We scan new podcasts and send you the top 5 insights daily.
Don't celebrate hitting an 18-touch prospecting cadence. This data point indicates a failure, not a best practice. The real question isn't how to add more touches, but why the first 17 were ignored. Focus on improving the quality and relevance of your message, not the quantity of your outreach.
Effective cold calling is not about one-off attempts. To truly penetrate an account, SDRs should aim to call a single high-value prospect 12 to 15 times within a 90-day window. This benchmark enforces consistent, focused effort over time, moving away from a low-yield "spray and pray" approach on massive lists.
Sellers often stop following up after a few touches to avoid being perceived as a "stalker." This mindset should be reframed. If you have a genuine solution to their problem, persistent, multi-channel follow-up is an act of service, not annoyance. Not following up is failing to do your job.
Focusing on email open rates can lead to clickbait subject lines and weak copy. Instead, orient your entire outreach strategy around getting a reply. This forces you to write more personalized, engaging content that addresses the recipient's specific pain points, leading to actual conversations, not just vanity metrics.
Salespeople mistakenly delay follow-ups to avoid being 'annoying,' but this kills momentum. Prospects don't track outreach attempts like salespeople do. A steady, frequent cadence isn't pushy; it demonstrates reliability and preparation, proving you won't quit on them.
Don't stop following up after the initial window. An optimal cadence involves consistent touchpoints for the first 14 days to capture immediate interest, followed by a slower "slow drip" cadence at 30 days and even six months. This long-tail strategy effectively captures deals from customers who delayed their decisions.
When a prospect doesn't respond, don't default to thinking they're ignoring you. Instead, assume they are extremely busy and your message was lost in the noise. This mindset encourages persistent, multi-channel follow-up rather than premature disqualification.
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.
Most salespeople give up after two attempts. A sophisticated, long-term sequence across multiple channels isn't about annoying prospects; it's about leveraging statistical probability. This strategy creates multiple opportunities to deliver the right message through the right channel at the exact moment the buyer is ready to engage.
The primary goal of a prospecting sequence is to elicit any response, which qualifies as “meaningful engagement.” Even a negative reply is a valuable signal, allowing reps to stop wasting effort and reallocate their time to more promising prospects instead of pursuing silence.
To avoid being perceived as a nuisance, structure your follow-up communications to be overwhelmingly helpful. By providing value—such as insights, resources, or connections—in the majority of your interactions, your direct asks for the business become more welcome and effective.