DACH Playbook
Rules and adaptations for cold emailing in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland. Based on Vanderbuild's 2025 DACH cold mailing guide and cultural norms.
Cultural Rules (Non-Negotiable)
Germany (Deutschland)
| Rule |
Detail |
| Always use Nachname |
"Sehr geehrter Herr Müller" — NEVER first name without permission |
| Write in German |
German-language emails get dramatically higher conversion. Expect the first meeting in German too |
| Formal tone |
No "Hey", no "quick thing", no emoji. Professional ≠ stiff, but respect hierarchy |
| Brevity valued |
Germans appreciate directness and clarity — no fluff, no vague generalities |
| Hierarchy matters |
Address the right level. Going over someone's head without cause = relationship destroyed |
Austria (Österreich)
- Slightly less formal than Germany — "Hallo Herr/Frau [Name]" acceptable
- Still use German language
- Communication culturally closer to Central Europe
- Titles matter (Ing., DI, Dr.) — use them if known
Switzerland (Schweiz)
- Multilingual: German, French, Italian depending on canton
- More international workforce → English often acceptable
- Slightly more casual tone tolerated
- Use
.ch domain if sending to Swiss companies
Legal Requirements
GDPR Compliance
- Legitimate interest is the legal basis for B2B cold email in DACH
- You MUST document your data acquisition source for every contact
- Include clear opt-out mechanism in every email
- Companies with a DPO (Datenschutzbeauftragter) are more scrutinous
Technical Requirements
| Item |
Requirement |
| Sending domain |
Dedicated domain, separate from main brand (e.g., rapiddraft-mail.de) |
| Domain extension |
.de for German campaigns preferred |
| Server location |
EU-based mail servers (GDPR compliance + deliverability) |
| DKIM/DMARC/SPF |
Must be correctly configured before any sending |
| Domain warm-up |
Minimum 3-4 weeks before full volume |
| Anti-spam |
DACH anti-spam systems are highly advanced — reputation is critical |
Language Templates
Sehr geehrter Herr [Nachname],
Sehr geehrte Frau [Nachname],
If title is known:
Sehr geehrter Herr Dr. [Nachname],
Mit freundlichen Grüßen,
[Vorname Nachname]
[Position] | [Firma]
Shorter Closing (follow-ups)
Subject Line Patterns (German)
Keep subject lines under 50 characters. No clickbait.
| Pattern |
Example |
| Benefit + Company |
Zeichnungsprüfung + [Firmenname] |
| Pain keyword |
Nacharbeitsquote senken |
| Industry + outcome |
Maschinenbau: 37% weniger Iterationen |
| Mutual reference |
[Referenz] + Konstruktionseffizienz |
| Direct question |
Wer prüft Ihre Fertigungszeichnungen? |
Key Differences from US/UK Approach
| US/UK (JMM native) |
DACH adaptation |
| "Hey John" |
"Sehr geehrter Herr Müller" |
| Ugly/compressed formatting |
Clean but still brief |
| Broken grammar as pattern interrupt |
Perfect grammar required |
| Humor levers |
Restrained — only subtle wit |
| "Thoughts?" as bump |
"Wie sehen Sie das?" or "Wäre ein kurzer Austausch sinnvoll?" |
| Aggressive multi-threading |
Still multi-thread but respect hierarchy |
| 7 touches in 11 days |
Space slightly more — 3-4 days between clusters |
Red Flags That Kill DACH Campaigns
- Using first names without established relationship
- English-only emails to German companies
- Overly casual tone ("just a quick note", "circling back")
- Mass sends without research — detected instantly, damages domain
- Ignoring titles (Dr., Ing., Prof.) when they're publicly listed
- No opt-out — legal requirement, not optional
- Scaling too fast — ruins domain reputation in advanced DACH spam filters