5 Actionable Neurolinguistic Insights For Your Sales Process

In 2024, the challenge isn’t just to capture attention—it’s to sustain engagement, build trust, and ultimately convert prospects into loyal customers. Traditional sales techniques often emphasize the “what” of the pitch, which includes product features, specifications, and cost-benefit analyses. While these elements are undeniably important, they overlook a subtler yet equally critical aspect: the “how” of the communication. This is where neurolinguistic insights can make a transformative impact. We are focused on the entire environment around us, meaning we use all five senses in the interaction: 83% sight, 11% hearing, 3% smell, 2% touch and 1% taste. To prioritise tone over everything is willing naïveté.

“It’s not what you say, but how you say it,” As the popular phrase goes, and one school of thought regarding sales methodologies would have us believe that tone is everything. But tone is only a small part of the picture. Even in 2024, where virtual sales rooms dominate, nonverbal communication and the corresponding practices of neurolinguistic programming are just as important as ever.

A successful pitch depends on your ability to build strong frames, or perspectives. Everyone uses frames, whether they realize it or not, and every social encounter brings frames together, but maintaining one’s frame and influencing that of the other became a major tenet of Oren Kloff’s book “Pitch Anything”, in which he argues for subduing the croc brain, before building trust to close the deal. He writes that, “Only one frame will dominate after the exchange, and the other frames will be subordinate to the winner.”

First elucidated in Richard Bandler and John Grinder’s 1975 book The Structure of Magic I, Neurolinguistic programming (NLP) is an approach to communication, personal development and psychotherapy considered pseudoscientific. With some studies promoting and some repudiating the claims, NLP remains in the public consciousness, with The Spectator describing the practice in a recent article as a “hodgepodge of strange hacks and corny aphorisms supposed to change an individual’s thoughts and behaviors.” Despite the controversies around efficacy, NLP has garnered support from a diverse group, amongst them Warren Buffett, Bill Clinton, Barack Obama, Oprah Winfrey, Russell Brand, and Jimmy Carr.

In this article, we will condense some of the understandings from NLP so that you can continue to subdue the croc brain and dominate the sales process.

1. Body Language in Virtual Sales Rooms

In sales, nonverbal communication such as maintaining eye contact and adopting an open posture is vital, as it establishes trust with prospects. Nonverbal communication makes up a huge amount of the contextual information we take for granted in a conversation. Experts estimate that ignoring nonverbal communication altogether would cause the listener to miss up to 60% of their communication.

By establishing a welcoming and open body language in a call, you allow the prospect to ease into the conversation, and in turn, optimise your chances at connecting well with them.

2. Active Listening

Prospects are always anticipating their reception. We are bred to be attentive to the affect of those around us because it’s the most accurate predictor of our safety as a child. When we grow up, this instinct remains, and is translated into an impulse to determine the feelings of those around us. As this process is always happening with those around you, make sure to be attentive to what your prospect is saying and reflect it back with compelling, sensory language that can simultaneously captivate and comfort them.

The NLP methodology involves injecting statements into the conversation to redirect it and programme the responses. In order to do this, you have to have a good sense of the conversation, understand where your prospect is coming from, and adapt your responses to remain in keeping with those thoughts and sentiments. Active listening is how all of that starts.

3. Mirroring Your Prospect

One way to effectively build trust and rapport with a prospect is to subtly match and reflect their body language, mannerisms, and words. This process, known as mirroring, has been known to put prospects at ease and generate positive responses. The key here is not being too overt with this process. Immediately repeating your prospect’s words to them verbatim or very obviously and precisely adjusting your body language to reflect theirs immediately after it changes, it’ll probably come off as strange.

In cold emails or follow-up communications, mirroring the language and tone of your prospect can make the messages more relatable and engaging. If a prospect uses specific jargon or phrases in their industry, incorporating similar terms in your emails can make your outreach feel more personalized and relevant. As jargon also functions as a sort of differentiating discourse marker, allowing experts to communicate smoothly but barring non-experts. Mirroring jargon with prospects also positions oneself as a peer, which is important for setting frame!

4. Embedded commands

Embedded commands are key to NLP and are composed of subtle linguistic patterns that inject suggestions or commands within a normal conversation. By embedding commands within your speech, you can influence the customer’s subconscious mind and guide their thoughts and actions.

