The Cold Call Coaching Workshop — 60-Min Training
Direct Answer
The Cold Call Coaching Workshop is a runnable 60-minute team training that fixes the real problem with outbound calling: cold calling is not dead, but bad cold calling is. This session teaches reps a repeatable call structure — a pattern-interrupt opener, a one-line reason for calling, a clean meeting ask, and rehearsed brush-off responses — then forces a live 20-minute call block so the skill is practiced, not just discussed.
It is built for SDR and AE teams running outbound on tools like Salesloft, Outreach, Orum, and Nooks, where connect rates sit at 5-15% and a healthy rep books 1-3 meetings per 100 dials. Run it weekly with the same scripts and a scored debrief, and connect-to-meeting conversion climbs because reps stop improvising and start executing a proven flow.
Section 1 — Cold Calling Is Not Dead, Bad Cold Calling Is (5 min)
Open the room with one honest sentence: most reps hate cold calling because they are bad at it, and they are bad at it because nobody taught them a structure. The dial-and-pray approach produces awkward, apologetic calls that get hung up on inside ten seconds. That feels like proof the channel is dead. It is not.
The data says the opposite. Across outbound teams, connect rates land between 5% and 15% of dials, and a competent rep converts roughly 1-3 meetings per 100 dials. The reps clearing the top of that range are not luckier — they run a script.
Put three numbers on the whiteboard before anyone touches a phone:
- Connect rate — what percent of dials reach a live human (target 5-15%).
- Conversation rate — of connects, how many last past the opener.
- Meeting rate — of conversations, how many book a next step.
*The rule for today: we do not judge the channel until we have run the structure. You cannot conclude cold calling is broken while making broken cold calls.*
Section 2 — The Cold Call Framework (10 min)
Walk the team through the five-part structure every call follows. This is the spine. Scripts in Section 3 are just the muscle on top of it.
The framework, in order:
- The opener. Two schools exist. The permission-based opener asks, "Did I catch you at a bad time?" — it disarms by giving the prospect an easy out, and counterintuitively keeps them on the line. The pattern-interrupt opener breaks the telemarketer rhythm: a calm, slightly slower "Hey, this is a cold call — you can hang up, or give me thirty seconds." Both beat the chipper "How are you today?" that signals a pitch.
- The value prop in one line. One sentence, outcome-focused, no feature list. If it takes two breaths, it is too long.
- The ask. You are not selling the product on this call. You are selling fifteen minutes. The ask is for a meeting, nothing more.
- Handling the first brush-off. The first "not interested" is a reflex, not a decision. Plan for it. One earned line, then either a softer ask or a clean exit.
- Voicemail strategy. Most dials go to voicemail. A 20-second voicemail that names a specific outcome earns a 1-2% callback — small, but it warms the next dial and the follow-up email.
On timing: aggregated dialer data from teams using Orum and ConnectAndSell points to Tuesday through Thursday, late afternoon (roughly 4-5 PM local), as the highest-connect window. Monday mornings and Friday afternoons are the dead zones. Parallel dialers like Orum and AI dialers like Nooks raise connect *volume* 3-5x by dialing many lines at once, but they do not fix a bad script — they just deliver more humans to a rep who is not ready.
*The rule: the framework is fixed. Reps personalize the words, never the order.*
Section 3 — Verbatim Cold Call Scripts (15 min)
Read each script out loud, then have the room repeat it. These are word-for-word. Brackets are stage directions, not lines to read.
The pattern-interrupt opener:
Rep: "Hey [First Name], this is Jordan over at Pulse. *[slight pause]* I'll be honest — this is a cold call. You can hang up now, or you can give me thirty seconds and then decide. Fair enough?" [Wait. Most people say "sure" or "go ahead." The honesty buys the thirty seconds.]
The "is now a bad time" technique:
Rep: "Hi [First Name], it's Jordan from Pulse — did I catch you at a bad time?" [They say "kind of" or "I'm busy." You agree, which disarms them.] Rep: "Totally fair, I figured I might. Thirty seconds and I'll let you go — would that be alright?"
The one-line reason for calling:
Rep: "The reason I'm calling is we help RevOps teams cut the time reps waste on manual call logging — most of the folks I talk to are spending three-plus hours a week on it. That's the whole reason for the call."
The meeting ask:
Rep: "I'm not going to try to sell you anything on this call. All I'd like is fifteen minutes — does Thursday at 2, or Friday morning, work better to see if this is even relevant?" [Offer two specific times. Never ask "when are you free?"]
Brush-off responses — say these word for word:
Prospect: "I'm not interested." Rep: "Totally fair — you don't know me yet. Most people I talk to weren't interested either, until they saw their reps were losing three hours a week to logging. If that's not a problem for you, I'll happily disappear. Is it?"
Prospect: "Just send me an email." Rep: "Happy to. So I send the right thing and not noise — is logging time the issue for your team, or is it more about dial volume? Then the email's worth opening."
Prospect: "We're all set." Rep: "Good — that means you've got something working. Quick gut check: is your current setup giving reps their afternoons back, or just barely keeping up? If it's working, I'm gone."
The 20-second voicemail:
Rep: "Hi [First Name], Jordan at Pulse. Calling because RevOps teams I work with were losing about three hours a week to manual call logging — we cut that to near zero. I'll follow up by email, but if it's worth a quick chat, I'm at 555-0142. Thanks [First Name]."
