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When buyers are overwhelmed with outreach, a simple, value-driven LinkedIn message that shares social proof without a hard ask can break through. It positions the seller as a consultant rather than just another vendor demanding time, leading to higher engagement.
The LinkedIn algorithm interprets direct messaging as a strong signal of connection. By engaging with a prospect in their DMs, you increase the probability that your organic posts will be prioritized and shown in their feed, creating a powerful content and outreach loop.
To stand out from generic DMs, use video outreach tools that let you record personalized messages while scrolling through a prospect's own LinkedIn profile or website. This allows you to offer immediate, specific feedback or insights, demonstrating tangible value before asking for a meeting.
Early-stage outbound messages shouldn't try to explain your value proposition or sell the product. The singular goal is to secure a conversation. Frame the outreach as one interesting person wanting to chat with another. If the prospect has pre-existing demand, they will turn the conversation into a sales call themselves.
The 'thoughts?' bump email is a relic of time-constrained manual prospecting, not a best practice for conversions. Every touchpoint is an opportunity. Instead of a lazy bump, offer a tiny piece of value, like a relevant case study link, to re-engage the prospect's interest.
Before LinkedIn was saturated with bots, the founders achieved an 8-10% response rate by being direct and vulnerable. They dropped the YC name for credibility but framed their ask as "we're two guys who need help," appealing to prospects' desire to be part of building something new.
Instead of trying to convince prospects of your product's value in an initial message, focus on being an interesting person they'd want to talk to. If your targeting is correct, a genuine conversation will naturally uncover their demand and lead to a sales call.
To get a senior leader's attention, shift your outreach from asking for something (a meeting) to giving something (a valuable insight). Most prospects are inundated with requests. By proactively offering help or a unique perspective relevant to their problems, you reframe the interaction from a sales pitch to a valuable consultation, making them want to engage.
After a new LinkedIn connection is accepted, send a short video or voice message. The goal is not to pitch, but simply to introduce yourself and establish that you are a real person. This humanizing step breaks through the noise and builds rapport for a future sales conversation.
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.