For years, I've been trying to build an AI agent that would actually be valuable to sales people. Honestly? It's been a grind.
The core challenge wasn't the technology. It was the fact that everyone wants something slightly different. No two sales reps use the same inputs. Some dump LinkedIn profiles. Some paste CRM notes. Some have call transcripts. Some just have random bullet points they jotted down between calls. There's no standard.
After talking to dozens of reps and watching them struggle with the myriad of AI tools on the market, I boiled it down to four non-negotiables:
Most AI tools nail maybe one of these. So I built one that nails all four: The Sales Email Writer agent (you can try it now, it's free.) Check it out:
Here's how the Sales Email Writer agent handles each requirement.
The agent offers 11 distinct tone options: friendly, authoritative, consultative, casual, and more. Each one uses different linguistic patterns, sentence structures, and word choices. Or you can pull your saved writing style directly from your Agent.ai settings.
Your emails sound like you on your best day. Not like AI pretending to be you.
Paste LinkedIn URLs, CRM notes, call transcripts, links to their website or business, or random bullets from your last conversation. The format doesn't matter. The agent synthesizes what's relevant automatically.
Dump your chaos. It works.
This is the piece most AI tools miss entirely. They can write about the prospect, but they don't know anything about you.
The agent pulls your LinkedIn profile automatically. Now the AI actually understands who you are and what you're selling. It can accurately tie your value back to the prospect's specific pain points.
That's what makes the email actually relevant.
No learning curve. No prompt engineering. No configuration.
Pick your email type, pick your tone, paste your context, hit generate. If a rep can't figure it out in 30 seconds, they won't use it. So I made sure they could.
What you get: Three distinct email variations, nine subject line options, each labeled by approach (direct ask, curiosity hook, value-led). Pick the best one or test all three.
We've all gotten those AI-written cold emails. You can spot them instantly.
"I hope this email finds you well." Delete.
"I'd love to pick your brain." Delete.
"I noticed your company is doing great things." Delete.
The problem isn't that AI wrote it. The problem is that it sounds like AI wrote it. Your prospects can smell it. And if it doesn't sound like YOU wrote it, what's the point?
Here's how the tone system actually works. Those 11 distinct tone options I mentioned earlier? Each one comes with its own linguistic patterns, sentence structures, and word choices. It's not just swapping adjectives. It's a fundamentally different voice.
Before the agent writes anything, it generates detailed tone instructions based on your selection. These guide the entire email, from the opening line to the call-to-action.
Or, skip the options entirely and pull your saved writing style from Agent.ai. The agent learns how you actually write. Your phrases. Your rhythm. Your thing.
Most AI tools give you one email. And if it's not quite right? You're back to tweaking your prompt. Regenerating. Fiddling with the output. You end up spending as much time iterating as you would've just writing the thing yourself.
That's not a solution. That's just moving the problem around.
The Sales Email Writer agent gives you three genuinely different variations every time. Not the same email reworded three times; three distinct approaches:
Each variation comes with three subject line options. That's nine combinations to choose from.
Pick the one that feels right for this specific prospect. Or send different variations to similar prospects and track what actually works. Built-in A/B testing without any extra setup.
Here's why this matters: automated, personalized emails have 332% higher click rates than standard campaigns. But only if each email is actually good. Three variations means you're testing your way to what works instead of guessing.
Here's what I kept running into with other AI tools: They can write about the prospect, but they don't know anything about you.
You're sending emails as a faceless name. No context about your background, your experience, what you actually sell. That's a huge miss.
The Sales Email Writer pulls your LinkedIn profile automatically. Now the AI understands who you are and what you're selling. It can accurately tie your value back to the prospect's specific pain points.
The connection between what you offer and what they need? That's what makes emails convert. And that's what most AI tools completely miss. This one knows about you, so it can connect the dots between what you sell and what they need.
That's it. Half these steps are optional or take two seconds. The whole thing takes about 60 seconds.
That's requirement #4 in action.
That's the Sales Email Writer.
60 seconds. Three variations. Emails that sound like you wrote them on your best day.
Four requirements: sound like you, handle any context, know who you are, be dead simple, finally solved in one tool.
Break it, test it, send me feedback. I want to know what's working and what's not.
This is about what actually helps you dominate your day-to-day.
It's built specifically for sales. 11 tone options, automatic LinkedIn integration, three variations every time. No prompt engineering required. The whole thing takes 60 seconds.
Yes. Pick from 11 tone options or use your saved writing style. The agent generates detailed tone instructions before writing anything. Your prospects won't know AI helped.
Whatever you've got. LinkedIn profile, CRM notes, call transcripts, links to their website or business, random bullets. No formatting required—the agent figures out what's relevant.
Options without extra work. Each variation takes a different angle, so you can pick the best fit for this specific prospect or A/B test all three to see what works.
It pulls your profile so the AI understands who you are and what you sell. That way it can accurately connect your value to the prospect's pain points, which is what makes the email actually convert.