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.
Don't use a generic opener. Lead with a specific trigger or context about the prospect, acknowledge it's a cold call, and then ask for 30 seconds of their time. This personalized approach makes every opener unique and more engaging, increasing the chances they'll listen.
Effective outreach uses public data to create a unique, valuable insight for the prospect (e.g., "Your building portfolio will face X dollars in fines by 2030 based on this new law"). This earns you the right to a conversation, where the pitch can happen later, rather than being ignored upfront.
Go beyond persuasion during a sales call. Use "pre-suasion" to shape the conversation's context beforehand. By strategically sending relevant content, links, and discussion topics, you can prime the prospect to focus on your strengths, making the eventual sales meeting far more effective.
A successful cold pitch isn't an essay about your brand's story. It should be short enough to maintain interest, compellingly frame the value you offer the recipient (not the other way around), and end with a clear, actionable request like sending samples.
A breakthrough for new salespeople is changing their mindset on initial calls. Instead of trying to immediately find a problem to sell against, focus on making a human connection and leading with genuine curiosity. This approach lowers pressure and fosters a more collaborative discovery process.
For cold outreach, hyper-personalizing every prospect is inefficient. Instead, identify patterns across similar roles or industries and develop 'targeted messaging' that speaks to these common challenges. This allows for scalable and relevant outreach without time-consuming individual research.
A cold call is not a discovery call. You haven't earned the right to ask probing questions. Your goal is to articulate a problem, pitch a solution, and ask for the meeting. Save your questions for after they object, using them to uncover the real issue.
Effective cold outreach avoids long life stories and unsolicited attachments. The optimal formula is: 1) a single sentence on how you can help them, 2) one or two quantified achievements (bona fides), and 3) a link to your polished LinkedIn profile. This respects the recipient's time and piques their curiosity.
In the first minute of a cold call, resist the urge to pitch your product. Instead, lead with a 'reverse pitch' that focuses entirely on the prospect's potential problems. This approach is three times more effective than using solution-focused language, as it speaks to what the buyer actually cares about.