In the world of niche markets, many businesses have a hard time because they do not have a good system in place. At De Grijff, we see companies start a B2B sales outreach campaign, but then it stops after the first or second time they talk to someone. The thing about growing revenue in B2B is that it takes time; it is not something that happens quickly.
When companies do B2B prospecting sometimes, and not other times, it makes the buyer unsure. On the other hand, if a company always follows up with sales, it shows that they are professional and can be trusted. This blog is about why doing sales outreach is very important for making a B2B pipeline work well, and how you can make a system that turns no response into sales.
The B2B buying process has gotten more complicated. It usually involves people, often 6 to 10 stakeholders. Studies show that most sales take 5 to 7 follow-ups. Most sales reps give up after just one or two tries. In a market, potential customers get a lot of information. If your B2B sales approach isn't steady and keeps following up, your brand will quickly be forgotten. B2B sales outreach needs to be persistent to stay noticed. Your B2B sales strategy must keep in touch with customers to stay on their radar.
Consistency matters because:
To move beyond "random acts of outreach," you need a structured sales cadence. A cadence is a scheduled sequence of sales touchpoints across various platforms. Modern SDR strategy suggests that the most effective programs orchestrate 8 to 12 touches over a 3 to 4-week period.
Relying on a single channel is a common mistake. Multi-channel outreach—combining email, LinkedIn, and phone calls—is essential.
By rotating these methods, you learn how each prospect prefers to communicate, which is a hallmark of sales outreach best practices.
Personalisation is very important. Outreach automation is the only way to do a lot of things without hurting sales productivity. You can use a CRM for sales outreach, like HubSpot or Salesforce, to keep track of the lifecycle and make sure you do not miss any opportunities.
Automation is helpful. It should not replace the human touch. Sending emails works best when the messages seem like they were written just for the person reading them, and they talk about the problems that person is having. For people who sell SaaS and do enterprise sales outreach, this might mean using automation to schedule follow-ups. Write the first message yourself to make it personal and show the value of what you are selling.
It is vital to remember that consistency is not a strategy on its own; it is a delivery mechanism. Consistency multiplies whatever you put into it.
Before you double down on frequency, ensure your B2B prospecting foundation is solid. Ask yourself: Do we understand the complexity of our buyer’s situation? Are we helping them see hidden risks?. At De Grijff, we help firms refine this "judgment" before we scale the outreach, ensuring that every touchpoint adds value.
To see a real lift in response rates, your sales cadence must offer something new each time. Instead of the "just checking in" email, try:
For high-value accounts, Account-based marketing (ABM) is the gold standard. ABM is not a "burst" campaign; it requires a persistent, long-term commitment to a "market of one". By maintaining a consistent presence with multiple stakeholders—a process known as multi-threading—you protect the deal from the risk of a single champion leaving the company.
The average buying committee now involves nearly seven people. Consistent, multi-stakeholder engagement is the only way to build the internal consensus required for complex B2B decisions.
Sales pipeline management is ultimately about building a repeatable sales process that thrives on predictability. By shifting from "campaign bursts" to an "always-on" approach, you stop paying the "learning tax" of restarting your marketing every few months.
Consistency ensures that even if 95% of your market isn't buying today, you are the first person they call when they move into the active 5% tomorrow.
Is your sales lagging, and are you missing continuity? At De Grijff, we specialise in providing the structure and persistence required for niche and technical business development.
Plan a conversation with our experts today and discover how we can help you build a data-driven, scalable sales engine.
Volume without consistency creates a "leaky bucket" effect. You might reach a thousand people once, but without the necessary 5–7 follow-ups, most of those leads will never convert. Consistency ensures you actually cross the finish line with the leads you already have.
A successful B2B outreach cadence typically involves 8–12 touchpoints over 3–4 weeks. The follow-up frequency should be higher in the first week and gradually spaced out, using a mix of email, LinkedIn, and phone.
Only if used poorly. Outreach automation should be used to manage the timing of your touches, while the content remains deeply researched and personalised to the buyer's operational reality.
Stop sending "following up" emails. Instead, provide "Value-First" messaging. Share industry reports, offer introductions, or provide frameworks that solve a specific problem the prospect is facing.