In your email campaigns, you can leverage embedded commands to encourage desired actions. For a SaaS product, instead of saying, “Click here to schedule a demo,” you could say, “As you explore how [SaaS Product] can transform your workflow, see what our demo can reveal.” This subtly nudges the prospect to take the next step without appearing pushy.

5. Reframing

The “frame” is the perspective of you or the prospect, so reframing involves shifting the perspective or meaning of a situation to create a more positive or beneficial interpretation.

First elucidated by Aaron T. Beck in the 1960s, cognitive therapy’s study of depressed patients who observed the effects of their thoughts and then consciously shifted them was know by Beck as “cognitive restructuring”, and it’s this that came to be known as reframing, a technique effective in treatment of depression and other predicaments.

Reframing can help you handle objections and turn potential obstacles into selling opportunities. When a customer presents an objection or expresses a concern, reframe it by highlighting the positive aspects or offering a different perspective. For instance, if they say, “Your software seems expensive,” respond with, “I understand your concern. However, when you consider the reduction in operational inefficiency and the resulting cost savings, our solution offers significant long-term value.” This shifts the focus from immediate cost to overall value and ROI, making the objections work in your favor.

While these NLP and psychotherapy insights may not be foolproof magic, they offer valuable techniques that can be strategically applied to your sales process.

All of the insights involve mastering one’s physical reaction to prospects, thereby allowing participation from prospects if they so desire! Understanding and utilizing body language in virtual meetings, practicing active listening during discovery calls, using mirroring in email outreach, embedding commands in call-to-actions, and reframing objections in conversations are practical ways to enhance engagement and close more deals. Incorporating these techniques systematically can improve your overall sales effectiveness and foster stronger, trust-based relationships with your prospects.

Super Benji automatically mirrors the language of the prospect using neurolinguistic insights. Book a call here.

Relevance or personalisation – which is more importantfor 2024?

Personalization has long been the industry standard in B2B. Moreover, according to a recent study by Salesforce, 62% of B2B buyers expect vendors to personalize their offers based on their needs. In comparison to B2C, the sales process is longer and more complex, the services are more complex, and B2B buyers are more ‘rational’ and long-term than consumers. According to one study by 6sense, B2B buyers refrain from engaging sellers directly until they’re approximately 70% through their buying process. The decision-making process is increasingly long and complex and features many key interests. Indeed, a recent study showed younger customers actively shun businesses that lack some form of personalized experience, with 49% of Gen Z left less likely to purchase after an impersonal interaction. There is a generational gap regarding personalization.

Millennial buyers aged 25-44 are increasingly in decision-making roles and are expected to make up 75% of business buying teams in 2024. These buyers are digitally motivated and self-guided in their solution research process. To meet and exceed evolving customer expectations, brands must use data and analytics to better understand their customers and harness the power of AI to create authentic interactions and the hyper-personalized experience that customers now expect. Not only is personalization expected, especially by younger generations of buyers, but it’s also a dealbreaker for buyers who anticipate personalized and targeted communication.

Although there is a general consensus that personalization is preferable, nay, required, for B2B buyers, there still exist two schools of thought regarding ‘relevance’. As Brennan et al. summarized in their 2014 paper “Improving relevance in B2B research”, there exist two ‘camps’ within the marketing discipline: “the camp that considers practitioner relevance to be a sine qua non and the camp that considers relevance to be, at best, a distraction from serious research and, at worst, a threat to the quality of academic research.” Although this distinction was first elucidated in 2011, there have been a score of articles in recent months decrying personalization in favor of relevance, with titles like, “Relevancy Beats Personalization for B2B Outreach and Marketing”. Given that the academic B2B community cannot be clear about the role of relevance in their research, it’s

Personalization, which could be more elaborately termed ‘building personal relationships and sculpting individualized purchasing experiences’, is a key to B2B sales, and in 2024, the significance has never been more pronounced.

Marketers are aware of their customer desires, and data shows that most marketers believe personalization helps advance customer relationships, while a stunning 92% believe their prospects or customers expect a personalized experience. The State of the Connected Consumer report found that 64% of customers expect tailored engagement based on past interactions, but 52% say companies are generally impersonal. The report also found that 71% of customers expect companies to communicate with them in real-time.

