Forgotten Follow-Ups: A Template for Re-Engaging Stalled Opportunities

Direct Answer
This training provides a complete, ready-to-run 60-minute session for re-engaging stalled opportunities using a structured follow-up template. You will learn a specific, repeatable process—the "3-2-1 Revival" framework—that combines Salesforce data hygiene, Gong call intelligence, and MEDDPICC qualification to turn dead deals into active conversations.
The session includes verbatim scripts, two Mermaid diagrams, and an FAQ to handle common objections. Expect to walk away with a template you can deploy in your next 10 follow-ups.
1. Warm-Up (10 min)
Objective: Get the team thinking about why follow-ups fail and set the stage for a new approach.
Facilitator Script: "Let’s start with a quick poll. Raise your hand if you’ve ever had a deal go completely dark after a promising discovery call. Now, keep your hand up if you’ve sent more than three follow-ups without a reply.
Finally, keep it up if you’ve ever given up on that deal entirely. Look around—most of us are in the same boat. The problem isn’t effort; it’s that our follow-ups are forgettable.
Today, we’re going to fix that with a proven template that uses real data from your CRM to re-engage stalled opportunities."
Activity (5 min): In pairs, share one stalled opportunity from your pipeline. Identify:
- The last contact date (check Salesforce or HubSpot).
- The last value you provided (e.g., a case study, a demo recording).
- Why you think it stalled (e.g., budget, no decision-maker, lost priority).
Facilitator: "Write these down. We’ll use them later to test our template."
Key Takeaway: "Most stalled deals aren’t dead—they’re just waiting for a specific, value-driven trigger. Our template will provide that trigger."
2. The Anatomy of a Stalled Opportunity (10 min)
Objective: Understand why opportunities stall and how to diagnose the root cause using MEDDPICC.
Facilitator Script: "Before we write a single email, we need to diagnose why the deal stalled. In MEDDPICC, the most common causes are:
- Decision Criteria not aligned with your solution.
- Competition you didn’t uncover.
- Champion lost influence or left the company.
- Pain changed or diminished.
Here’s a real example from a Gong analysis: A rep sent 7 follow-ups over 90 days. The only reply was ‘not interested.’ But when we pulled the Salesforce activity history, we saw the prospect had visited the pricing page 3 times after the last call. The real issue?
The rep never addressed budget or authority. The deal was stalled because the economic buyer was never engaged."
Mermaid Diagram 1: Stalled Opportunity Diagnosis Flow
Key Takeaway: "Don’t guess why it stalled. Use CRM data and call recordings to pinpoint the missing MEDDPICC element. Your follow-up should directly address that gap."
3. The 3-2-1 Revival Template (15 min)
Objective: Learn and practice the "3-2-1 Revival" template—a three-step sequence for re-engaging stalled opportunities.
Facilitator Script: "The 3-2-1 Revival template is simple: 3 emails, 2 calls, 1 social touch over 14 days. Each touch must provide value tied to the missing MEDDPICC element. Here’s the exact structure:
Step 1: The 'Value Bomb' Email (Day 1)
- Subject: [Company Name] + [Specific Pain] = [Result]
- Body: Reference the last conversation. Share a specific case study or ROI data that addresses the missing element.
- Example: "Hi [Name], when we last spoke about [Pain], you mentioned [Missing Element]. I found this case study where [Company Similar to Prospect] solved [Pain] and achieved [Result]. Thought it might help. No need to reply—just wanted to share."
Step 2: The 'Insight' Call (Day 4)
- Script: "Hi [Name], it’s [Your Name]. I sent over that case study on [Pain]. I’m not calling to pitch—just wanted to see if it sparked any questions. If not, no worries. I’ll send over a quick summary you can share with your team."
- Goal: Leave a voicemail if no answer. Keep it under 30 seconds.
Step 3: The 'Social Proof' Email (Day 7)
- Subject: Quick update on [Industry Trend]
- Body: Share a Gartner or Forrester report snippet relevant to their industry. Tie it back to the stalled deal.
- Example: "Hi [Name], saw this Gartner report on [Trend]. It mentions that companies like yours are seeing [Stat]. Thought it might be relevant to your [Missing Element] discussion."
Step 4: The 'Champion Check' Call (Day 10)
- Script: "Hi [Name], I’ve been thinking about your [Project]. I don’t want to be a pest, but I noticed [Event in CRM, e.g., a competitor activity]. Is there anything I can clarify or share to help move things forward?"
- Goal: This call is about listening. If they engage, ask open-ended questions.
Step 5: The 'Social Touch' (Day 14)
- Action: Engage with their LinkedIn post or share a relevant article with a comment. No direct ask.
