Should You Hire a Cold Email Agency or Do It In-House?
Most founders try cold email themselves first. That's fine. But once you've validated the channel works and you want to scale — or you've tried it and it isn't working and you're not sure why — that's when bringing in an agency makes sense.
Here's the honest breakdown of when hiring an agency is the right call vs. building in-house:
Hire a Cold Email Agency When:
- You need pipeline now and can't wait the 3–4 months it takes to recruit, onboard, and ramp an SDR
- You've tried cold email yourself and reply rates are under 2% — something in the approach is broken
- Your deal value is $15,000+ and you can justify $5,000–$8,000/month in outbound spend
- You want the infrastructure built properly from day one (domains, DMARC, warmup, deliverability)
- You're testing a new market or ICP and want to move fast without making permanent hires
Build In-House When:
- You have an existing sales team with bandwidth to add outbound to their workflow
- Your ICP is so niche that deep product knowledge is required for every touchpoint
- Your budget is under $3,000/month — at that level, you're better investing in tools and training
- You want full control over every message and iteration cycle
What to Look for in a Cold Email Agency
Not all agencies run the same. Here's what separates the ones that deliver from the ones that just send emails:
1. Deliverability Infrastructure First
Ask any agency you're evaluating: how many sending domains do they set up per campaign, and what's their inbox placement rate? Top agencies typically use 3–5 domains per 1,000 emails/day, with full SPF, DKIM, and DMARC authentication. If they can't tell you their inbox placement rate, that's a problem.
2. Real ICP Research, Not Template Blasting
According to Sopro's 2026 outreach data, 81% of sales and marketing decision-makers engage with cold outreach when it's tailored to their company context. Agencies that send the same message to 10,000 contacts will hit the industry average of 3.43% reply rates. Agencies that build persona-specific campaigns routinely hit 8–15%.
3. Reply Handling That Converts
Email management without reply handling is half a job. The moment someone replies with "tell me more," you need a human or a process to convert that into a booked meeting. Ask whether the agency handles replies, who manages them, and how fast they respond.
4. Transparent Reporting
You should get weekly or real-time access to open rates, reply rates, and meeting booked rates. Not a PDF at the end of the month. Ask to see a sample dashboard or reporting format before you sign.
Red Flags When Hiring a Cold Email Agency
- They promise results in 2 weeks. Realistic agencies quote 60–90 days to first qualified meetings — email warmup alone takes 4–6 weeks for new domains.
- They won't show you case studies from your industry. Generic case studies are fine for credibility. What you need is evidence they've worked in your specific market.
- They use shared sending domains. If your emails go out from their domains (not yours), you don't own the deliverability reputation you're building. Walk away.
- Long lock-in with no performance clause. Any agency asking for a 12-month commitment without a performance exit clause isn't putting skin in the game.
- They don't ask about your current pipeline. If an agency doesn't understand your existing customer acquisition before proposing a strategy, they're selling a template, not a solution.
9 Questions to Ask Before You Hire
- What industries do you have proven case studies in?
- Will my emails go out from my domains or yours?
- What's your inbox placement rate across active campaigns?
- Do you handle replies, or do I manage them?
- How do you define a "qualified lead" in your reporting?
- How many meetings should I realistically expect in month 2 and month 3?
- What does the onboarding process look like, and how long until first emails go out?
- What happens if performance is below the agreed benchmark?
- Who owns the sending domains and email accounts at contract end?
Realistic Timeline After Hiring
Set the right expectations before you start. A well-run cold email agency typically follows this cadence:
- Week 1–2: ICP definition, domain purchase, infrastructure setup
- Week 2–4: Email warmup, copy development, list building
- Week 4–6: Campaign launch at low volume, initial data collection
- Week 6–10: Full send volume, A/B testing, reply rate optimization
- Month 3+: Consistent meeting volume, secondary sequence testing
Anyone promising a full pipeline in 30 days is setting you up for disappointment — or worse, spam folders.
Want to see how cold email compares to LinkedIn outreach for your specific ICP? Read our cold email vs LinkedIn comparison before you commit to one channel.
Get a Straight Assessment Before You Commit
Arvani Media works with B2B companies to build and run outbound programs on cold email and LinkedIn. We'll tell you honestly whether your market and offer are right for cold email before you sign anything. Talk to us here.
Frequently Asked Questions
- How do I know if I should hire a cold email agency?
- If you have a proven offer, a defined ICP, and need qualified pipeline faster than you can hire and ramp an SDR — cold email agency is worth evaluating. If your offer isn't validated yet, fix that first.
- What's the typical contract length with a cold email agency?
- Most agencies ask for 3–6 months minimum. Realistic results take 60–90 days, so shorter commitments don't give the campaign time to optimize. Be skeptical of anyone asking for 12 months without a performance exit clause.
- How many emails will a cold email agency send per month?
- This varies by pricing tier and ICP size. Most mid-range agencies target 3,000–10,000 contacts per month across 3–5 sending domains. Volume isn't the goal — reply rate is.
- What reply rate should I expect from a cold email agency?
- According to Instantly's 2026 benchmark report, the average cold email reply rate is 3.43%. Top-performing campaigns run 8–15%. A good agency should target 5%+ as a baseline for a well-defined ICP.