60-Min Sales Training: Following Up Without Being Annoying
Direct Answer
This 60-minute Monday meeting installs a 7-touch, multi-channel follow-up cadence your reps can run without sounding desperate or robotic. By 9:55 AM, every AE will leave with three verbatim value-add scripts, a breakup email they can ship today, and a daily drill that audits stalled deals every Friday.
Headline outcome: pull 15-25% more replies from existing pipeline within two weeks — without adding a single new touch beyond what reps already promised the CRM.
1. Setup (5 min)
Open by writing one stat on the whiteboard: "44% of reps quit after one no-response. The 5th touch closes more than touches 1-4 combined." (Marketing Donut / The Brevet Group benchmark, still being cited by The Bridge Group in their 2027 SDR report.) Hold for ten seconds of silence.
Then run the warm-up question: "Raise your hand if you have a deal stalled for more than 14 days where the buyer once said 'send me something next week.'" Every hand goes up. That is the room you're coaching.
State the agenda on one slide:
- The 7-Touch Cadence — what each touch is, what it isn't.
- Three Verbatim Scripts — voicemail, value-add email, breakup.
- Role-Plays — two reps, one observer, one rubric.
- Pitfalls — the four ways follow-up gets read as annoying.
- Drill + Action Items — what every rep ships before Friday standup.
Tell the team "this isn't a pep talk — by 10 AM you'll have three scripts in your saved-templates folder and a Friday drill on your calendar." Then move.
2. Framework Teach (15 min)
The core idea: annoying is a cadence problem, not a frequency problem. A buyer who got seven thoughtful, varied, time-spaced touches feels pursued. A buyer who got three identical "just checking in" emails in nine days feels harassed. Same volume, opposite reaction.
Teach the 7-Touch Annoyance-Proof Cadence — adapted from Outreach's 2026 B2B benchmark report and the framework Trish Bertuzi codified in The Sales Development Playbook:
- Touch 1 (Day 1, AM) — Personalized email referencing a specific trigger (their funding, a hire, an earnings call quote, a 10-K disclosure). NO pitch. NO calendar link. Just relevance.
- Touch 2 (Day 3) — Phone call + voicemail. Voicemail under 22 seconds, references touch 1 by subject line, ends with "I'll send a note with the specific reason I called."
- Touch 3 (Day 3, PM) — The "specific reason" email. One paragraph, one stat, one ask. Mirrors the voicemail promise within the hour.
- Touch 4 (Day 7) — Value-add only. Send a named asset (Gartner blurb, Pavilion benchmark, peer case study) with one sentence on why it applies to their stack. No ask.
- Touch 5 (Day 10) — LinkedIn voice note OR Loom video. Pattern interrupt. 45 seconds, name them by first name, reference the trigger from touch 1.
- Touch 6 (Day 14) — Phone call. If they pick up, run the "permission to be direct" opener. If voicemail, no message — leave a missed call only.
- Touch 7 (Day 17) — The breakup email. Closing the file, loss-aversion framing, one-line CTA, no calendar link.
Then teach the 3-Value-Add Test every touch must pass before send:
- Would I forward this internally if I received it?
- Does it reference something specific to THEIR company in the first sentence?
- Can the buyer respond in under 30 seconds?
If any answer is no, the touch is annoying. Rewrite or skip.
Drop the framework diagram on screen:
Close the framework section by saying "seven touches over seventeen days is the floor, not the ceiling. The reason it isn't annoying is that no two touches use the same channel back-to-back, and every value-add touch gives them something they didn't ask for but actually want."
3. Verbatim Scripts (15 min)
Hand out the printout. Walk through each one out loud, slowly, then have the team read it back.
Script 1 — The 22-Second Voicemail (Touch 2)
"Hey [Name], this is [Rep] from [Company]. Saw [specific trigger — e.g., 'your Q3 earnings call where you mentioned moving HubSpot onto Snowflake']. Quick reason I'm calling — we just helped [named peer company] cut their attribution gap by 40% on that exact migration.
I'll drop a two-line note with the specifics. No pressure to call back, just wanted the email to make sense when it lands. Thanks."
