Hey @olenabomko,
It does work, especially if you are selling is mostly outbound dependent and you are selling high ticket size product. :D
It does require a good amount of experimentation though on all fronts like ICP, geography you are selling to, messaging, outreach method, etc.
@maria_anosova@olenabomko
The message which has got me most replies is approaching from a lens of a customer and the challenges.
When you talk about the challenges in the industry or approach for a feedback to improve the product, people resonate or feel like they are a part of your solution defining team (they feel included)!
And I've had cases when these conversations do turn into calls and even pilots :D
PS: It's especially beneficial if you are a founder.
We've tried cold messages on LinkedIn, and in fact, they do work! Be mindful that you will probably have to A/B test quite a lot during those, especially if you do not know your target audience.
Sometimes yes, sometimes no. The warmer you can make the message the better but if anything you have to do research and make it personalized to have a chance.. oh and follow up lol a few times ahahah
@istiakahmad I disagree. The channel definitely does matter. If you email or LinkedIn message me its understandable that you got my contact information from the web. If you pull my personal cellphone number, 10/10 my reaction would be "how did you get this information" and you lose my trust immediately.
Thats just me
Just a matter of not sending the same canned email or message to everyone.
Respecting their own time and priorities by not filling up their dms or mailbox with emails every week.
Better to spend a few minutes writing something relevant, funny, or provoking every few months than wasting your time with a canned message or email that is more likely to get you an unsubscribe than a response.
Usually, a good personalized subject line of an email gets your foot in the door - then if the actual content is worthy you might even get a response.
Sometimes it's a matter of consistency over a long period, so nurturing your contacts, engaging with their updates, and understanding their position and business will build trust and interest at some point with some contacts.
Mix things up with a video message, cold call and even leave voicemails, I've found that emails where I mention I left a voicemail tend to have a higher reply rate. It's good for people to put a voice next to a name.
Yes -- but only doing so strategically. It requires you to take time beforehand to research your ideal customer profiles, understand their pain points, and cater short, personalized messages.
If you're smart about how to approach it, cold email/linkedIn messaging can be effective (especially in B2B).
I believe so – if you target the right pain point, and offer a solution at the right time. It's all about personalization.
Plus, can be even better with intros from people you have in common.
My assumption in an ideal world of smart people is always: "If they keep doing it, the ROI must be positive".
I'm not a big fan of outreach, and for commoditized products/services, I always avoid picking the ones that did outreach to me as a principle. I perceive it as spam.
That said, out of 100 outreach, there's often at least 1 that either has:
- Perfect copy that really catches my attention and
- Interesting product for me
- Perfect timing ... I knew the product, but it was not top of mind, and they remind me about it exactly when I need it (this is almost always luck)
So yeah, it does work, as long as it's well-written, promotes something really interesting (hard to judge as a founder), and is decently targeted.
I think it works as long as your target customer really spends time on LinkedIn. When I had tried this for software developers, I found a low response rate (vs twitter DMs - where they're more present). But, e.g., for engineering managers who are hiring (and therefore on LinkedIn all the time), I've had some success.
Also echoing what's below - it can't be a canned message. Needs to be personalized to them -- why are you reaching out?
Hello @olenabomko
I am one of the few people who probably enjoys receiving cold DMs / invites on LinkedIn. I have a standard response I send to all cold outreach introducing them to our platform https://boodlebox.ai/, it has generated more than a few new customers to our platform!
That said, I also do cold outreach, but I find they are best received when you really drill down to a targeted group to reach out to and send a very targeted message that will resonate with them.
Hey @olenabomko!
I cold DMed my way into working for startups/VC all on 𝕏.
A lot of my friends were asking for help so I made a free Guide to Cold DMs.
Good luck and happy DMing (make sure to DM me too 😸)
https://www.cyberpatterns.xyz/c/...
I think - it depends what the outcome of X campaign / mission is - to sell a product/service the jury is still out but as a prospecting tool and to increase visibility 1000%
It does work, but as long as you do not PITCH SLAP your ICP. Show genuine interest, and actually get to know your ICP. Sales are not the main objective when connecting in the beginning.
Of course, it can be a cold email or DM, but personalizing (showing genuine interest) and not "pitch slapping" in your first message; keeping it short, sweet and natural will radically increase the open/reply rate of cold emails or DMs by far.