The Cold Voicemail Reboot — 60-Min Training
Direct Answer
Cold voicemail is not a vanity exercise — it's a planted seed that makes the next call land. Leave a voicemail on the 3rd-attempt of your daily dial, follow with an email within 90 seconds, and keep the message under 20 seconds with this template: *name + company + one-line problem hook + soft ask + callback number twice*.
Benchmark callback rate is 3-5%; the real win is the lift it gives the next live conversation. This 60-minute training drills the script, the cadence, and the handoff so SDRs and AEs running B2B SaaS outbound ($25K-$500K ACV) stop dumping bad voicemails and start "stacking the deck" the way Jeb Blount, Josh Braun, and Morgan Ingram actually teach it.
Section 1 — Why Voicemail Still Matters (5 min)
Open with the room's bias. Ask the team: *"Raise your hand if you think voicemail is dead."* Most hands go up. Then walk through the math.
The average B2B decision-maker still reviews 60-70% of unknown voicemails within 24 hours (RingDNA 2025). Jeb Blount calls voicemail a "familiarity asset" in *Fanatical Prospecting* — it doesn't have to drive a callback to drive value, it just has to make your name recognizable when you dial again Tuesday.
The mindset shift for the room:
- Voicemail is not a closing tool — it's a setup tool. You're not trying to win the meeting; you're trying to win the next ring.
- Anthony Iannarino's rule: every touch is a deposit. A clean voicemail deposits more than a hang-up.
- Morgan Ingram's framing (JBarrows): the voicemail is the "B-side" of the call attempt — the call is the A-side, the email is the bridge.
Section 2 — The 20-Second Framework (15 min)
Write this on the whiteboard. Four beats, 20 seconds, every time.
- Beat 1 — Name + Company (3 sec): "Hey Sarah, this is Kory from Pulse RevOps."
- Beat 2 — Hook (7 sec): One sentence on the problem you fix for someone like them. Reference a peer or trigger event. *Never* pitch product.
- Beat 3 — Soft Ask (5 sec): "I'd love 12 minutes to compare notes — happy to send a calendar link if it's useful."
- Beat 4 — Callback + Repeat (5 sec): Phone number, said twice, slowly. Then your name again.
Verbatim script — use this verbatim on the first run-through:
*"Hey Sarah, this is Kory from Pulse RevOps. I noticed your team just rolled out the new MEDDIC motion — three of the RevOps leaders I work with hit the same forecast-accuracy wall around the 90-day mark, and I helped them fix it in two weeks. I'd love 12 minutes to compare notes. My number is 555-218-4419, that's 555-218-4419. Talk soon — Kory."*
The non-negotiables (drill these):
- Talk slower than feels natural. Josh Braun's rule: if it feels weirdly slow, it's about right.
- Say the number twice. Most reps say it once and mumble. The repeat triples callback rates per Gong's 2024 voicemail study.
- Never say "I'm just following up." Sarah Brazier calls this the "vanilla open" — it gets deleted in 4 seconds flat.
- No corporate throat-clearing. Cut "Hope you're doing well," "Sorry to bother you," "I'll keep this brief."
Role-play drill (10 min of this section): Pair reps up. Each rep records three 20-second voicemails on their phone, plays them back, and scores against the four-beat checklist. Manager floats and flags the slow-down failures.
Section 3 — The "Stack the Deck" Cadence (10 min)
This is Mike Weinberg's contribution from *New Sales. Simplified.* — voicemail in isolation is noise; voicemail inside a coordinated same-day touch sequence is a campaign.
The 3-call rule: Do not leave a voicemail on attempts 1 or 2. Most prospects screen unknown numbers — leaving a voicemail on the first attempt signals "low-value cold caller." By attempt 3, the number has shown up in their missed-calls list three times. *Now* the voicemail lands as "this person is persistent and probably matters."
Same-day email handoff (the lift multiplier):
- Send within 90 seconds of leaving the voicemail.
- Subject line: *"Just left you a voicemail — Sarah"*
- Body: 3 sentences, mirror the voicemail hook, drop a calendar link.
- This combo lifts response rate from ~3% (VM alone) to 8-11% per Outreach's 2025 multi-channel benchmark.
Section 4 — Pre-Call vs Voicemail: "Did I Catch You at a Bad Time?" (10 min)
Reps confuse these two openers constantly. Drill the difference.
Live pre-call opener (Josh Braun's pattern interrupt):
*"Hey Sarah, this is Kory — we haven't met. Did I catch you at a bad time?"*
This works only live. It triggers the prospect's "actually, kind of, but go on" reflex. It is *the* highest-performing cold opener in B2B SaaS (Gong 2024: 3.4x meeting-set rate vs "How are you?").
