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So you launched your directory. Now what?
You’ve got listings, a homepage, maybe even a filter system. But unless those businesses know you exist, your site will just sit there collecting digital dust.
In this post, I’ll show you how to turn your directory into a relationship-building machine using a personalized outreach system that stands out in crowded inboxes. You’ll learn how to create cold emails that don’t feel cold — complete with:
Whether you're just starting or want to systematize outreach at scale, this guide will help you build trust, spark conversations, and open doors for monetization down the line.
Learn how to launch, automate, and monetize a local directory using Webflow and Airtable—without writing code.
You’ve done the hard part. You picked your niche, designed your landing page, and started adding listings. Maybe you’ve even set up filtering and SEO-friendly URLs. But here’s the reality: just publishing a directory doesn't make it useful — or valuable — to anyone.
This is where many builders hit a wall. The question becomes: “How do I actually grow this thing?”
Most people assume that traffic will come naturally or that businesses will stumble upon their listing. But in practice, this rarely happens — especially when you’re just getting started. Businesses won’t know about your directory unless you tell them.
Outreach isn’t about pitching. It’s about building relationships.
It’s your first opportunity to show the people you’ve listed that your directory is real, thoughtful, and created with intention.
Instead of just saying “Hey, your business is on my site,” you’re saying:
“I built something to help promote you. Here’s a preview — let me know what you think.”
That subtle shift in tone — from transactional to collaborative — is what turns a cold email into the start of a meaningful business relationship.
At this early stage, you don’t need hundreds of replies. You need a few great ones. Here’s why cold outreach works so well for directory builders:
Here’s the mistake 90% of new builders make:
They send a generic email like,
“Hey, I listed your business on my site. Want to upgrade to premium?”
This kind of outreach feels mass-produced and transactional. It doesn’t show effort. It doesn’t build trust. And it usually ends up in the trash folder.
In contrast, what we’re going to do is design an outreach system that says:
“I found your business, added it to my site, and created something that might genuinely help you. Here’s what it looks like.”
That’s the shift. That’s what makes outreach work.
Let’s face it — cold outreach has a bad reputation.
We’ve all received those generic LinkedIn DMs or boring email pitches that scream “copy and paste.” You can spot them a mile away, and your gut reaction is always the same: Delete. Unsubscribe. Block.
That’s exactly what we want to avoid.
When you’re running a directory, your outreach email is often the first time a business hears from you.
It’s not your homepage. It’s not your branding.
It’s your email — and if it feels lazy, everything you’ve built loses credibility.
But when the email feels thoughtful and intentional, you create a moment of surprise that makes people curious.
Here’s the simple framework I use in every outreach message:
Introduce yourself clearly. Say where you're from and why you're reaching out. If your directory is local, mention your city or region — it instantly creates relevance.
“Hey, I’m Connor from Ottawa. I just added your race to The Running Directory, a site I created to help people find events like yours.”
This is the kicker. You’ve already created a listing for them. Lead with that.
Include a link to their page and tell them you’d like to make it even better by adding a few of their images.
“Here’s a preview of the page I created for your event. Would it be okay to use a few photos from your site or Instagram to complete the listing?”
Now you’re not just asking for something — you’re offering value first.
Your goal isn’t to get them to sign up for a premium plan or book a call right away.
It’s to start a conversation.
So instead of,
“Want to upgrade to premium?”
Try,
“Would it be okay if I featured a few of your photos on the page?”
It’s a soft, friendly request — and much harder to ignore.
Let’s be real — inboxes are crowded. Even a well-written email can get lost.
That’s why adding visuals and video makes such a huge difference.
When you show someone a preview of what you’ve already built and speak to them directly in a short video, it signals something powerful:
“I didn’t just list your business. I care about doing this right.”
First, include a direct link to their page in your email.
This instantly proves you’re not bluffing — you’ve actually featured them.
Make the link easy to spot with anchor text like:
→ View your listing
or
→ Check out your page on [Your Directory Name]
Next, create a small preview image that shows what the listing looks like.
Think of it like a little “screenshot + brand combo.” Here’s how I do it:
This image is clickable and drives curiosity — which often leads to clicks and replies.
This is where the magic happens.
Using Tella, record a simple 3-part video:
Once recorded, Tella gives you a shareable link and even generates a GIF preview to embed directly in your email.
