Snippets
Mastering 'Snippets' in Maya’s Co-Pilot
One of the fastest ways to build rapport on LinkedIn is to use short, human messages that sound like you - not a robot.
That’s what snippets are for. They’re small, proven lines you can drop into your messages at just the right time - to compliment someone, build trust, or move them toward a call. Below are some of the most effective ones you can use directly inside Maya’s Co-Pilot. Just copy and paste them in.
How to configure?
Adding snippets and prompts is super easy. Check out this quick interactive walkthrough:
Once you’ve tested a few and started seeing what gets replies, make them your own. Tweak the tone. Add personality. You could even try using them as snippets inside Maya's custom prompts. Remember, the best messaging never sounds like a template - they sound like you on your best day. The person that people really enjoy being around :)
1. Compliments (to open your first message)
These work best right before your qualifying question - see the playbook to learn more about how to structure those.
"you've had a formidable career my friend. Just been reading your portfolio. Very impressive - congrats. Following you from here in [location] :)""really enjoyed your post today/yesterday. Especially [abc]. You write well [name] - love it. Will be following you from here in [location]"really love what you guys are building at [company]. Congrats :) Been following you from here in [location] :)"just been reading your about section - [XX] years in [industry] is no small feat my friend. huge congrats. Look forward to learning more about you from here in [location]
Tip: these sound best when you personalise one detail - a specific post, company, or number of years. Keep it warm, short, and real.
2. The empathetic 'Social Proof' trick (after they reply)
Once they’ve replied to your qualifying question, it’s time to build a little credibility - without sounding like a sales pitch.
Drop one of these into a reply where appropriate show you’ve been in their shoes (make it fit naturally):
"yeah, I hear you. [LinkedIn lead gen] took months of painstaking trial and error before we finally cracked it. Can't lie - it's been a complete treasure trove""yeah, I hear you. [LinkedIn lead gen] took months of painstaking trial and error before we finally cracked it. Actually just put a plabook together on it""Yeah, makes sense. Sma here - it took months of trial and error before we got AI really working for us. Now the team run themselve haha."
This line builds curiosity - it’s name-dropping without name-dropping. Your next question might be something like:
“so what’s the big hairy goal this quarter?”
Keep it conversational, not corporate.
3. Inviting them to a call (once there’s interest)
When the conversation feels natural and they’re clearly interested, you can softly invite them to a chat.
Use one of these:
-
"Happy to share what's been working for us if it can give you and the team some ideas to riff on" "Up for sharing notes if you wanna grab 20 mins together sometime this or next week."More than happy to share our [process/playbook]. If it can help you and the team some ideas to riff on?"
⚠️ Important: Always wait for their reply before dropping a link. The goal here isn’t to pitch - it’s to keep the conversation human and mutual.
Next steps
This is a growing resource - we’ll keep adding new snippets as we see what performs best.
For now, use these as your shortcuts to sounding warm, confident, and conversational - exactly how Maya’s Co-Pilot is designed to help you show up.
The more you use them, the faster you’ll spot patterns that fit your tone and audience.
And when that happens, start building your own library - that’s when you’ll sound not just personal, but authentically you.

.png)
.png)