Seventy-three percent of B2B customers expect companies to understand their unique needs and expectations according to Salesforce, and in an increasingly competitive inbox environment, personalized and targeted communication is more important than ever, and first-name personalization is the lowest echelon of personalization. Despite the simplicity of this type of customizable experience, research indicates that using personalization in an email body may lead to a 28.57% increase in click-throughs.

Even if you don’t use Spotify and Netflix regularly, you can probably still appreciate that personalization is essential to a modern customer experience; all the content available on the most popular entertainment websites is pushed according to your watch history, and generic experiences fall flat compared to those. According to Deloitte analysis, Amazon and Netflix achieved high customer conversion rates and customer retention, which translates into increased revenue.

The Deloitte report “Hyper-personalizing the customer experience using data, analytics, and AI” features a diagram indicating how the personalization maturity curve will unfold. It shows how, when personalization moves beyond rules-based segmentation, behavioral recommendations, and omni-channel optimization, predictive personalization will allow for anticipatory analysis, and allow for engagement of each customer separately.

They evidently envision this as a major change in the way that personalization is actioned in sales spaces, as they speak about hyper-personalization in no uncertain terms, and how

“This segment-of-one approach allows you to optimize whom you target with key messages and offers through the most relevant and appropriate channels,” and they envision it as “a holistic marketing strategy that fundamentally changes the way organizations interact with customers and should be treated as an evolving and maturing practice that’s embedded throughout the customer journey and part of every marketing campaign.”

Although many consumers have come to expect personalization, many can also be put off by hyper-personalization. Sixty-nine percent of consumers appreciate personalization as long as it is based on data they have explicitly shared with a business. To the average user, personalization has become synonymous with the ever-present third-party cookie; requesting access to reams of specific data in order to optimize for you can feel as much an infringement on one’s personal liberties as it is an optimization of it. There’s a lot to lose. A Gartner study found that brands risk losing 38% of their existing customer base because of poor personalization efforts, and 76% of consumers get frustrated when they can’t find a personalized experience with a brand. As Alex Elliott noted pithily, “Personalization without relevance is just creepy.”

One theory-based research paper from 2023 noted the widening gap between theory and praxis in B2B marketing: Ojanvisu’s paper suggests different epistemic underpinnings of B2B marketing, and in the course of the paper, surmises how “B2B scholars are urged to think beyond their subspecialized silos and acknowledge how the business environment and the various strands of B2B marketing congruently shape B2B marketing relevance, while also embracing research methods that bring them closer to business practice.” In other words, B2B marketing theory is a far cry from reality.

To be relevant, your team needs to ensure they’re delivering relevant engagement to prospects who are in the market. In this way, relevancy also implies lead qualification, as attempting to pitch to a prospect not in the market is the epitome of irrelevant, despite their other personal qualities.

To be more relevant, your team can use data-driven insights and analytics to understand customer behavior, preferences, and real-time needs. In turn, teams can adopt dynamic segmentation and utilize behavioral triggers and real-time data to create dynamic customer segments and campaigns that target certain events in the app. Moreover, then using the situational data, including location or time, can allow contextual messaging, before A/B testing to reiterate the success of the relevant messaging.

With the development of various AI hyper-personalization, the right cloud-based technologies are also important, including embracing an omnichannel strategy. Deploying cloud applications with effective database management capabilities that offer contextual relevant data, constant availability, real-time access, global access, and scalability. In turn, you can harness insights surrounding all manner of relevancy metrics, including geolocation, firmographic information, buyer persona, buyer status, and more, all of which allows for further relevance.

But as Mohan Muthoo noted very aptly, although we talk a lot about personalization being less important than relevance, we should turn our attention to the “relevance of the personalization.”

Whilst a relevant email might have you placed in the right situation with appropriate timing, for example in front of a currently-hiring manager, and a personalized email might segue from an untethered observation into a pitch, a combination of relevant insight with personalized observation is ideal. To analyze whether the insight is relevant or just personalized, consider the email from the POV of the prospect: if it would annoy you, it might the prospect too. Especially with the new rules of outbound impending – the threshold for being seen in a prospect’s inbox is much higher than in ZIRP days, long-past.