In the next section, we’ll tie it all together by showing you how to automate this entire workflow using Airtable and Make — without losing that personal touch.
Creating personalized outreach emails manually is doable for 5 or 10 listings — but what happens when you have 50? Or 500?
That’s where automation comes in.
Using Airtable and Make.com, you can build a workflow that generates personalized outreach emails at scale — while still making every message feel like it was handcrafted.
Start by adding these fields to your Listings
table in Airtable:
Business Name
Event Title
(if applicable)Listing URL
(link to their page on your site)Email
Screenshot URL
(we’ll automate this)Thumbnail Image URL
(also automated)Video Link
(either a generic Tella video or a personalized one)Email Draft Status
Send Date
(to track follow-ups)You can also add a Create Draft
button field to trigger the automation.
To make your outreach emails stand out visually, set up a Make.com scenario that:
Listing URL
Thumbnail Image URL
fieldUse Make.com to create a second automation that:
This gives you a chance to manually review or tweak each message before it goes out.
If you want to go the extra mile:
Video Link
field in Airtable to point to the custom videoNow your email still uses the same automation — but feels 100% personal.
Here's what the final email might look like (automatically generated):
Subject: We added [Event Title] to [Your Directory Name]
Hey [First Name],
I’m [Your Name] from [Your City], and I created [Your Directory] to help people discover events like yours.
I just added [Event Title] to the site, and I’d love to make the page even better by adding a few photos from your website or Instagram.
👉 [View your listing]([Listing URL])
Here’s a quick video I recorded to show you what I’ve built:

Would it be okay if I included a few images? Let me know!
Best,
[Your Name]
[Directory URL]
In the next section, we’ll show you how to keep track of replies, follow up with people who don’t respond, and make sure no opportunity slips through the cracks.
You’ve done the hard work. You’ve built the directory, personalized the outreach, and sent the email.
Now here’s the part most people skip: follow-up.
If you don’t have a system for tracking who replied (and who didn’t), you’re going to miss out on opportunities — not because people aren’t interested, but because people forget.
Inbox overload is real. Even thoughtful, well-designed emails get buried.
That’s why I treat follow-ups as a core part of the outreach system, not an afterthought.
Here’s what I’ve found:
Here’s how I do it inside Airtable:
Send Date
field when you manually or automatically send your outreach email.Send Date
is more than 3 days ago AND Response
is emptySubject: Just wanted to follow up 🙂
Hey [First Name],
I sent a note last week about the listing I created for your [event/business] on [Your Directory].
Totally understand things get busy — just wanted to follow up and see if it’s okay to use a few of your photos to make the page even better.
Here’s the link again if you want to check it out: [Listing URL]
No pressure either way — just let me know!
Cheers,
[Your Name]
As your system grows, you can:
Response
field to log whether someone replied (and how)The goal is simple: no lead gets left behind — and no email gets lost in the void.
You now have everything you need to start building real connections with the businesses you list — but before you launch your first batch of emails, here are a few best practices to keep your system running smoothly:
Before scaling up, start small.
Send a few emails manually, watch how people respond, and make small tweaks to your message, subject line, or thumbnail format.
It’s tempting to automate the whole system end-to-end from day one.
But when you’re still validating your approach, keep the final send manual. That way you can personalize things or fix edge cases before they become mistakes at scale.
If you’ve added 100+ listings to your directory, not all are created equal.
Start your outreach with:
This helps you build early momentum and social proof.
Your first video might feel awkward. Your thumbnail might look a little off. That’s okay.
What matters most is effort. People can feel when something is made for them — even if it’s not flawless.
Once you’ve nailed your core workflow, build in time every month to:
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Launching your directory is just the first step — what really moves the needle is building relationships with the businesses you’ve featured.
By creating a personalized outreach system that includes:
…you’re not just contacting businesses — you’re creating real moments of connection.
Whether your goal is to get feedback, build partnerships, or grow your brand, this system gives you a repeatable way to stand out and scale up.
Want help building systems like this for your own project?
Check out the Local Directory Playbook — it’s where I teach builders like you how to go from zero to monetized MVP using no-code tools.
Thanks for reading — now go send that first email. You’ll be surprised by what happens.
In most cases, yes.