How do you coach reps to build a multichannel outreach sequence?
Direct Answer
Coach reps to build a multichannel outreach sequence by anchoring it to a single buyer problem, not a channel preference, then stacking email, phone, LinkedIn, and video in a deliberate rhythm so each touch references the last. The core move: have the rep map the prospect's likely day, write one message in three formats (short, value-led, no pitch in the first touch), and set the cadence inside the team's tool — Outreach, Salesloft, or Apollo — so it runs on rails instead of memory.
As a manager in 2027, you are coaching message quality and channel logic, not volume; an AI tool can fire 14 touches, but only a human can make touch #4 sound like it remembers touch #1.

Why This Happens — Diagnose Before You Coach
Reps who build weak sequences usually fail for one of four reasons, and you coach each one differently. The fastest way to waste a 1:1 is to coach will (motivation) when the real gap is skill (they don't know what a good touch looks like) or knowledge (they don't understand the buyer well enough to write relevance). Diagnose first.
- Skill gap: The rep blasts the same paragraph across every channel — the LinkedIn message is the email with the greeting removed. They've never seen a real cadence built well.
- Knowledge gap: They don't know the persona's pains, so every touch is generic. No amount of channel-stacking fixes a message with nothing to say.
- Will gap: They know how but skip the phone and hide behind email because calling is uncomfortable.
- System gap: The sequence is fine, but the data is bad, the tool isn't set up, or the territory is saturated — that's a manager problem, not a coaching problem.
The Coaching Conversation
Run this as a 25-minute 1:1 using the GROW model — Goal, Reality, Options, Will. Keep the rep building; you are the guide, not the author. Use these verbatim scripts.
Goal — set the target out loud. Open with: *"Before we touch the sequence, what are we actually trying to get? A meeting? A reply? Tell me the one outcome for this cadence."* Then: *"Who exactly is this for — title, company size, the moment they'd care?"* If they can't answer in two sentences, stop and fix the targeting before the message.
Reality — look at the work, not the intention. Pull up their last sequence in Salesloft or Outreach and ask: *"Walk me through why touch two follows touch one. What does touch two know that touch one didn't say?"* Most reps have never been asked this and discover their touches are unrelated.
Then: *"Which of these did you actually run last week, and which got skipped?"* This surfaces the will gap honestly.
Options — co-build, don't dictate. Say: *"Let's write the first touch together. One problem, one sentence of relevance, one soft ask — no pitch. What's the problem this persona has on a Tuesday?"* Build a sample multichannel cadence with them live:
- Day 1 — Email (short): *"Saw [trigger]. Teams at [similar co] hit [specific problem] right after that. Worth a 15-minute compare?"*
- Day 2 — LinkedIn (connect + light note): *"Connecting after your post on [topic] — curious how you're handling [problem] this quarter."*
- Day 4 — Phone + voicemail: *"Hi [name], [rep] from [company] — left you a note on LinkedIn. Calling because [one reason]. I'll send a two-line email so you have it in writing."*
- Day 5 — Email (value, no ask): Share one specific insight or a relevant Gong-style benchmark; do not ask for the meeting.
- Day 8 — Video (Loom/Vidyard, 45 sec): Walk a single screen tied to their world.
- Day 11 — Phone + breakup email: *"Last note from me — should I close the loop or is the timing just off?"*
Will — lock the commitment. End with: *"What will you change in your next sequence, and when will it be live in Apollo?"* Then: *"What might stop you from making the calls — and how do we handle that now?"* Write down the commitment and the date. Coaching without a logged next step evaporates.
The Coaching Plan / Cadence
Don't fix everything in one session. Run a 30/60/90 coaching arc and let the loop repeat weekly.
- Days 1–30 — Build one great sequence. The rep ships ONE multichannel cadence you've reviewed touch-by-touch. Goal: message quality and channel logic, not quantity.
- Days 31–60 — Run and read the data. They run it at volume; you review reply and meeting rates in Outreach weekly and A/B one variable (subject line, day-1 channel, video vs. No video).
- Days 61–90 — Scale and self-coach. The rep builds a second sequence solo, then walks you through their own reasoning. You're transferring the diagnostic skill, not the script.
The weekly engine is a closed loop — observe real touches, diagnose the weakest one, coach it, practice in role-play, measure the change, repeat.
