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How to Run an Email Campaign to Reach Laravel Companies in Canada (2026)

Step-by-step guide to running a cold email campaign targeting Laravel companies in Canada. Full 3-touch sequence, list refinement, and sending with Origami's built-in sequencer.

Charlie Mallery
Charlie MalleryUpdated 10 min read

GTM @ Origami

Quick Answer

To contact Laravel companies in Canada in 2026, you need a verified list and an email sequence that lands. With Origami you can build that list and deploy a 3‑touch sequence directly from the same platform. Origami’s built‑in email sequencer sends custom messages, tracks opens and replies, and auto‑unenrolls leads who respond — no CSV exports or separate tools. This guide walks you through refining your Canadian Laravel list and gives you the exact copy to steal.

If you haven’t built your prospect list yet, start with our companion post on how to build a list of Find Laravel Companies in Canada (2026). Then come back here to run the campaign.


Step 1 — Build the List in Origami (Skip If You Already Have It)

Even if you’ve already pulled a list, it’s worth seeing how fast the new workflow is.

Open Origami and type a plain‑English instruction like this:

Find decision makers at Canadian software companies that use Laravel, including verified email addresses, job title, company size, and tech stack details.

In under a minute, Origami returns a table with:

  • First name, last name, verified email
  • Job title (CTO, Head of Engineering, Technical Lead)
  • Company name, size, location
  • Detected tech stack (PHP, Laravel, Vue, Composer, Nova, Forge, etc.)
  • LinkedIn profile and hiring signals where available

New users get 1,000 free credits (no credit card) to test the exact same flow. The free plan includes the email sequencer, so you can send a few campaigns without spending a dollar.


Step 2 — Refine and Qualify the List for Email

A raw list of every domain mentioning Laravel in Canada will burn your sender reputation. You need to trim it to people who can actually say yes.

Inside Origami’s table view, filter and segment:

1. Strip out generic and junior roles
Delete info@, support@, and anyone with a title like “Junior Developer” or “Intern”. You want CTOs, VPs of Engineering, Technical Founders, and Heads of Product — people who control budgets for tools, services, or outsourced development.

2. Segment by company size
For most B2B offers (agency services, monitoring tools, SaaS), the sweet spot is 5–50 employees. Teams this size use Laravel seriously but often lack a full DevOps or architecture person, so they feel pain points your offer can solve. Agencies with 2–5 developers are also gold if you sell productivity tools or staffing.

3. Prioritise active tech hubs
Group contacts by city. Toronto, Vancouver, and Montreal have the densest Laravel ecosystems. Leads in Calgary, Ottawa, or Waterloo are still valid, but you might want to adjust messaging for local references (e.g., mention a nearby meetup or client).

4. Look for live signals of intent
The more you can tell someone is actively working with Laravel right now, the warmer the lead. In Origami’s enriched view, check for:

  • Recent job posts for “Laravel” or “PHP” on their careers page
  • Use of Laravel Nova, Spark, Forge, or Envoyer (visible in tech‑stack column)
  • Funding rounds or new product launches (these create urgency to scale)

What a “qualified” lead looks like for Canadian Laravel companies in 2026:
A founder or technical leader at a 5–50 person software shop, located in Toronto/Vancouver/Montreal, actively shipping a Laravel product, and showing tech debt or hiring signals that your offer directly addresses.

Cut anything that doesn’t meet that bar. A smaller, tighter list will far outperform a big one.


Step 3 — Create the Email Sequence

Origami gives you two ways to build your sequence:

Option A: Paste your own templates
Write a 3‑touch sequence yourself, paste each message into Origami’s sequencer, set the delays between touches (Day 1, Day 3, Day 7 — or your preferred cadence), and hit “Launch.” Full control, zero guesswork.

Option B: Let the AI agent write it
Tell Origami’s agent the goal (e.g., “Book a 15‑min consultation to discuss improving Laravel deployment speed”) and the tone. The agent generates a personalised 3‑day sequence for each lead, pulling in their title, company, and tech stack so the messages feel one‑on‑one. You can still tweak the copy before sending.

Below is a ready‑to‑use sequence written for outreach to Canadian Laravel companies. Messages are short, specific, and avoid fluff — copy, paste, customise.

