In this episode of the Startup Selling Podcast, I interviewed Damian Thompson.
Damian is the co-founder and Chief Customer Officer at LeadFuze, a company that provides automated lead generation software that helps B2B companies find leads and have more sales conversations automatically. Damian has led sales teams in a dozen countries, coaching 200+ professionals to more than $100 million in sales.
Damian walked us through his "Cardinal Rules of Cold Emailing.”
Here are a few we discussed:
1 - Passive-Aggressive SUCKS (my words…): Sending a second or third or fourth email to someone that read – "I haven’t heard back from you…” is really bad. It’s not the prospect’s fault they haven’t replied – it’s yours. Would you want to receive this email? Would you respond? How do you feel when you get these emails?
2 - Brevity: Assume email is read on mobile. Don’t use wasted words.
Bad: "I found you on Angel List…” or “I know you’re busy so I won’t take much time…”
3 - Don’t be apologetic: As Damian said – "if you target your market right, you’re offering something of value… They [your prospects] WANT to work with you.”
4 - Start your email with questions, then offer a quick value proposition then close with a call-to-action.
Ask yourself: What are the 1-2 biggest problems/pains of customers?
Reverse engineer biggest objections.
4 - Think low friction. The goal of your cold email should be to start a conversation. Don’t ask your prospects to call you or try to book a meeting right away. That’s too much to ask.
Be happy with ANY reply. There’s no such thing as a negative reply. If you’re getting NOTHING, that’s the worst outcome.
5 - Subject Lines Matter: Shorter is better. Five (5) words or less is ideal. Using the person’s first name or company name works really well.
It’s okay to be aggressive. Damian’s best-performing email subject line was “You’re doing it wrong,” but be sure to link subject lines to email’s content and ultimately, write emails that match your personality. If you’re just not comfortable being aggressive, do something else.
6 - Provide value in every interaction and outreach. Give prospects something quick that’s useful, and offer a few more ideas.
Once you nail your message and market, find a way to do it on a scale because, as Damian said “using Lead Generation to validate a market is a disaster."
Remember that NO ONE buys for your TECHNICAL SOLUTION. Customers buy to increase revenue, reduce costs, and to get a promotion. There’s some other motivation, so find it and write to it.
Finally, we talked about building your sales team.
A few key ideas:
People & Mentions from this episode:
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