The LinkedIn B2B Benchmark report supports these findings. Given the top two priorities of B2B companies involve “Improving B2B measurement tools and relying on data and insights to demonstrate effectiveness”, and then “Creating relevant and useful thought leadership and content for customers”, brands are turning their attention to how they can leverage data, and how they can deliver relevant content to their customers, and undoubtedly the two are also going hand-in-hand.

Now, what Deloitte counts as hyper-personalization might well be merely a crossover of relevance and personalization. This newest mode of interacting with customers also has the added benefit of accomplishing every CMO desire by “Driving business growth through re-imagined platform and service design”, “Employing new marketing strategies and tools to drive growth and reduce costs”, “creating and ensuring a consistent, personalized, and memorable brand experience across all media through a deeper understanding of customer needs and relevant touch points, and finally, “making more data-driven decisions”. In this vision, the CX is improved, revenue maximized, and cost reduced. A host of interactive technologies are set to be ushered onto the scene.

These mechanisms seek to gather relevancy and personalizing proxies. Data-driven content generation, in-moment customer journeys, and next-best-action engines serve to offer the most personalized and relevant experience. To preferentially value relevance over personalization would be to involve oneself in an unnecessary semantic discussion. Hyper-personalization would include relevance by definition, at least by Deloitte’s definition, as they write that “with cost-consciousness still top of mind, it’s more important than ever to spend budgets wisely, optimizing your marketing approach to target customers with relevant and contextualized offers.” At the heart of it, they conclude that “When the relevant data is gathered, implementing a method of targeting customers with the correct content can be achieved through technology.”

With Burger King’s recent announcement of their dynamic pricing strategy, it’s never been a more perfect time for both hyper-personalization and hyper-relevance to continue to optimize customer experience, and in so doing, reduce operational costs.

Super Benji leverages advanced AI to send hyper-personalized and contextually relevant emails and messages, ensuring your team connects with prospects in the most impactful way possible.

Hook, Line, and Sinker: How to Write Great Sales Hooks

In the world of B2B sales, hooks are not just mere conversation starters; they are the catalyst that determines whether a prospect is intrigued or indifferent.

Each word, punctuation mark, and statistic must be viewed as a crucial piece of a meticulously constructed puzzle, designed to foster engagement. The goal is clear: to captivate, capture, and convert. With the right hook, your message transcends being merely seen — it’s felt, remembered, and acted upon.

A hook is more than just a preamble. It’s a tool to distinguish yourself, pique curiosity, and set the tone for the rest of the content. Astute writers invest considerable time in crafting the hook, and you should too. So without further ado, here are some effective tips and techniques for writing hooks, peppered with real-world examples for inspiration.

1. Speak directly to the reader

The most effective copy engages the reader. However, many writers fall into the trap of being overly self-focused. You know, copy that’s all about them and not about the audience.

Whether you’re penning a blog post or a sales letter, it needs to feel like it’s tailored for the reader. This can be achieved by swapping words like “us” and “we” with “me” and “my,” for instance. A whopping 80% of marketers concur that personalised content is more effective.

It’s all too easy to become fixated on performance, KPIs, and forget that you’re communicating with real people.

2. Incorporate an intriguing or shocking statistic to keep readers hooked.

This is a technique I frequently employ in my personal and client projects. According to a study by McKinsey & Company, using data to make smarter marketing decisions can boost marketing productivity by 15-20%. It’s one of the most effective ways to engage readers and substantiate the points you make.

3. Ask a question relevant to the audience

Engaging readers is paramount to good content and copy. Otherwise, they won’t be compelled to read the entire message. A relevant question signals to people that they have found the right resource, which helps them absorb the content better.

Ask the audience a question about the problem they’re experiencing, the symptoms of the problem they have, the solution they want, or the values or beliefs they hold.

4. Tell a personal story

We’ve used them to communicate since we were cavemen painting wall art and hunting with spears. Despite our advancements, stories still play a pivotal role. They evoke emotion, stimulate key parts of the brain, and establish a connection with others.

And, what’s one of the best stories to tell? Your own. Think of a story that relates to what you’re writing about. Was there inspiration for your brand or product? How did you get the idea for the topic?

Stories are also capable of helping readers see themselves in the story, giving the audience hope, or creating an emotional investment in your brand. You’re revealing a personal side that many don’t in business, which will make you stand out for the better.