Touch 1 — Cold Email (Day 1)

Subject: Quick question about scaling your Laravel app in Canada
Preview text: I saw your team is growing — curious how you handle infrastructure today.

Hi ,

Noticed is doing interesting work with Laravel. I speak with a lot of Canadian dev teams and hear the same two headaches: slow deployments across time zones and finding affordable production‑grade hosting north of the 49th parallel.

Curious — what’s your current stack for scaling and monitoring? We’ve helped a handful of Toronto / Montreal shops cut their deploy times in half while staying compliant with Canadian data rules.

Worth a 10‑minute chat?

Best,


Touch 2 — Follow‑up with Social Proof (Day 3)

Subject: One thing that helped a Montreal Laravel team
Preview text: They cut deployment time by 40% — without changing their core stack.

Hi ,

Following up — I know inboxes are brutal. Quick story: a 12‑person dev shop in Montreal was wrestling with Forge‑based deploys that felt fragile every time traffic spiked. We helped them layer in lightweight container orchestration without touching their Laravel codebase. Their lead time from commit to production dropped 40%.

If scaling reliability (or speed) is on your radar for I’d be happy to share what that looked like.

No pressure.


Touch 3 — Breakup + Open Door (Day 7)

Subject: Closing the loop
Preview text: I’ll leave you alone after this — just one thought.

Hi ,

Tried a couple of times; didn’t want to be a pest. If scaling or hosting your Laravel stack becomes a priority in 2026, I’d love to stay connected. Even if we’re not a fit, I’m happy to point you toward the public tools most Canadian teams are adopting right now.

If there’s a better person on your team to talk to, a quick intro would mean a lot.

All the best,


Why this sequence works for Canadian Laravel companies

  • Local pain points: Canadian‑specific hosting, time‑zone coordination, and data residency matter more to this audience than generic “scale your app” lines. Mentioning Toronto, Montreal, and Vancouver by name signals you’ve done your homework.
  • Role‑appropriate detail: A CTO cares about deployment speed and compliance; a founder cares about cost and reliability. The language works for both.
  • No jargon bombs: You’re not selling “DevOps transformation” — you’re talking about real things like Forge, containers, and lead time. That builds instant credibility.

Step 4 — Send the Sequence Directly from Origami

This is where the tool saves you hours. You never export the list, upload it to another platform, or fight with CSV formatting.

  1. Inside the same prospect table you just refined, click “Sequences”“New Sequence”.
  2. Name it (e.g., “Canadian Laravel Outreach — March 2026”).
  3. Paste your three messages or let the AI agent generate them.
  4. Set the delay between touches: Day 1 for the first email, Day 3 for the second, Day 7 for the last. You can adjust to any interval you like.
  5. Review the list of enrolled contacts (you can still exclude individuals).
  6. Hit “Launch Sequence”.

What happens after you launch

Origami’s built‑in email sequencer sends each touch automatically on your configured schedule. You stay in the same dashboard to watch:

  • Opens & clicks — Understand which subject lines and CTAs grab attention.
  • Replies — See full reply text inline, right next to the contact’s enriched profile.
  • Prospect context — While reading a reply, you can still see the contact’s title, company size, and tech stack. You’ll know instantly why you reached out and what’s relevant.
  • Automatic un‑enrollment — If someone replies, they exit the sequence. No risk of sending a breakup email after a positive response.

This is the killer feature: one platform from list‑building to outreach. Find leads, enrich them, sequence, send, and track — all without logging into a separate tool. The sequencer is included on every paid plan; you only pay for the credits used to enrich your leads. Sending itself is free.

What response rates to expect

With a tightly qualified list of 100–200 Canadian Laravel decision‑makers and the sequence above, you can consistently see 8–12% positive reply rates (a “yes, let’s talk” or “tell me more”). Open rates typically land between 45–65% when your domain and reputation are healthy.

If you’re below 5% positive replies, don’t start by rewriting email copy. First, check your list quality:

  • Did you accidentally include generic emails or junior roles?
  • Are the companies actually using Laravel right now, or is the “Laravel” mention stale?
  • Are you targeting companies outside the sweet‑spot size?

Once your list feels razor‑sharp, then test small tweaks: a different pain point in the subject line, a shorter Touch 2, or a Light‑Laravel‑specific case study. But 80% of success is list quality — the sequence just activates it.