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The Double Opt-In Email Introduction

The Double Opt-In Email Introduction

What is The Double Opt-In Email Introduction

The Double Opt-In Email Introduction is when someone wants to introduce two people and has the permission of both before doing so. It’s common sense, but doesn’t seem to be common.

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“So, how can I help?”

Have you ever got on a phone call and both people say at the same time “So, how can I help?” Some contact introduced you both and didn’t either 1/ ask for permission to make an introduction, and 2/ didn’t really explain the specific purpose and benefit of the introduction… Well it happened to me this week.

A founder made an introduction to me to someone at an investment bank about some nebulous fundraising related topic. I didn’t really follow, but it didn’t appear to be the worst use of 5 minutes to have a call. Only it was.

Quite quickly the conversation came to, “I’m sorry, I don’t actually know why we were introduced.” The irony was, the call might have actually been useful had it followed proper protocol, at least for networking purposes. As it happened, this didn’t follow protocol and so was quite wasted.

What’s wrong with just making introductions to people?

A lot. Let’s break this down:

Why most no double opt-in emails suck even more

Beyond just being annoying, these intros are more infuriating, why?

What a non double opt-in email looks like

Hi Alexander,

Please meet Mary at Twitter. They are playing with ephemeral communication and hope to make a big impact. She wants to ask you some questions about their business plan and thought you would like to chat, given your background.

Over to you guys to chat.

Best,

Dick Head

No, I don’t want to chat about their business plan. The real life Twitter has enough problems to take up my year.

What a WTF intro email looks like

Hi Jarvis, 

Mary is CC’d on this email and is thinking about doing a startup. You should chat! 

Like your facebook posts,

Captain Insano

What the very fuck.

The rule of proper intros

It’s really simple:

If you think two people really should meet for a specific reason, ask both of them independently if they want to be connected, and give a specific reason why it is that it would be mutually beneficial for them to be connected. Then make an introduction which introduces each party briefly

What a double opt-in email looks like

Hi Alexander,

My friend Mary at Twitter is playing with ephemeral communication and hopes to make a big impact. They have raised $560m to date. She mentioned she read your blog and wants to ask you some questions about why they need to send a pitch deck before meeting VCs.

I know you are interested in social networking and Mary is super connected in the space. It would be a great connect for you, so thought you would like to chat?

Are you happy for me to make an intro?       

Best,

Cash Money

I’m watching you

I pay attention to people who make bad intros. I’m not as demure as some. If I get crappy intros, I let people know. For more esteemed people, I keep track of the quality of intros and at some point don’t accept them anymore.

The downside of being a connector

I follow the double-blind intro rule and I have come a cropper. There is one friend I have made intros to with quality people, but for some reason, shit happens. Both people are happy to meet, but for some reason, one party doesn’t respond and organize a call with him. I have no idea why this happens, but it seems to happen! Frankly, it’s not my fault and is a statistical anomaly. In such cases, you just need to be more prudent about making intros till you build up the social capital again.

Is it ever ok to make intros direct?

There are a few circumstances when you don’t need to make a “Double Opt-In Email Introduction.” These are:

  1. Certain on value: If you will bet your life that an intro is cash money, then off you go. But you need to know someone well enough to make that call. The best example is for paying customers. Everyone wants to make money. I intro startup founders to lawyers all the time and don’t ask for permission. Does that make me a dick? No. I know if the founders are a waste of time or not, firstly. I also know lawyers want to make money. So the fuck I care.
  2. You are tight: If you are buddy buddy with someone, you don’t have that much to lose by making intros. They’ll just say ‘WTF dude?’, a few times before they get bored if you make sucky ones. But you know them well enough to know what is gold and what is wood in the first place. Co-workers are another good example. They aren’t going to make intros that don’t make sense, right? A lot of my friends that make intros are not junior (shit, I’m getting old…), so when they make intros they are pretty much always awesome.
  3. Super connectors: Some people are turbo connected and make intros all the time. Sometimes they are gold and sometimes they are wood. I take these people with a pinch of salt since they are like Babe Ruth (High strike out, but high strike rate). Sure you think twice about some intros, but a lot of them end up decent.

Conclusion

It’s simple, just make “Double Opt-In Email Introductions” as standard. It makes some operational overhead for you, but it mitigates downside risk for you. The final thing to note, don’t make too many dodgy double opt-in offers; your contact still has to say no to you.

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