Event Follow-Up Email Templates

Browse best-performing event follow-up email templates for conference connections, trade show leads, and networking follow-ups, built to reconnect with enough specific context that the person actually remembers who you are.

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6 templates d'emails
[[Event name]] recap: what stood out

Hi {{first_name}},

Good to connect at [[event name]]. Two things from the event that stuck with me:

[[Specific insight from a session or speaker]] and how it connects to [[their industry or challenge]].

Your point about [[something they said in your conversation]].

I'd like to stay in touch. If [[specific topic]] comes up on your end, I'd welcome the chance to compare notes.

[[Your name]]

You asked about [[specific question]] at [[event name]]

Hi {{first_name}},

At [[event name]], you asked about [[specific question or topic they raised at your booth or session]]. I didn't have a complete answer in the moment, so I wanted to follow up properly.

[[2-3 sentence answer or explanation with a link to a relevant resource]].

If you want to dig deeper into how this would work for [[their company]], I'm happy to set up a call.

[[Your name]]

Nice meeting you at [[event name]], {{first_name}}

Hi {{first_name}},

It was good to connect at [[event name]]. I enjoyed the discussion about [[topic from conversation or session you both attended]].

No specific ask here. I just wanted to stay connected and keep the conversation open for when it makes sense. If anything comes up where I can be helpful on the [[your area of expertise]] side, don't hesitate to reach out.

[[Your name]]

[[Event name]]: the [[topic]] conversation

Hi {{first_name}},

We connected briefly at [[event name]] during the [[session, keynote, or location]]. I work with [[type of companies or teams]] on [[what you do]], and your situation with [[specific challenge or goal they mentioned]] sounds like something I can help with.

I can put together a short overview of how we handle [[specific thing they asked about]] and send it over this week. Would that be useful?

[[Your name]]

Following up from [[event name]]: [[brief topic you discussed]]

Hi {{first_name}},

I've been thinking about the conversation we had at [[event name]] about [[specific topic]]. Your point on [[something they said]] was interesting, especially given what I'm seeing in [[related area or your industry]].

I mentioned [[resource, tool, or idea you discussed]]. Here's the link: [[link]]. Thought you'd find it useful.

Let me know if you'd like to continue the conversation.

[[Your name]]

Great to meet you at [[event name]]

Hi {{first_name}},

We spoke briefly after the [[session or panel name]] at [[event name]]. You mentioned your team was [[specific thing they mentioned: expanding into a market, solving a problem, evaluating a tool]], and that's something I work on closely.

Would a quick call next week make sense to pick up where we left off?

[[Your name]]

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Frequently asked questions

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Send event follow-ups within 48 hours of the event ending, while the conversations are still fresh for both you and the recipient. Conference follow-up windows close quickly. People return to their desks with a full inbox and a week of catch-up work already stacked.

For multi-day events, follow up on the final evening or the morning after rather than waiting until the end of the full conference week. The person you met on day one won't remember the details of a five-minute conversation four days later.

Open with a specific reference to where and how you met: the booth, the panel session, the lunch table, the conversation by the coffee station. This is what separates a useful follow-up from a mass-send that reads like a lead generation campaign.

"We spoke briefly after the [Panel Name] session at [Event Name]. You mentioned your team was expanding into [market] and I work with companies making that move. Would a quick call next week make sense?" If they remember the conversation, that's enough to get a reply.

If you can't remember the specifics (which happens after a busy conference day) check their LinkedIn profile before writing. Their current role, a recent post, or their company's latest news will usually surface a relevant angle. "We connected briefly at [Event Name] during the [Session] panel. I've been thinking about the discussion on [topic] since then." What you want to avoid is sending a note with no specific detail that could have gone to anyone in the room.

Name the event and the context of your meeting. "Great to meet you at [Event Name]" is clean and recognizable. "Following up from [Event Name]: [brief topic you discussed]" adds enough detail to jog the memory before the email is even opened.

Avoid "Connecting after [Event]" or subject lines that are vague about the content. The reader may have met dozens of people at the same conference. A subject line that specifies the session or the specific discussion point you shared helps them place you immediately.

Both have their place, and they work better together than either does alone. A LinkedIn connection request with a short note ("Great to meet you at [Event Name], we talked about [topic]") is low friction and often gets seen faster than email. It also gives the person a way to find you without hunting for a business card.

Email is the better format for any follow-up that has a concrete ask: a meeting request, a resource you want to share, or a proposal to explore working together. LinkedIn is better as a first touchpoint that keeps the door open. If you only have one contact point, email is the stronger choice for follow-up with any substance to it; LinkedIn is the stronger choice when your goal is simply to stay on someone's radar.

Segment by conversation quality rather than blasting one template to everyone who scanned their badge. People who asked specific questions about your product or service get a personalized note that references what they asked. People you had a brief but engaged exchange with get a note that references the general topic they showed interest in. Cold badge scans with no real conversation can get a more templated approach, but even those should acknowledge the specific event and offer something concrete rather than a generic pitch.

For leads who asked specific questions, a resource-offer CTA gets more traction than an open-ended meeting ask: "I can put together a short overview of how we handle [specific thing you mentioned] and send it over this week. Would that be useful?" It's lower friction than a call and easier to say yes to.

Sending a follow-up that reads like a mass email. Even when you are following up with fifty people from the same conference, the recipient should feel like the message was written specifically for them.

Following up too late is nearly as damaging. A week after a busy event, the connection you made has faded significantly. You need to arrive in their inbox while they still have a mental image of the conversation. "It was great talking about your team's APAC expansion at [Event]" proves the email was personal. "It was great connecting with you at [Event]" with no other detail does not.

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