- Example: "Great post on [Topic], [Name]. I thought this article on [Related Topic] might add to the conversation."
Activity (5 min): Using the stalled opportunity from the warm-up, write one 'Value Bomb' email using the template. Share with your partner for feedback.
Key Takeaway: "The 3-2-1 Revival works because it’s value-first and timed to avoid being spammy. Each touch is a trigger for the missing MEDDPICC element."
4. Handling Objections and Re-Engagement (10 min)
Objective: Practice responses to common objections when re-engaging stalled opportunities.
Facilitator Script: "Even with the perfect template, you’ll get objections. Here are three real ones and how to handle them using Challenger Sale techniques:
Objection 1: 'We’ve put this on hold.'
- Response: "I understand priorities shift. Can I ask what changed? Was it budget, timing, or a new initiative? I’d like to understand so I can share any relevant updates if things change."
- Why it works: It’s diagnostic and shows you’re not pushy.
Objection 2: 'We’re evaluating other options.'
- Response: "That makes sense. To help you compare, I can share a competitor analysis we’ve done with Gartner data. Would that be useful?"
- Why it works: It positions you as a trusted advisor and addresses the competition element of MEDDPICC.
Objection 3: 'Not interested right now.'
- Response: "No problem. I’ll close this out in my Salesforce pipeline. Before I do, is there a specific reason? I want to make sure I don’t miss anything if your situation changes."
- Why it works: It’s respectful and often reveals the real blocker.
Activity (3 min): Role-play one objection with your partner. Use the script above.
Key Takeaway: "Objections are data points. Use them to update your MEDDPICC assessment and decide if the deal is worth re-engaging or should be closed-lost."
5. Measuring Success and Automating Follow-Ups (10 min)
Objective: Learn how to track re-engagement success and automate the process using Salesforce and Outreach.
Facilitator Script: "You can’t improve what you don’t measure. Here’s what to track in Salesforce:
- Re-engagement Rate: % of stalled opportunities that replied to the first touch.
- Conversion Rate: % of re-engaged opportunities that moved to next stage.
- Time to Re-Engage: Average days from last contact to first reply.
Automation with Outreach:
- Create a sequence for stalled opportunities based on deal stage and last activity date.
- Use Salesforce reports to trigger the sequence when a deal has been inactive for 30 days.
- Set a task for yourself to review the Gong recording before the first call.
Mermaid Diagram 2: Automated Re-Engagement Workflow
Key Takeaway: "Automation ensures no deal falls through the cracks. But always personalize the first touch based on Gong and Salesforce data."
6. Putting It Into Practice (5 min)
Objective: Commit to using the template with one stalled opportunity this week.
Facilitator Script: "Your homework: Pick one stalled opportunity from your pipeline. Use the 3-2-1 Revival template. Log every touch in Salesforce. After 14 days, report back to the team on:
- Did they reply?
- What MEDDPICC element was missing?
- What would you do differently?
Final Tip: "The best follow-up is the one you actually send. Stop overthinking. Use the template, adapt it to your voice, and send it today."
FAQ
Q: What if the prospect has already said 'no' multiple times? A: Respect their decision. Use the 'Not interested right now' script to uncover the real reason. If it’s a hard no, close it in Salesforce and move on. You can always re-engage in 6 months with new value.
Q: How do I avoid sounding like a robot? A: Personalize the first sentence. Reference something specific from the last conversation or their LinkedIn activity. Use Gong to pull a quote from the last call.
Q: What if I have no data in Salesforce? A: Start with a diagnostic email asking for a 5-minute call to ‘update your records.’ This is a low-pressure way to gather MEDDPICC data.
Q: How many times should I follow up before giving up? A: The 3-2-1 Revival is 5 touches over 14 days. After that, if no reply, close-lost in Salesforce and set a 90-day reminder to re-engage with new content.
Q: Can I use this for inbound leads that went cold? A: Yes. Adapt the first email to reference the original source (e.g., a demo request or content download). Use HubSpot to see what content they consumed.
Q: What if the champion left the company? A: Use LinkedIn Sales Navigator to find the new champion or decision-maker. Send a 'Value Bomb' email referencing the original conversation and the new person’s role.
Sources
- Gong: The Science of Follow-Ups
- Salesforce: Best Practices for Re-Engaging Stalled Opportunities
- MEDDPICC Framework Explained by Winning by Design
- Challenger Sale: Handling Objections
- Gartner: Sales Follow-Up Statistics
- Outreach: Automating Follow-Up Sequences
- Forrester: The Cost of Forgotten Follow-Ups
- HubSpot: Re-Engagement Email Templates






