Prospecting is More Than a Cold Call
There are six steps to more effective prospecting campaigns will help you reduce pure cold calling and engage highly qualified prospects.
“Why won’t salespeople prospect? All they ever do is complain that they don’t have enough leads.” I’ve heard this too many times, from the sales leaders I work with.
Whose job is it to generate leads? Some say it is marketing that should be generating qualified leads for salespeople.
I’ve heard it said, “Salespeople should never prospect.” That’s just not realistic. With proper process and training, salespeople can become very good at prospecting. Running a prospecting campaign should be a joint effort between marketing and sales, but the truth is that most salespeople are left to do this on their own.
Prospecting Does Not Equal Cold Calling
My feeling is that cold calling is inefficient, ineffective and mostly a waste of everyone’s time.
- How many of you like to receive cold calls?
- How many of you make a purchase from a cold call?
- How many of you enjoy cold calling and are really good at it?
Not to say that it doesn’t work because it can if it is done as part of a campaign.
Effective Prospecting Campaigns
Effective prospecting campaigns have to be more than picking up the phone and trying to reach the person on the list. If they are not well planned, it becomes a pure numbers game. The more numbers dialed, the more likely you are to find someone who will buy.
Personally, I don’t want to make 100 calls to get 10 live answers to find 1 person I can have a conversation with. I want to make 10 high-quality contacts, have great conversations with them, and get 5 or more sales.
“A prospecting campaign is very similar to a resume, in that a good resume gets you an interview (not the job) with someone that can hire you. A good prospecting campaign gets you an appointment with someone who can buy from you.”
I have been very successful using the method below for my company, as have my clients. To be successful, the sales managers need to teach their salespeople to execute this process as well as monitor, encourage and reward the behaviors necessary for the process to work. For more effective prospecting campaigns, follow these steps:
Step 1:
Identify 10 – 15 companies at a time as your targets. These should be companies you feel would be “ideal” for customers.
Step 2:
Research the companies. Google. Check the website, social media, annual report, recent articles, and trade journals. Call a salesperson and ask for their marketing materials. Ask a few questions. You are looking for information to confirm that the company or division is a good target.
Step 3:
Find the names of 3 – 5 people in the organization who are most likely to be interested in your solution and at a level that they can make a decision. Google. Find them on social media. See if they are on the team page of the website.
Get their addresses and phone numbers. Call the main number at the corporate office and ask for them. All they can say is “no” and be prepared to be transferred to the person you ask for.
LinkedIn is a great place to find names and emails as well as learn about your prospects.
Step 4:
Plan a multi-touch campaign. Determine where you are in the sales process before starting so that you can plan your campaign appropriately. Are you prospecting a current client? Were they a past client? Are they on a list from a trade show, so you know they have some interest?
Any combination of direct mail, email, social media, fax (yes, in some industries they still respond to fax), voicemail, phone, a face-to-face visit, advertising or PR can be utilized.
Be sure all of the touches are received by the prospect within a four to six week period. All touches must include a call to action. Each touch must be sent out to all contacts simultaneously.
Make a timeline and calendar of all the action items to complete the multi-touch campaign. Design the entire campaign and do Step 5 prior to executing.
Step 5:
Plan the calls. Write out a call plan before each call, email, social message or visit. Write all the emails. Be sure you have an engaging message. Be sure to have a list of 4 – 6 well thought-out questions that will qualify the prospect by determining their needs. Questions that will get them talking.
List a few pieces of information you want to be sure to deliver. Don’t do a data dump on the prospect.
Think about what you are willing to commit to as a next step, and what commitment you would like from the prospect as a result of the call.
If making calls, plan the voicemail you will leave. Write down exactly what you will say if you plan to leave voicemails or if you get voicemail instead of the person you are calling.
Step 6:
Plan the follow-up. Be sure that whatever you promise to deliver as a result of the campaign, you execute with excellence. The face-to-face visit, phone appointment, demo, fulfillment package should all be done in a professional and timely manner.
Remember, a prospecting campaign should result in an appointment with the person or people who are most likely to purchase what you are selling. Your prospecting efforts should pique their interest enough that they schedule an appointment with you face-to-face, video conference or on the phone.
Need help developing your prospecting campaign? Download our free guide Seven Steps to Building Effective Prospecting Sequences


![6 High-Probability Moments to Send LinkedIn Connection Requests Prior to an Event Events create natural relevance. Conferences, trade shows, user groups, and local meetups give you a reason to connect that does not feel forced. The mistake sellers make is waiting until the event starts or turning the request into a pitch. A better move is connecting days or weeks ahead with a simple acknowledgment of the shared event. Example: Hi Sarah, saw you’re attending the Midwest Manufacturing Summit next month. I’ll also be there and am super excited! I’d love to catch up in person at the event. In the meantime, let’s connect here on LinkedIn. You are aligning with something already on their calendar. When you see them at the event or reach out afterward, your name is no longer unfamiliar. Following an Event After an event, connection requests work best when they reference a real interaction, even a small one. A short conversation, a question during a session, or a brief introduction creates enough context. The request should reflect that moment, not attempt to convert it into a follow-up. Example: Tim, I enjoyed meeting you at the conference last week. Your take on [subject/trend/idea] was intriguing. I look forward to staying connected and to our next conversation. This reinforces continuity and professionalism without pushing the relationship forward prematurely. After a Sales Call Sending a connection request after a sales call is one of the most underused opportunities in prospecting. If the call was answered and productive, the request reinforces credibility and continuity. Example: Thanks again for the conversation today. I appreciated your perspective on how your team is thinking about next quarter. I look forward to our next meeting and sharing some ideas I have with you and your team. If the prospect did not answer, a connection request can still make sense as a light reinforcement, especially early in the relationship. It keeps your name present without escalating pressure. Either way, the request works because the call establishes legitimacy first. After a Meaningful Interaction Not all interactions happen in formal selling environments. Thoughtful exchanges in comment threads, group discussions, or brief conversations in passing all create natural moments to connect. That might mean running into each other at a non-work event, crossing paths at an airport, or chatting briefly in a line somewhere unexpected. Example: Haley, it was a pleasure meeting you on our flight to Atlanta. Thank you for your restaurant recommendations! I look forward to staying connected, What makes this work is that the interaction was real. The request simply continues it. Mutual Connections Shared connections reduce perceived risk when handled with restraint. They signal that you operate in similar professional circles, not that you have permission to pitch. The mistake is overexplaining or implying endorsement. Example: Hi Mark, I noticed that you are connected to my good friend, James, and since you are also [interested in, working in, located in] I thought it might make sense for us to be connected also. A simple acknowledgment is enough. Familiarity does the work. Profile Views Profile views signal awareness, not intent. When someone views your profile after a call, email, or content interaction, a connection request can make sense as a low-pressure acknowledgment. Example: Wendy, thank you for visiting my profile. I had a chance to look at yours, and based on your interests, I thought it might make sense for us to connect. The discipline is resisting the urge to read more into it than is there. Want the exact framework for integrating LinkedIn into a disciplined outreach sequence without pitching, spamming, or wasting time? Buy The LinkedIn Edge by Jeb Blount and Brynne Tillman today. Sales Gravy is the number one sales training organization](https://salesgravy.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/6-Moments-LinkedIn-Connection-Requests-Actually-Work-in-Prospecting-Sales-Gravy-Blog-Featured-Image-768x401.jpg)