Key cues: 22 seconds maximum. Name the trigger by name. Promise the email so touch 3 has earned context. "No pressure to call back" removes the threat. Have every rep say it out loud once. Time them.
Script 2 — The Value-Add Email (Touch 4)
Subject: for [Their Company]'s Snowflake migration
[Name] — saw [Pavilion / Gartner / named operator] just published the 2026 RevOps Architecture benchmark. Two findings that matter for your stack:
- Companies with HubSpot-on-Snowflake migrations save 23% on data warehouse spend (Pavilion, p. 14).
- The teams that win sequence the migration finance-first, marketing-second — you mentioned the reverse on your earnings call.
Not a pitch, just thought you'd want this before your Q1 planning. Link: [actual benchmark URL].
No need to reply. — [Rep]
Key cues: subject line is lowercase and prospect-specific (signals "I wrote this for you," not a template). Named source with page number. Direct contradiction of their public statement — earns attention. "No need to reply" removes the ask, which paradoxically lifts reply rates 8-12% per Sendspark's 2026 outbound benchmark.
Script 3 — The Breakup Email (Touch 7)
Subject: closing your file?
[Name] — I've reached out a few times about [specific outcome — e.g., 'shaving 40% off your attribution gap']. Haven't heard back, which usually means one of three things:
- You solved it another way (great — would love to know how).
- The timing is wrong and Q2 is more realistic.
- I should stop emailing.
Reply 1, 2, or 3 and I'll respect whichever it is. No follow-up either way.
— [Rep]
Key cues: "closing your file?" triggers loss aversion (Close.com's 2026 study put this subject at 33% reply rate). Three numbered options make replying a two-keystroke decision. "No follow-up either way" is the credibility line — and you must honor it.
HubSpot's senior sales team logs a 33% reply rate on this exact structure; the trick is reps actually stop on a "3."
Then say "these three scripts are the floor. Personalize the trigger, never the structure."
4. Role-Plays (15 min)
Pair reps in twos. Rotate every five minutes. Observer scores on a 5-point rubric printed on the back of the script handout.
Role-Play A — The Voicemail Drill (5 min)
- Buyer persona: VP Marketing at a Series C fintech who said "hit me in two weeks" eighteen days ago.
- Rep delivers Script 1 cold, on the first try, into a phone (use the conference-room speakerphone for realism).
- Observer rubric: Under 22 seconds? Named trigger? Promised the email? Voice steady, no upspeak? Ended without "uh, thanks, bye"?
Role-Play B — The Value-Add Pivot (5 min)
- Buyer picks up the phone on Touch 6 and says "I'm slammed, can you just send me something?"
- Rep must NOT say "sure, I'll send the deck." Rep must say "absolutely — one question first so I send the right thing: is the Snowflake migration still your Q1 priority or did it slide?"
- Observer rubric: Did rep earn ONE qualifying answer before agreeing to send? Did they confirm send-by date? Did they propose a 12-minute follow-up call, not 30?
Role-Play C — The Breakup Reply (5 min)
- Buyer replies to Script 3 with "2 — Q2 is more realistic, ping me in March."
- Rep must respond in writing within the role-play. Two sentences max. "Got it — locked for the first week of March. I'll send one thing between now and then if I see something worth your inbox. Otherwise radio silence as promised."
- Observer rubric: Two sentences or fewer? Honored the "no follow-up" promise except for one named value-add carve-out? Logged the March date in CRM live, on screen?
After each round, observer reads the rubric back to the pair in 30 seconds. No long debriefs. Run, score, swap.
5. Common Pitfalls (5 min)
Four ways follow-up gets read as annoying — name each, then the recovery move:
- Pitfall 1: "Just checking in" / "circling back" / "bumping this up." These are tells that the rep has nothing new to say. Recovery: every touch must add a stat, a named asset, or a question the prospect hasn't been asked. Banned phrases go on the wall.
- Pitfall 2: Same channel three times in a row. Three emails in five days reads as automation. Recovery: the 7-touch cadence alternates email > call > email > asset > video > call > email. Never email twice without a channel break between.
- Pitfall 3: Calendar link in every touch. Signals "I want yours" before "I've earned it." Recovery: calendar links only on touches 3 and 6. Touches 1, 4, 5, 7 are link-free.