Drills & Role-Play
- The three-format drill: Give the rep one buyer problem and 10 minutes to write it as an email, a LinkedIn note, and a voicemail. Then read all three aloud — if they sound identical, the rep is channel-blind. Coach until each plays to its channel.
- Call-the-voicemail role-play: You play the prospect's voicemail; the rep leaves a 20-second message live. Most reps over-explain. Run it five times until it's tight and ends with the email-bridge line.
- Touch-chaining drill: Hand the rep a finished touch #3 and have them write touch #4 that *references* it. This builds the habit of a connected cadence instead of seven cold restarts.
- Call-review scorecard: Pull a real connect from Gong or Chorus and score it together on opener, relevance, and the ask. Score the same rep again in two weeks to show movement.
What to Measure
Coach to leading indicators, because quota is a lagging number that arrives too late to coach.
- Per-step reply rate by channel — tells you which touch is dead weight.
- Sequence-to-meeting conversion — the real proof the cadence works.
- Step-completion rate — are phone and video steps actually being run, or quietly skipped? (Will gap detector.)
- Connect-to-conversation rate on calls — message-quality signal.
- Time-to-first-touch after a lead enters — speed-to-lead still wins meetings.
- Behavior change over time — is the rep building the *second* sequence better without you? That's the only metric that means the coaching stuck.
Common Mistakes Managers Make
- Coaching the deal, not the skill. Rewriting the rep's email yourself fixes today's sequence and teaches nothing. Co-build, then make them ship the next one alone.
- Rescuing the rep. Jumping on the calls "to show them" feels helpful but steals the rep's reps. Let them struggle inside a role-play instead.
- Coaching volume over message quality. Pushing "more touches" when the touches are generic just scales the failure and burns the territory.
- No follow-through. A 1:1 with no logged commitment and no review date is a conversation, not coaching.
- Coaching everyone the same. Your will rep needs accountability; your knowledge rep needs persona research. Same script for both wastes the session.
- Treating AI as the coach. Letting an AI sequence-builder write the cadence end-to-end produces fluent, forgettable touches. The human edits for relevance.
FAQ
How many channels should a multichannel sequence actually use? Three to four done well beats six done badly — typically email, phone, LinkedIn, and one video step. Coach the rep to add a channel only when they can explain what it does that the others can't. A four-channel cadence the rep actually runs outperforms a six-channel one they skip half of.
How long should a multichannel sequence run? For most B2B personas, 11 to 15 business days with 8 to 12 touches is a reasonable spine. Coach to the buyer's rhythm, not a fixed number — enterprise committees in 2027 need more touches over a longer window than a fast SMB buy.
Should reps personalize every touch or use templates? Both. Coach a strong template skeleton plus one genuinely personalized line per touch — the trigger, the post, the peer company. Full hand-crafting doesn't scale; zero personalization doesn't convert. The first and last touches earn the most personalization.
How do I coach a rep who only sends email and avoids the phone? That's almost always a will gap, not a skill gap. Set a minimum daily call floor, role-play the opener until it's comfortable, and review Gong call data so the avoidance is visible. Don't accept "email works fine for me" — pull the connect-to-meeting data and compare.
Can AI build the sequence so reps don't have to? AI tools in Apollo, Outreach, and Salesloft draft fast first versions, and that's useful. But coach the rep to own the edit: the touch-chaining, the relevance, and the human voice on calls and video. The rep who blindly ships AI cadences sounds like everyone else in the prospect's inbox.
Bottom Line
The one move that matters: stop coaching channels and start coaching the connected message. Diagnose skill vs. Will vs.
Knowledge first, co-build one sequence touch-by-touch using GROW, then make the rep run it, read the per-step data, and build the next one alone. A sequence works when touch #4 sounds like it remembers touch #1 — and that's a human skill you can coach, not a feature you can buy.
Sources
- Gong Labs — What the best sales sequences have in common
- Outreach — Building effective sales sequences
- Salesloft — Cadence best practices
- RAIN Group — Sales prospecting and outreach research
- Harvard Business Review — The new science of sales force productivity
- Sales Hacker — How to build a multichannel outreach cadence
- Apollo.io — Outbound sequences guide
- Winning by Design — Outbound prospecting framework
*Sales coaching for multichannel outreach sequences — how to coach reps to build an email, phone, LinkedIn, and video cadence, a sales manager coaching guide, rep coaching framework, and a multichannel outreach coaching playbook for 2027.*