Section 4 — Live Call Block (20 min)
Phones up. This is the part that builds the skill. Two formats, pick based on your list and your nerve:
- Real dials. Reps work a live list using your dialer — Orum, Nooks, ConnectAndSell, JustCall, or Aircall — logging activity in Salesloft or Outreach. The manager listens live or via Gong call recording.
- Roleplay rounds. If a live list is not ready, pair reps. One is the prospect (instructed to throw a brush-off), one is the rep. Swap after three calls.
Set the rule before the block starts:
Manager: "For the next twenty minutes you run the structure exactly: pattern-interrupt opener, one-line reason, the ask, and a scripted brush-off response. I am not grading charm. I am grading whether you executed the flow. If you freelance and crash, that's a miss. If you run the script and crash, that's data."
The manager stays mostly quiet during live dials and takes notes on the four scored metrics. According to call-coaching research from teams using Gong, reps improve fastest when they hear their own recorded calls in the debrief rather than only being told what to fix — so record everything.
Do NOT:
- Do NOT let the manager jump on the line mid-call to "save" it — the rep learns nothing.
- Do NOT skip logging; an unlogged dial is an invisible dial.
- Do NOT end the block early because connects are slow. Slow connects are the job.
Section 5 — Debrief and Call Scoring (7 min)
Reps self-assess first, then the room reviews the numbers. Pull the call block stats from Salesloft, Outreach, or Apollo and put them next to the targets.
The math — score these four, in this order:
- Connect rate = connects / dials. Target 5-15%. Below 5% is usually a data or timing problem, not a script problem.
- Conversation rate = conversations past the opener / connects. If this is low, the opener is failing — fix Section 3 first.
- Meeting rate = meetings booked / conversations. This is the money metric.
Common objections from reps, and the manager's comeback:
*"My connect rate is garbage, the script is broken."* Connect rate is timing and data, not script. Move dials to Tuesday-Thursday late afternoon and recheck before blaming the words.
*"I felt fake reading a script."* The script is a floor, not a cage. You rehearse it until it sounds like you. Reps who freelance from minute one are the ones who freeze.
*"They all said send me an email."* "Send me an email" is a soft no you can convert. You ran past the response. Slow down and ask the qualifying question before agreeing.
Close the debrief by naming the single highest-leverage fix per rep. One fix, not five.
Section 6 — Commitments and Close (3 min)
End with each rep committing out loud. Verbal commitment in front of peers sticks better than a note nobody reads.
- Daily call target — every rep names a number (e.g., "60 dials a day, Tuesday through Thursday loaded heaviest"). Write it on the board.
- One script fix — each rep states the one line they are drilling this week, from their debrief.
- Call window — each rep blocks their highest-connect hour on the calendar as protected dial time, no meetings allowed in it.
*Cold-calling research is blunt on one point: the reps who book the most meetings are not the most charming — they are the ones who make the most dials inside a tight structure.*
Lock the targets in HubSpot or Salesforce as activity goals so the next week's debrief has real numbers to score against. Same scripts, same metrics, every week — that repetition is what moves the meeting rate.
FAQ
Is cold calling actually still worth the time in 2026?
Yes, for the right motion. Connect rates of 5-15% and 1-3 meetings per 100 dials are unglamorous but real, and for many B2B segments cold calls still book meetings faster than email-only sequences. The channel rewards teams that run a structure and pair it with a parallel or AI dialer like Orum or Nooks to lift connect volume.
What is the difference between a permission opener and a pattern interrupt?
A permission opener asks "did I catch you at a bad time?" and disarms the prospect by giving them an easy exit, which paradoxically keeps them talking. A pattern interrupt breaks the telemarketer cadence — for example, openly naming it as a cold call — so the prospect's auto-reject reflex does not fire.
Test both with your list; conversation rate tells you which wins.
When are the best days and times to cold call?
Aggregated dialer data points to Tuesday through Thursday, late afternoon around 4-5 PM local time, as the strongest connect window. Monday mornings and Friday afternoons are the weakest. Load your dial blocks into the strong windows before concluding your script is the problem.
Do parallel and AI dialers replace coaching?
No. Tools like Orum, ConnectAndSell, and Nooks raise connect volume 3-5x by dialing multiple lines at once, but they only deliver more live humans to the rep. If the rep has no opener, no one-line reason, and no brush-off response, more connects just means more fast hang-ups. Coach the script first, then scale dials with the dialer.
How should we score a rep's cold calling?
Score four metrics in order: connect rate (connects / dials, target 5-15%), conversation rate (past the opener), meeting rate (meetings / conversations, the money metric), and what specifically worked. Pull the numbers from Salesloft, Outreach, or Apollo and review one Gong recording per rep so feedback is grounded in the actual call, not memory.
Sources
- Gong Labs, "What the Best Cold Call Openers Have in Common," Gong Research, 2025.
- Salesloft, "Outbound Calling Benchmarks: Connect and Meeting Rates," Salesloft State of Sales, 2025.
- Orum, "Parallel Dialing and Connect-Volume Lift Report," Orum, 2026.
- Nooks, "AI Dialer and Virtual Salesfloor Coaching Data," Nooks, 2026.
- Outreach, "Best Days and Times to Cold Call: Dialer Data Analysis," Outreach Engagement Report, 2025.
- HubSpot, "Cold Calling Statistics and Conversion Benchmarks," HubSpot Sales Blog, 2027.
- ConnectAndSell, "The Math of Conversations: Dials to Meetings," ConnectAndSell, 2026.