Quipp for network marketers
Three openers. Zero cringe.
Your warm list is full of people you actually know. The message should sound like it.
The cold-list freeze is real.
You open the app, you scroll the list, you see a name you know — someone who'd actually be a good fit. And then you sit there. Not because you don't believe in what you're selling. Because you're not sure how to start without sounding like every other message they've already tuned out.
That gap between knowing someone and sending the message — that's where most outreach dies. Not in the pitch. In the opener.
I close that gap. You tell me who, you tell me what kind of connection it is, and I'll give you three opening lines in seconds. Real lines, not scripts. Lines that sound like you reaching out — not like you running a funnel.
What "sounding like you" actually means.
Network marketing has a reputation problem, and a lot of it comes down to openers that sound copied from a training call. The person on the other end has seen a hundred versions of "Hey! I've been thinking about you and wanted to share something exciting." They scroll past it before it finishes loading.
When I write your opener, I'm not pulling from a template. I'm tuning to the vibe you picked — warm, casual, direct, confident, low-key — and writing something specific to the type of relationship you have with this person. Old friend opener sounds different from professional contact opener sounds different from someone you met once at an event.
The goal is a message that reads like you actually wrote it. Because someone who writes their own messages gets replies. Someone running scripts gets read-receipts and silence.
Example openers Quipp might write
"Hey, been meaning to reach out since we lost touch — I've been doing something new lately and honestly thought of you immediately."
"Not a pitch, I promise — just wanted to see how you've been doing and maybe share something I've been up to."
"Okay I'll just be direct — I started something that makes a lot of sense for people in your situation and you came to mind first."
You pick one. Hit send. Done.
More conversations. Less friction.
The math in network marketing is a contact sport. More outreach means more conversations. More conversations means more yes's — and more no's you've already accounted for. The bottleneck for most people isn't belief in the product. It's the energy cost of composing each first message one by one.
I move that bottleneck. Instead of spending ten minutes staring at one name, you spend thirty seconds. Pick the contact, set the relationship context, choose your vibe, and get three options. Work through your whole list the same way. You'll run more conversations in a week than most people run in a month — and none of them will sound like a copy-paste.
Follow-ups too. The "checking in" message, the re-engage on someone who went quiet, the soft nudge — I write all of it. The hardest message to write is always the second one after someone didn't reply. I make that easy.
How I work.
Tell me who.
Pick the contact. Set the connection type — warm acquaintance, old friend, professional contact, someone you just met.
Tell me what.
What do you want from this message? A reply, an intro call, a yes? Set the goal.
I'll write three. You send one.
Three openers, tuned to your vibe. Pick the one that sounds like you. Hit send.