Instead of blasting the same message across all channels, the key is to make them work in unison to tell a single, coherent story. This coordinated approach prevents message fatigue and delivers better results by treating each channel as a component of a larger conversation.
For businesses heavily reliant on email, adding SMS marketing is not just an incremental improvement. Data from MailChimp shows that customers see a 16.5x ROI multiplier after launching their first SMS campaign. This demonstrates the immense value of communicating with customers across different channels where they are ready to engage.
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'.
Instead of viewing them as separate efforts, businesses should link customer retention and acquisition. By unifying data to better re-engage existing customers via owned channels like email and SMS, brands increase lifetime value. This, in turn, reduces the long-term pressure and cost associated with acquiring entirely new customers.
To achieve personalization efficiently, Samsung creates a few core email templates. They then use third-party tools like Movable Ink to dynamically insert content modules based on individual customer data, such as products owned or purchase propensity. This avoids massive versioning complexity.
Simply executing a multi-touch sequence across different channels is insufficient. If the core message is generic and demonstrates a lack of basic research, even a perfectly structured cadence will be ignored and eventually blocked. Relevance is the prerequisite that makes persistence effective rather than just annoying.
Reframe voicemails not as a request for a callback, but as a strategic preview for your next action, like an email or text. This guides the prospect to an easier response channel and makes the multi-touch sequence feel more cohesive and intentional.
Prospects rarely return calls from voicemails. The goal is to increase email reply rates. Leave a voicemail referencing your context, state you're sending an email to avoid phone tag, and ask them to reply there. This leverages one channel to boost another.
Counterintuitively, SMS marketing is becoming the preferred channel for complex, multi-step sales like insurance, solar, and real estate. These industries require relationship-building and drip messaging over time, a process that sales-tech platforms are now automating effectively via text message.
Stop asking for callbacks in voicemails. Instead, use the voicemail as a brief 'bumper' to direct the prospect to a specific email you just sent. This tactic can triple email reply rates in a sequence by creating a multi-channel prompt for a higher-leverage channel.
In a noisy market where brand recall requires 15-20 touches, the key to creating demand is not just a multi-channel presence (ads, outbound, PLG). The real superpower is ensuring the core brand promise and messaging are identical and consistent across all of them.