How to Run a 3‑Touch Email Campaign for Tampa Home Service Contractors in 2026
Step‑by‑step guide to running a cold email campaign for Tampa home service contractors using Origami's built‑in email sequencer. Includes ready‑to‑send 3‑touch sequence copy.
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Quick Answer: You already have a list of Tampa home service contractors from Origami. Now send that list into a personalized, multi‑step email sequence—directly from the same platform. Origami includes a built‑in email sequencer on all paid plans, so you find, enrich, sequence, and send without exporting a single CSV. This guide walks you through refining your list, writing three Tampa‑specific emails you can copy, and launching the sequence to start booking jobs.
If you followed our how to build a list of Home Service Contractors in Tampa playbook, you used Origami to describe your ideal customer in plain English—something like:
“Find decision makers at home service contractors in Tampa, FL with verified emails. Include owners, general managers, or marketing contacts.”
Origami’s AI agent searched the live web, chained data sources, and returned a clean list of prospects with verified names, email addresses, phone numbers, titles, company size, and web presence. If you haven’t built that list yet, grab your 1,000 free credits (no credit card needed) and run that prompt. The free plan gives you enough to test a small campaign. For the full guide on list building, check the parent post linked above.
That list is your raw material. But a raw prospect list isn’t a campaign. To turn names into booked estimates, you need to refine the list, craft a sequence that sounds like it came from someone who actually understands home service contractors in Tampa, and send it from a tool that doesn’t make you juggle three different tabs. That’s exactly what we’ll do, step by step.
Step 1 – Refine and qualify your Tampa contractor list
The list Origami gave you might have 200–500 contacts. You won’t blast all of them with the same sequence. First, segment. I do this inside Origami’s lead table, where I can filter by title, company size, and location.
What “qualified” looks like for Tampa home service contractors
A qualified lead in this space is someone who:
- Has budget control or direct influence – Owner, managing member, general manager, or sometimes a VP of operations. Skip the marketing coordinator who doesn’t decide if they hire you.
- Runs a business that fits your sweet spot – A solo roofer is different from a 15‑truck plumbing shop. Decide your ideal size. I usually aim for 1–50 employees: big enough to need consistent lead flow, small enough that the owner still reads cold emails.
- Operates in Tampa or specifically the sub‑markets – South Tampa, Brandon, Westchase, St. Pete. If you only service Hillsborough County, filter out Pasco or Manatee leads unless they’re close to the border.
- Shows recent activity – Check the enriched details Origami appends. A company that hasn’t updated its Google Business Profile in two years or has a dead Facebook page may not be actively seeking new business. Prioritize those who look active—maybe they list tools like ServiceTitan, Jobber, or Housecall Pro, which tells you they’re already investing in operations and likely open to lead‑generation improvements.
Remove bad fits
Scan for:
- Franchise corporate addresses – An owner of a franchise location might not be the real decision maker if their lead flow is controlled by corporate.
- Obvious P.O. boxes with no physical location – Less likely to be running an active service business.
- Personal email addresses – Origami tries to find business emails, but occasionally a personal Gmail or Yahoo slips through. Delete those; they’ll bounce or go to spam.
Segment the final list into maybe two or three buckets: “Owners – small shops (1‑10 employees)”, “Owners/GMs – mid‑size (11‑50)”, “Owners – past Angi/HomeAdvisor users”. The messaging can then use merge fields that reference segment‑specific pain points automatically. We’ll cover that next.
Step 2 – Create the email sequence
Origami’s sequencer lets you either paste your own templates or ask the AI agent to generate a personalized 3‑day email sequence for all your leads. I’ll show both options, then give you the exact copy I’ve used to get replies from contractors in Florida.
Option 1: Paste your own templates
If you already have a sequence that works, you can copy‑paste it into Origami. Just write the emails, include placeholders like and, set the delays between touches (I recommend Day 1, Day 3, Day 7 for a short 3‑touch campaign), and hit “Launch.”
Option 2: Let the agent write it
This is where Origami shines. Instead of staring at a blank editor, you can ask:
“Write a 3‑day cold email sequence for Tampa home service contractors. Make each message feel personal, reference their specific trade when possible, and highlight the challenge of seasonal lead droughts in Florida.”
The AI will generate a sequence that pulls from each lead’s profile data—title, company, industry, maybe even tools they use. So a roofing company owner sees a different message than a general manager at an HVAC shop, even though you set the campaign up once. The agent writes the body, subject lines, and preview text. You can tweak before sending.
The actual 3‑touch sequence I use (copy these)
Below is the Tampa‑specific copy I’ve refined over dozens of campaigns. Drop these into Origami’s sequencer, insert your own details, and you’re ready. Each message is 50‑100 words, direct, and avoids the fluff that makes contractors hit delete.
Touch 1: Day 1 – Cold Email
- Subject: Quick question about your lead flow
- Preview: (appears in inbox beside subject; leave blank or let Origami pull the first line)
- Body:
Hi ,
I keep seeing ’s work around Tampa—nice stuff. Most home service contractors I talk to are stuck in the word‑of‑mouth roller coaster: busy for two months, ghost town the next.