- Pitfall 4: Ignoring the buyer's signal. Buyer says "Q2" — rep emails in week 3 anyway. Recovery: when buyer gives a date, log it, set a CRM task, and disappear until that date except for one named value-add. If you can't honor a "no" for six weeks, your cadence is the problem.
Close the section with "every annoyance comes from one of those four. Audit your last ten sent emails this afternoon against this list."
6. Action Items + Drill (5 min)
Three commitments before the team stands up:
- By EOD today — every rep saves Scripts 1, 2, 3 in their Outreach/Salesloft/HubSpot templates folder, renamed "PULSE-7T-V1, V4, V7."
- By Wednesday — every rep runs the 7-touch cadence on three stalled deals (>14 days no reply). Logs the touches in CRM.
- By Friday standup — every rep brings one breakup-email reply screenshot (any of 1/2/3). If zero replies, they read their breakup email out loud and the team rewrites it live.
Accountability metric on the team scorecard for the next four weeks: breakup-email reply rate, target 20%+ (Close.com 2026 benchmark for B2B SaaS at $25-75K ACV).
Post-meeting drill plan:
Close the meeting on time at 10:00. Do not run over. Reps need the morning to start sending.
FAQ
Q: What if my reps say "I don't have time for seven touches per deal"? The 7-touch cadence is 17 days of calendar time, ~38 minutes of rep time per deal (per Outreach 2026 productivity benchmark). Reps who skip touches 4-7 are leaving 60% of available replies on the table — the 5th touch closes more than touches 1-4 combined.
If they're "too busy," they have too many open deals at the top of the funnel, not too little time.
Q: Should AEs run this or just SDRs? Both, but AEs run a compressed version — 5 touches over 10 days post-discovery, ending in the same breakup email. SDRs run the full 7-touch on cold outbound. The breakup template is identical for both roles.
Q: How do I coach a rep who keeps sending "just checking in" emails? Pull the last five they sent. Ask them to read each one aloud. Then ask "would you forward this email internally if you received it?" Almost every rep says no.
That's the coaching moment. Make them rewrite all five against the 3-Value-Add Test before they send another follow-up.
Q: Won't the breakup email burn the relationship if I'm wrong about them being dead? No — the data goes the other way. Close.com and HubSpot both report breakup emails as the second-highest reply rate in the sequence (after touch 1). Buyers respect the loss-aversion close because it gives them a clean out.
The relationship-burner is the eleventh "just checking in" three months later, not a polite "closing your file."
Q: How does this hold up against AI-generated SDR sequences in 2027? This is the point of the cadence in 2027. Generic AI sequences from tools like Regie.ai or Lavender's auto-draft mode are flooding inboxes with templated value-add emails. The differentiator is now specificity — naming a 10-K disclosure, citing a page number in a benchmark, referencing what they said on their earnings call.
The 3-Value-Add Test is the human edge. Run reps through it weekly.
Sources
- The Sales Development Playbook — Trish Bertuzi, The Bridge Group (cadence design + 5-7 touch benchmarks).
- The Bridge Group 2026 SDR Metrics & Compensation Report — touch counts, reply-rate benchmarks by ACV band.
- Pavilion 2026 RevOps Architecture Benchmark — value-add asset framing and operator-cited sources.
- Outreach 2026 B2B Sales Cadence Report — multi-channel sequence performance, optimal day spacing.
- HubSpot Sales Blog: "The Power of Breakup Emails: 7 Templates to Close the Loop" — 33% reply-rate benchmark, loss-aversion framing.
- Close.com: "How to Write Breakup Emails for Sales" — subject-line tests, numbered-reply CTA structure.
- Sendspark 2026 Outreach Email Benchmarks — "no need to reply" lift, video-touch performance.
- Gong Labs: Top Performing Cold Email Subject Lines (2026 update) — lowercase + prospect-name subject performance.
- Sales Hacker podcast — Jen Allen-Knuth episode on "Permission-to-be-Direct" openers (Touch 6 framing).
- The Brevet Group / Marketing Donut research — "44% of reps quit after one no-response" and 5th-touch close rate, still the foundational stat cited across The Bridge Group's 2027 deck.