Voicemail opener — DO NOT use the same line. "Did I catch you at a bad time" on a voicemail is incoherent — they're not there. Use the four-beat framework above instead.
The handoff drill: Have the team practice the *switch* — they dial, hear three rings, brain has to instantly toggle from "live opener" to "voicemail framework." Most reps fumble this transition. Run 10 cold dials in the room and watch the switch fail in real time.
Section 5 — Benchmarks, Measurement & the Manager's Scorecard (15 min)
What "good" actually looks like in 2026 B2B SaaS outbound:
| Metric | Floor | Target | Top quartile |
|---|---|---|---|
| Voicemail callback rate | 1.5% | 3-5% | 7%+ |
| VM + same-day email reply rate | 4% | 8-11% | 14%+ |
| VMs left per rep per day | 8 | 15-20 | 25+ |
| Avg VM length | <25 sec | 18-22 sec | 20 sec exactly |
| Meeting-set lift on attempt 4 after VM | 1.2x | 1.8x | 2.4x |
Manager scorecard (run weekly):
- Pull 5 random VMs per rep from the dialer recording.
- Score 0-4 against the framework beats.
- Anything under 3/4 = re-drill in 1:1.
- Reps under 3% callback after 4 weeks get a focused coaching plan, not a PIP.
Section 6 — Wrap-Up & Commitment (5 min)
Close the meeting by having each rep verbally commit to two specific actions:
- The number of voicemails they'll leave per day for the next two weeks (floor: 15).
- One script element they personally need to fix (slow down, kill the vanilla open, repeat the number, etc.).
Write commitments on the whiteboard. Photo. Posted in the team channel. Reviewed in Friday's pipeline meeting.
End with Jeb Blount's line: *"The prospecting work you do today builds the pipeline you'll close 90 days from now."* Voicemail is part of that work — the cheapest, most-skipped touch in the stack. Stop wasting it.
FAQ
Q: Should I leave a voicemail on every cold call attempt? A: No. Use the 3-call rule — voicemail on attempt 3 of a sequence, never on 1 or 2. Multiple voicemails from the same unknown number early in a cadence trains the prospect to permanently block you.
Q: What's a realistic callback rate I should expect? A: 3-5% in 2026 B2B SaaS outbound is the target band. Below 1.5% means your script is broken (likely the open or the hook). Above 7% means you're either calling warm-ish leads or your TAM segmentation is unusually tight.
Q: Is the same-day email actually necessary, or is the VM enough? A: The email is necessary. Standalone voicemail reply rate hovers around 3%; voicemail + 90-second-mirror email pushes combined reply rate to 8-11%. Skipping the email leaves 60-70% of the lift on the table.
Q: How long should the voicemail actually be? A: 18-22 seconds. Under 15 sec feels rushed and unprofessional; over 25 sec gets deleted before the callback number. Time your reps with a stopwatch in role-play — most overshoot by 8-12 seconds on their first attempt.
Q: What if my prospect's voicemail is full or disabled? A: Send the mirror email immediately and re-dial in 48 hours. A disabled voicemail is a soft signal the prospect screens aggressively — switch to LinkedIn voice-note + email-led cadence on attempt 4.
Q: Should AEs leave voicemails too, or just SDRs? A: AEs absolutely should — especially on revival of stalled opps and on competitive-displacement outbound where the AE name carries weight. The framework is identical; only the hook changes (reference the prior conversation or the trigger event).
Sources
- Blount, Jeb. *Fanatical Prospecting.* Wiley, 2015 — voicemail-as-familiarity-asset framing, 3-call rule.
- Iannarino, Anthony. *The Lost Art of Closing.* Penguin, 2017 — every-touch-is-a-deposit framework.
- Weinberg, Mike. *New Sales. Simplified.* AMACOM, 2012 — stack-the-deck same-day cadence.
- Braun, Josh. "Bad-Time Opener" methodology, Josh Braun Sales Training, 2024.
- Ingram, Morgan J. JBarrows Sales Training, "The B-Side of the Cold Call" framework, 2023.
- Brazier, Sarah. Gong Labs voicemail teardowns, "Vanilla Open" data, 2024.
- Gong.io. *2024 State of Cold Calling Report* — voicemail callback benchmarks and number-repetition lift.
- Outreach.io. *2025 Multi-Channel Outbound Benchmark Report* — VM+email same-day combined reply rates.