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How to Run an Email Campaign Targeting High-Revenue Screen Printing Shops in San Francisco (2026)

A tactical guide to emailing San Francisco screen printing shops with $1M+ revenue. Includes a steal-worthy 3-touch sequence, subject lines, and step-by-step instructions for Origami’s built-in email sequencer.

Finn Mallery
Finn MalleryUpdated 11 min read

Founder @ Origami

You already used Origami to build a list of screen printing shops over $1M in San Francisco. Time to turn that list into a live campaign—and you don’t need another tool. Origami’s built-in email sequencer makes it possible to refine, sequence, and send without leaving the platform. This guide walks you through the exact workflow I use to run cold email campaigns for this audience—including a full 3-touch sequence you can copy, paste, and launch today.

If you haven’t built that list yet, follow our guide on how to build a list of Screen Printing Shops Over $1 Million Revenue in San Francisco first. Everything below assumes you have a list in Origami ready to go.


Step 1: Build the List in Origami (Quick Recap)

Even if you followed the parent guide, here’s the exact prompt you typed (or would type) into Origami’s search bar:

Find screen printing shops in San Francisco, California with annual revenue over $1 million. Include verified email addresses, phone numbers, and company details.

Origami’s AI agent goes to work, scanning the live web, chaining data sources, and returning a targeted prospect list. For each lead you get: first and last name, job title, direct email, phone number, company name, website, estimated revenue range, employee count, and often a peek at their tech stack. Everything is already verified—no guesswork.

If you’re starting fresh and don’t have an Origami account, the free plan gives you 1,000 credits (no credit card required). That’s enough to enrich and qualify dozens of leads for this campaign.


Step 2: Refine and Qualify the List

A raw list from any platform needs a human eye before you waste a single email. Here’s how I qualify and segment screen printing shops in San Francisco for maximum reply rates.

1. Remove Non-Screen Printers

Some contacts will be promotional product distributors or digital-only print shops that also offer embroidery. Look at the company description and website. If “screen printing” isn’t a core service—out. I typically remove anything that smells like a middleman or a print broker. You want shops that own screens, squeegees, and conveyor dryers.

2. Segment by Revenue Band

I split the list into two buckets: $1M–$2.5M and $2.5M+. The owners of smaller shops are often involved in day-to-day production. At the $2.5M+ level, you’re more likely to find an operations manager, production director, or purchasing manager. You can use Origami’s contact roles to filter by job title—“Owner”, “CEO”, “Production Manager”, “Purchasing Manager”, “General Manager”. Match your messaging to who you’re emailing.

3. Location: San Francisco Proper vs. Bay Area

If you’re selling a hyperlocal service (same-day supply delivery, local equipment repair), keep only SF zip codes. For most offers, the broader Bay Area works fine—shops in South San Francisco, Daly City, and Oakland face the same cost pressures and labor challenges. Origami shows full addresses, so you can filter with a quick manual review or by grouping by city.

4. What “Qualified” Looks Like

A qualified lead for this campaign:

  • Self-identifies as a screen printer, not a broker
  • Has in-house production equipment
  • Generates at least $1M in annual revenue (likely 10,000+ impressions per month)
  • Is in San Francisco or the immediate Bay Area
  • Is a decision-maker (owner, ops manager, purchasing)

San Francisco’s brutal commercial rents and high minimum wage mean these shops are under constant pressure to increase output without adding headcount. That’s the lever you’ll pull in your email sequence.

In Origami, you can star the best leads, tag them by segment (e.g., “owners”, “ops”), and add private notes. Spend 15 minutes here—the rest of the campaign hinges on it.


Step 3: Create the Email Sequence

Origami gives you two routes to build your sequence:

Option 1: Paste Your Own Templates
You write the emails yourself—subject lines, body, follow-ups. Copy and paste them directly into the sequencer, set your delays between touches (e.g., Day 1, Day 3, Day 7), and hit launch. You keep full control over voice and offer.

Option 2: Let the Agent Write It
Ask Origami’s AI agent to generate a personalized 3-day sequence for every lead automatically. The agent reads each lead’s title, company size, industry, and revenue, then crafts messages that feel custom. You can review and tweak any email before it goes out. I like to use this as a starting point and then inject my own personality.

Below is the exact 3-touch sequence I’ve used for San Francisco screen printing shops. It’s short, direct, and references the real pain points of high-volume, high-cost shops. You can paste this straight into Origami’s sequencer.

The 3-Touch Sequence (Copy/Paste)

Touch 1 — Day 1 (Initial Cold Email)

Subject: ’s turnaround times

Preview text: One SF shop cut rush delays by 40%

Hi ,

Saw that is doing over $1M in screen printing—props from a fellow SF hustler. Curious: how often do rush orders force your team to tear down and re-stage screens?

