"Cold emails, cold calls, and cold messaging are dead."

How many times have you heard that? Especially recently, everybody in the B2B world seems to be talking about demand generation, brand marketing, and storytelling.

But if cold channels are dead, then all marketing channels are. Because every relationship starts "cold."

When you first promote a piece of content to a new audience, it's cold. People don't expect to get content from you. They don't trust you. They are often suspicious (Is he trying to sell me something?). Who likes to "be sold to"?

The real problem is how cold sales outreach works today.

The "sellers" on the other side of your screen are self-focused. All of their behavior demonstrates that they don't care about you; they just want an exchange of money to happen as soon as possible.

Modern cold outreach is similar to what we see in Boiler Room and The Wolf of Wall Street: Scrape the contacts. Set up automation. Spam them all. Pray someone will reply. Rinse and repeat.

Let's be clear: That is not sales outreach; it's spam. And that approach is dead.

To have success with cold outreach, you should...

  1. Be clear about your ideal customer profile (ICP), including the buying committee structure and how the customer typically buys products like yours.
  2. Warm-up and engage the entire buying committee.
  3. Use intent data to seize the moment and reach out at the right time to the right people.
  4. Master social-selling by connecting and engaging with your target audience on social media, learning more about their needs, and helping them (through consultations or content) by sharing your experience in solving the same challenges.
  5. Personalize your outreach by explaining how you can help solve your target accounts' specific challenges and help them achieve their strategic goals. Each buying committee member has different needs, goals, and reasons to buy or not to buy your product.

In this article, I'll focus on the first three steps and share practical examples of Steps 4 and 5 throughout those three steps.

1. Ideal Customer Profile (ICP)

An ideal customer profile is a list of attributes that your best customers from a specific market segment have in common.

You have to create separate ICPs for each market segment you are prospecting. Otherwise, you'll fall into a trap of mixing up the data about your customers and ending up with a "one size fits all" solution.

How to Create an ICP in Seven Steps

1. Choose one market segment.

2. Select the Top 10 clients from that segment.

3. Fill in an Ideal Customer Profile template.

4. Define the buying committee members and collect public info about them. The easiest part is collecting demographic data such as sex, age, location, job role, and industry. You can get that data from your customer's LinkedIn profiles.

In addition to that, I also highly recommend collecting data such as...

  • Websites your customers are sharing in LinkedIn posts. They show where you can apply for guest posting or cooperation.
  • Influencers whose content your customers engage with. They show with whom to start building relationships.
  • Communities your customers are a part of. Just as with websites, you can use those communities for cooperation, contribution, and content distribution.

5. Analyze the buying process.

Interview your sales team, asking questions such as...

  • What goals was each buying committee member trying to achieve with our product?
  • What concerns or objections did you face during the sales process?
  • At what stage did the objections appear, and why? How did you handle them?
  • What other factors influenced the purchasing decision of each buying committee member?

Then, analyze emails and sales calls to validate the sentiments.

6. Enrich each ICP with in-depth customer interviews.

Here are some sample questions:

  • What leads them to buy products like yours?
  • What factors influence their purchasing decisions?
  • What social media do they use?
  • Which industry blogs, websites, or influencers are they following?
  • Who else is involved in the negotiation process, or whom do they consult with before buying products like yours?
  • If they were to research your product or service, what would they search for?
  • What was the problem they were looking to solve before stumbling across your product or service?

7. Define the ICP using all of your data.

Your final result should resemble the following:

Ideal customer profile template sample

Here are a template, checklist, and survey questions you can use to build an ICP profile.

2. Engaging With the Entire Buying Committee

People buy from people they know, like, and trust. When I discuss that inevitable law of marketing with my clients' marketers or SDRs, they always nod their heads in agreement.

But my next question usually makes them numb:

If you know and accept that, why don't you warm up and build a relationship with your target accounts before reaching out to them?

Here are seven ways to do a warm-up. They can skyrocket the reply rate to your outreach campaigns.

1. Connect on LinkedIn with the entire buying committee (or on another channel where its members hang out), engage with content, and start conversations.

A practical example: first, connect with the champion, and give a "value-add," not just a generic connection.

LinkedIn connection example

Set up a call to learn more and see how you can help them.

LinkedIn connection example

Help deliver more value and build a real relationship, don't just sell them.

LinkedIn connection example

Follow up via email and validate that the relationship is built.

Followup email example

Finally, connect with the decision-maker.

LinkedIn connection example screenshot

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Sales Outreach in Five Steps: How to Run Campaigns That Get Results and Don't Burn Your Leads

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Andrei Zinkevich

Andrei Zinkevich is the founder of ROIplan, a global B2B software company, and a co-founder of Fullfunnel.io, a B2B tech and services partner.

LinkedIn: Andrei Zinkevich

Twitter: @AZinkevich