll send over our 1‑page conference prep checklist — built from everything we learned doing events without a team.

Best, [Signature]

How to personalize at scale: Replace [Conference], [Company], and [First Name] with Origami’s dynamic fields. The platform will auto‑fill these from your contact data. If you use the AI agent, it will even add context like “Saw you’re at Booth 1420” if that info exists in the lead’s profile.


Step 3: Send the sequence directly from Origami

Here’s where most tools fall apart. You build a list in one place, export it, mangle a CSV, upload it to a sequencer, and hope the fields match. Not here. You launch the entire campaign from the same Origami project where you built and refined your list.

Set your delays and go

Inside the sequencer, set your touchpoints:

  • Day 1: Initial email
  • Day 3: Follow‑up
  • Day 7: Breakup

You’re not limited to 3‑7‑7. If the conference is 4 weeks out, you might go Day 1, Day 5, Day 10. Adjust to the urgency.

Hit “Launch,” and Origami takes over. It sends each step automatically, respecting your configured delays. No manual drip, no forgetting a follow‑up.

Track everything in one dashboard

Once the sequence is live, you’ll see opens, clicks, and replies right next to the same enriched profiles you built the list from. While looking at a contact’s activity, you can still see their title, company, tools used — all the context that tells you why you reached out in the first place. No tab‑switching.

Automatic un‑enrollment is baked in: If a lead replies, Origami removes them from the sequence immediately. You won’t accidentally send a “final breakup” message after someone books a call.

What the sequencer costs

The sequencer itself is free on all paid Origami plans. You’re only paying for the credits used to find and enrich those leads. Plans start at $29/month, and you can test the entire flow — list building and sending included — on the free plan with 1,000 credits (no credit card needed).

Response rates to expect

For a well‑segmented list of companies with conference signals and no events team, expect a 5–10% reply rate. If you’re below 3%, iterate:

  • Low opens → fix subject lines or send times
  • High opens, low replies → the offer isn’t sharp enough or you’re targeting the wrong persona; test a stronger hook (e.g., a checklist vs. a “quick call”)
  • No interest across the board → the list isn’t as qualified as you thought; go back to Step 1 and tighten the criteria

The beauty of having list refinement, messaging, and sending in one tool is that you can tweak and re‑launch in under an hour — not a day.


Frequently Asked Questions