I help contractors in the area fill their pipeline consistently, without relying on Angi’s overpriced leads or Facebook ads. Any interest in hearing how I could bring you 3–5 warm leads per month?
Worth a look?
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Why this works: It calls out Tampa specifically, acknowledges their work (even if generic), and names a pain point (seasonal lead gaps). The number “3–5 warm leads” sounds realistic, not spammy.
Touch 2: Day 3 – Follow‑up
- Subject: Re: Quick question about your lead flow
- Body:
, I wanted to bump this once—things move fast.
I shared this with a roofer in St. Pete two quarters ago. He was skeptical until we filled 12 spots in six weeks using a system that didn’t require him to answer the phone for cold calls.
Happy to explain how it works in 10 minutes. If not, no worries at all.
Why this works: The “Re:” subject line keeps the thread visible. The small social proof (unnamed roofer) is believable and local. I’m not asking for a big commitment—just a 10‑min call.
Touch 3: Day 7 – Final breakup
- Subject: Last try,
- Body:
, I’ve reached out a couple times and haven’t heard back. I’ll take the hint and leave you alone after this.
But if you ever want to explore a different way to attract home service leads in Tampa—one that doesn’t chain you to review sites—my inbox is open.
Best,
Why this works: It’s polite, final, and plants a seed for later. No groveling, no “I guess you’re not interested” guilt. It leaves the door open without burning a contact.
Default delays: I set Day 1 (immediate), Day 3 (2 business days later), Day 7 (5 business days later). Origami handles the timing automatically; you configure the intervals in the sequence builder.
Step 3 – Send the sequence directly from Origami
Here’s the part I love: you never leave Origami. You don’t export a CSV, import into Outreach or Mailshake, rebuild the sequence, and pray the fields map correctly. It’s all under one roof:
- Launch the sequence – With one click, Origami’s built‑in email sequencer starts sending. You only pay for credits to enrich leads; the sequencer itself is included on all paid plans (and on the free plan you can test with your 1,000 enriched contacts). Sending is free.
- Tracking right where your list lives – Opens, clicks, and replies show up in the same dashboard where you built the list. While looking at a contact’s activity, you still see their full enriched profile (title, company, tech stack) so you remember why you reached out.
- Automatic un‑enrollment – If a lead replies, they exit the sequence instantly. No dreaded “I’d love to chat” reply followed by a breakup email the next day. Origami detects the reply and stops.
- No extra tools – You find, enrich, qualify, sequence, send, and track—all from one platform. No syncing, no broken zap, no duplicate contact hell.
What happens when you hit “Launch”
For a list of 100 Tampa contractors, Touch 1 goes out immediately. Over the next week, you watch the reply column fill. A few owners will write back: “Not right now,” “Tell me more,” or “Call me at 3.” Each reply removes them from the sequence, and you can reply from anywhere. I often handle follow‑ups from my phone by logging into the Origami web app.
Expected response rates
For Tampa home service contractors, a well‑targeted cold sequence typically sees:
- Positive reply rate: 3–7% (interested replies, not counting out‑of‑office).
- Booking rate: About 1–3% of the total list ends in a booked call or meeting. That’s 1–3 conversations per 100 contacts. Since these are high‑ticket services (many contractors can mean $10k+ lifetime value), that’s a solid return.
When to iterate on messaging vs. iterate on the list
- If your reply rate is under 2% after 100 sends, change the messaging. Open rates don’t matter as much as replies. Try a different angle: mention a recent Tampa ordinance (like the county’s roof‑permit update) or a weather event that creates demand.
- If your reply rate is healthy but conversations die, it’s your offer or call to action, not the list. Maybe “3–5 leads a month” isn’t enough for a 20‑truck HVAC shop, and you need to show bigger volume.
- If you’re getting irrelevant replies (e.g., window washers when you only wanted roofers), go back to Step 1 and refine the Origami prompt. Add more specific filters or negative keywords.
Putting it all together: your campaign checklist
- Run your Origami prompt (or import from the parent guide) to get a list of Tampa home service contractors with verified emails.
- Refine and segment—remove bad fits, focus on decision makers in the right service area.
- Paste the 3‑touch sequence above into Origami’s sequencer (or let the AI generate a version).
- Set delays (Day 1, 3, 7) and launch.
- Monitor replies inside Origami. When someone writes back, they’re automatically removed from the sequence.
- Follow up manually to book calls or estimates.
- After 2 weeks review reply rates. If they’re low, tweak the copy and rerun on a fresh batch.
That’s it. One platform, no CSVs, no headaches. You’ll be booking jobs in Tampa while the competition is still sorting leads in a spreadsheet.
Ready to run your campaign? Start by building your list with Origami’s free plan—1,000 credits, zero credit card required—and then launch your first sequence from the same dashboard.