I help shops like yours reduce that chaos with a lightweight system that syncs production queues to incoming orders. No extra staff, no new hardware, no gimmicks.

Open to a 10-minute call this week to see if it makes sense?

Best,


Touch 2 — Day 3 (Follow-Up)

Subject: 3 quick questions for

Preview text: quick sanity check

,

Following up—SF real estate costs make idle screens expensive. Most high-output printers I talk to lose 5+ production hours a week just tracking threads and re-scheduling jobs.

Three quick questions:

  1. Are you still doing manual order staging?
  2. What’s your biggest logjam right now?
  3. If you could save 10 hours a week, would it matter?

Even a one-line reply helps me figure out if it’s worth a conversation.


Touch 3 — Day 7 (Breakup Email)

Subject: — closing the loop

Preview text: No hard feelings either way

,

I imagine inbox zero is a fantasy in your world. I’ll stop after this.

If production efficiency ever becomes a priority, I’ve got a couple of SF-specific playbooks that let shops scale without scaling headcount. Totally not selling today—just wanted to leave the door open.

If ever, just reply “efficiency”. I’ll send you a 2-pager.

Each message is between 60 and 75 words—tight enough to get read on a phone between screen setups. Adjust the offer to your own product or service, but keep the structure: specific pain, quick ask, low-friction next step.

When you set this up in Origami’s sequence builder, configure the delays like this:

  • Day 1: Send immediately after launch (or schedule for the next available business morning)
  • Day 3: 2 business days after Touch 1
  • Day 7: 4 business days after Touch 2

Origami will automatically schedule everything based on your launch time.


Step 4: Send the Sequence Directly from Origami

This is where the platform shines. You never export a CSV, never upload to a separate tool, never rig together multiple logins.

Launching Your Sequence

Inside your Origami dashboard, navigate to the list you built. Select all qualified leads (or a specific segment), click “Create Sequence”, and connect your email account (Google Workspace, Outlook, or custom SMTP—takes 30 seconds). Then:

  • Option A: Paste the three templates above into the sequence steps. Set the delays, customize the “From” name if needed, and hit “Launch.”
  • Option B: Tell the agent: “Write a 3-day email sequence for San Francisco screen printing shops, mentioning production bottlenecks and SF labor costs.” Review the output, tweak, and launch.

Once launched, Touch 1 goes out. Touch 2 and Touch 3 fire automatically on the exact cadence you set. No manual follow-ups, no forgetting to send.

What You See While It Runs

Everything lives in one dashboard:

  • Open and click tracking for each contact, right alongside the original prospect data
  • Replies flagged in real time—you can respond from within Origami or your email client
  • Prospect context never disappears: while reviewing a contact’s activity (opens, clicks, replies), you still see their enriched profile—title, company info, revenue, tech stack. That context helps you tailor your reply when they do respond.

Automatic Un-enrollment

The sequencer automatically stops for a lead the moment they reply. That means no one gets a breakup email after they’ve already said “let’s talk.” The platform watches for any reply (even an out-of-office) and removes them from the sequence. You can always re-enroll them manually if the OOO is a dead end.

Sending Infrastructure

Origami sequences send through your own email account, so deliverability is as good as your sender reputation. You’re not blasting from a shared IP pool. The sequencer is just a timing and personalization layer on top of your connected mailbox. Paid plans include the sequencer for free—you only pay for credits when you enrich leads. No per-email cost, no sending fees.

Response Rates to Expect

For a well-refined list of San Francisco screen printing shops with $1M+ revenue, I typically see:

  • Reply rate: 4–7% across the full 3-touch sequence. Owners are busy, but the pain point is real.
  • Positive replies (meeting booked or clear interest): roughly half of all replies.
  • Bounce rate: under 3% if Origami’s enriched emails are recent.

If your reply rate is below 3% and open rates are above 45%, the issue is your message—not your list. A/B test subject lines or the offer in Touch 1 before you change anything else. If bounce rates spike over 5%, go back and refine your list: remove generic info@ addresses, double-check revenue fit, and ensure you’re targeting real decision-makers.

When to Iterate

  • Low opens after 48 hours? Test a shorter, more curiosity-driven subject line.
  • Opens are high but zero replies? Pivot the first email—lead with a different pain angle (maybe environmental compliance, client deadlines from tech companies, or chemical storage costs).
  • Replies are negative or dismissive? You might be targeting the wrong persona. Try emailing production managers instead of owners, or vice versa. Use Origami’s job-title filtering to pivot fast.

You can duplicate the sequence, tweak, and relaunch in under 10 minutes—all without touching the list-building stage again.


Frequently Asked Questions