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.
For large, complex deals, effective sales sequences should be designed for the long haul—sometimes a year or more—with less frequent touchpoints. This strategy prioritizes staying top-of-mind for future opportunities over the quick, intense cadences used for short-cycle sales.
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.
Sales reps shouldn't feel pressured to invent a new reason to reach out in every step of a sequence. If your core value proposition is strong and solves a real problem, it remains relevant. Persistently and politely reiterating that value demonstrates conviction and is often more effective than finding weaker, new angles.
AI dramatically lowers the effort needed to find relevant prospecting information, but this is a double-edged sword. It empowers diligent reps to become hyper-relevant, but it also enables lazy reps to skip genuine effort and blast out slightly-better-but-still-generic messages. The tool amplifies the user's underlying work ethic.
