Data from 44 million outreaches shows LinkedIn connection requests without a message have a 3% higher acceptance rate. This is because it reduces the recipient's cognitive load and bypasses the immediate fear of a sales pitch, leading to a quicker, more instinctual acceptance based on their profile.

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Using phone, email, and social isn't merely about finding a channel that works; it's about becoming a known person. When a prospect has heard your voice on a voicemail and seen your face on LinkedIn, you are no longer an anonymous bot. This human connection dramatically increases the likelihood of a response, even if it's a polite 'no'.

Don't just track whether a prospect accepts your LinkedIn request; track the speed of acceptance. A quick response (within a day or week) indicates the person is active on the platform and more likely to engage with a follow-up message. A month-long delay suggests they are a less immediate or engaged prospect.

A study of 300 million cold calls found that asking for permission to speak (e.g., "Got a minute for me to share why I'm calling?") is ten times more effective than standard pleasantries. This approach allows the prospect to consciously opt-in to the conversation.

The list of people who recently viewed your profile is a source of pre-qualified leads. Initiate contact with a personalized connection request based on a non-sales commonality (e.g., location). If they accept, follow up by offering value, not a sales pitch.

Asking for a prospect's time or interest is less effective than giving them something valuable. Emails that include a tangible offer (e.g., a benchmark, an audit, a unique insight) see a 28% higher reply rate. You get their time by not asking for it directly.

Instead of a direct "just following up" message, tag your prospect in a relevant industry post on LinkedIn. This provides value, gives them visibility, and serves as a subtle reminder, positioning you as a helpful resource rather than a persistent seller.

AI outbound tools pull from the same databases, hitting the same people with similar messages. To stand out, go fully manual. Research individuals, send unique, short messages, and target people not in common databases. This "back door" approach is more effective for high-value deals.

To confirm a meeting with a busy prospect, use a direct, binary question in the email subject line (e.g., "Confirming appointment, yes or no?"). This minimizes cognitive load, allowing them to understand the request and reply without even opening the email.

Get past gatekeepers by acting like an important person, not a salesperson. First, "slide by" with minimal information. If pushed, lead with your trigger/context and put pressure back on them. If pushed again, use social proof. This gradually reveals information while maintaining an air of authority.

No-Message LinkedIn Requests Get More Accepts | RiffOn