Is your prospecting and follow up game generating the results you want? Learn 5 best practices to build a solid sales cadence here.
by
The Apollo Team
UPDATED Oct 8, 2024
5Min Read
Do people buy the first time they hear about a product or service?
No. And that’s why you need a sales cadence.
According to the Rain Group’s Top Performance in Sales Prospecting research, it takes an average of 8 touches to get an initial meeting with a new prospect. But that meeting is just the beginning of a longer sales process.
But how do you do sales prospecting without overwhelming potential customers?
What sales activities should you prioritize to be more effective at engaging with prospects?
Keep reading to find out how to build the perfect sales cadence.
A sales cadence is a sequence of touch points that a sales rep follows to connect with a prospect and start a sales conversation.
Mario Martinez Jr., CEO and Founder of Vengreso says that today's modern sales cadence requires a modern B2B sales approach.
“An effective sales cadence for prospecting in this digital era,” he says, “should be focused on driving buyer engagement and must include at least four, but for best results, all of these outreach strategies: Phone, Email, Text Messaging, Social Selling, Video for Sales, Digital Referral, Direct Mail, and/or Gift Marketing. This is called the omnichannel approach to your cadence. Leveraging at least 3-4 channels in your cadence can produce up to 4x the response from a prospect. Anything short of implementing this strategy is a failed strategy!”
Whether you already have a sales cadence or you haven’t started yet, you can always tweak and add new steps to grab the attention of your buyer.
Follow these best practices to build an effective sales cadence.
Michael Hanson, Founder and CEO of Growth Genie advises not to have a general spray and pray cadence targeting all your prospects, because it will fall at the first hurdle.
“Split your cadence into verticals in which you have case studies, job titles and trigger events (hiring a particular position, using a particular software, received funding). So for example, at Growth Genie we may run 2 cadences: 1 targeting marketing leaders hiring SDRs in the SaaS space and another targeting CEOs of sales outsourcing companies hiring account managers.”
The best sales cadences have the perfect combination of automation and personalization and utilize the strengths of both to its advantage.
Certain steps in the cadence may be okay to automate, but be sure to include personalization in some of the messages.
And for specific prospects that are of high value to you, personalize as much as you can to offer a better experience.
Instead of just giving a sales pitch, provide valuable content relevant to your prospect.
For example, a link to a recent report for their industry, a video about best practices for their particular role, or a webinar that will impact their business.
Establish yourself as a source of valuable information, not just another seller with a spray and pray pitch.
Give before you ask; make a deposit before making a withdrawal.
Social selling is simply using social media to engage with prospects and establish a relationship before asking for a meeting. It’s a way to earn the trust of your prospects and warm up the relationship so your cadence messages are not “cold”.
Once you do this for a while, you’ll be top of mind for them and any email or call you make as part of your cadence will have a greater chance of success.
Analytics are an integral part of your sales cadence, because what’s not measured cannot be improved.
When you use a sales engagement platform you can see the open and reply rates of your emails. Apollo.io also lets you know click rate, interest rate, and more detailed analytics you can actually use for better decision-making about your prospecting.
With this data, you can:
There are many sales cadence examples you can find online. From ambitious ones like the 30-touch cadence created by Michael Hanson, The Ultimate Outbound Sales Cadence, to the 5-step cadence by Sales Hacker CEO, Max Altschuler.
Here is an example of Altschuler’s winning cadence:
Start with a few steps and grow steadily, adding steps as you see fit.
Apollo.io has an entire feature dedicated to helping sales reps build out sales cadences or sequences.
You can create a successful sales sequence in Apollo with four types of steps:
1. Automatic Emails. Create your own targeted messaging to be delivered automatically based on the parameters you set.
2. Manual Emails: Set up reminders to edit and personalize follow-up emails in the sequence.
3. Phone Calls: Create reminders to make a phone call with notes, tips, and scripts (and use our Dialer to call directly from the platform and automatically record calls).
4. Action Items: These are customizable tasks you may need to set up as part of the cadence.
Because our platform is both a sales intelligence and a sales engagement tool, you can create the perfect email campaign by finding the right prospects and adding them to a sequence right away.
“Apollo can help you split your ideal customer profile into different lists with different types of messaging for different verticals,” Hanson says. “Apollo for example lets us find companies that are hiring SDRs which is our main trigger event.”
Adding personalization with Apollo is easy as you have more than 200 data points. We also offer pre-defined personalization tokens and custom fields, so you can set-up personalized, multi-step sequences all from one dashboard.
You can also do customer segmentation to reach out only to your ideal customers using advanced filtering.
Check out the links above for more details on how to use Apollo for a successful sales cadence. And if you have not tried our platform yet, you can get started for free.
Receive insider stories and data-backed insights for elevating your work and staying ahead of the curve
You can unsubscribe at any time using the link in our emails. For more details, review our privacy policy.
Prospect on LinkedIn
Gather verified email addresses & phone numbers directly from LinkedIn, reach out, and see when they open your emails.