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When a sales team claims outbound calling "doesn't work," the root cause is often a lack of activity, not a failed methodology. As Jeb Blount memorably states, "nobody answers a phone that doesn't ring." A focused burst of calls often proves the method's effectiveness immediately.
Contrary to the belief that "cold calling is dead," Goldcast saw significant success by hiring an outsourced SDR team that focuses purely on phone calls. This success proved the channel's viability, shifting the internal focus to solving data hygiene problems to get accurate phone numbers.
The primary reason new outbound initiatives fail is not a bad channel mix or messaging, but a lack of leadership commitment leading to "fits and starts." Companies quit before the cumulative impact of prospecting can materialize because they expect instant results. Success requires an unwavering organizational commitment to sustained, daily activity despite initial low returns.
If your sales efforts feel volatile or based on luck, it's likely because you aren't doing enough outreach. What seems like random success at low volume becomes a predictable process at high volume. A 1% cold call conversion rate isn't luck; it's a metric you can scale.
A sales consulting or outsourcing firm cannot rely solely on passive inbound marketing. To be credible to clients who need sales help, the firm must actively demonstrate the very outbound techniques it preaches, like cold calling. Failing to do so undermines its value proposition.
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.
Industry metrics like needing 18 touches or a 4x pipeline are often symptoms of a problem, not goals. Instead of blindly increasing activity, leaders should investigate the root cause. High numbers usually indicate ineffective messaging or poor qualification, not a lack of effort.
When results lag, avoid throwing out your entire sales strategy. Instead, diagnose the problem by examining the micro-activities: your follow-up cadence, value proposition messaging, ICP definition, and questions asked. Often, a small tweak to one component is all that's needed to fix the macro problem.
Not making sales calls is a disservice to the clients you could be helping. By staying silent, you deny people the opportunity to benefit from your solution. This reframes prospecting from a selfish act to an act of service, making it easier to overcome call reluctance.
True cold calling is ineffective because the prospect has no context. Outbound works when it's integrated with marketing's brand-building efforts. By focusing on "mindshare" first, marketing "warms" the audience, making them more receptive when a BDR eventually reaches out.
When launching an outbound program, metrics shouldn't be used to determine if the strategy "works." Instead, view them like an elite sports team watches game film. The data on calls, connections, and objections provides insights for making small, incremental adjustments to messaging, timing, and targeting over a long period.