5. Make an analogy or use a metaphor

A dash of creativity can go a long way in writing. Whether you’re writing a blog post or landing page, a little linguistic flourish never hurts. One way to do so is with an analogy or metaphor.

You’ve probably heard the analogy, “Life is a marathon, not a sprint.” A metaphor, on the other hand, might be something like “The calm lake reflected like a mirror.”

6. Go against the grain

Be a contrarian and say something that challenges the norm in your industry. Dare to be different. Say something unexpected. Challenging the status quo with a different viewpoint will require data or case studies to substantiate your idea. You would need to be equipped with several concrete reasons why this is the case.

7. Leverage recent news stories and ride the wave of their popularity.

Newsjacking is a term coined when marketers use the latest news to gain traction for their own material; the benefit of newsjacking is that you ride the news like a wave, thereby generating extra traffic for your own niche.

You can start by looking up industry news by searching for things like:

Industry + news

Industry + breaking news

Industry + breakthrough

8. Make your hook benefit-oriented

Highlight what’s in it for them. How will reading your email or taking your offer benefit them? Be crystal clear.

You can also try writing compelling hooks by utilising strong emotions like curiosity, urgency, intrigue, humour, or social proof. These emotions are not just buzzwords; they are backed by compelling statistics that underline their effectiveness in engaging readers.

For instance, a study by the Journal of Marketing Research found that curiosity-evoking headlines generated 150% more click-through rates than their non-curiosity counterparts. Similarly, according to a report by Outbrain, headlines that incorporated elements of intrigue or mystery had a 14% higher click-through rate and a 12% boost in subsequent conversions.

Moreover, the power of humour should not be underestimated. A study published in the Journal of Marketing found that ads with a humorous slant had a 50% higher recall rate among viewers.

Finally, the concept of social proof is backed by compelling data. According to Nielsen, 83% of consumers trust recommendations from their peers over advertising, underlining the power of social proof in influencing decisions.

These statistics underscore the importance of leveraging emotions when crafting your hooks, demonstrating that they are not just effective, but essential tools in engaging and converting your audience. The hook is one of the most crucial elements of good writing. It reels readers in like a fish and keeps their eyes glued to the page until they’ve devoured every word.

Remember: your hook is a filter. You filter attention towards you.

Get it wrong, and you filter the wrong attention.

Get it right, and you filter the right attention!

Now, let’s shift gears and talk about a game-changer in the B2B sales landscape – Benji. Benji is not just a tool; it’s a partner in the sales process, tirelessly working to ensure every prospect is reached at the right time with the right message.

Imagine having a personal assistant who could take the stress out of keeping up with every prospect, crafting the perfect subject line, and identifying the right moment to reach out. That’s Benji for you. This innovative SaaS product is revolutionising the sales process by automating personalised email outreach and lead nurturing.

Benji is a staunch advocate for the end of spam and the beginning of value-driven, personalised communication. With its ability to scrape trillions of data sources and identify real-world triggers, Benji ensures timely and relevant outreach that builds trust and rapport with prospects.

Benji does all the heavy lifting, freeing up salespeople to focus on what they do best – building relationships and closing deals. But Benji is not just about automation; it’s about personalisation. It understands that in the world of B2B sales, every word, punctuation, and statistic matters. It crafts email hooks that are not just seen, but felt, remembered, and acted upon.

So, if you’re looking to transform your B2B sales process, give Benji a try. It’s not just a tool, it’s a philosophy. It’s a commitment to value-driven, personalised communication that resonates with your prospects. With Benji, you’re not just sending emails; you’re building relationships.

In the world of B2B sales, that makes all the difference. So, are you ready to take your email outreach to the next level with Benji?

The Anatomy of a Perfect Cold Email

Where attention goes, energy flows, and earning the right to your prospect’s time in a busy inbox has never been more challenging. Crafting the perfect cold email is a bit of an art form, one that I’ve honed over years of practice. The anatomy of a perfect sales email toes the line between earning the prospect’s attention, relating to them, getting into their world, attempting to relate, describing your offering, establishing trust, and generally explaining your new role in a stranger’s life.

Every day, I send out numerous cold emails, and let me tell you, avoiding those pesky mental spam filters is step number one. It’s all about showing you’ve done your homework. For instance, if I see someone’s hiring quality writers, I might start with, “I noticed you’re hiring for quality writers. Typically, that means…” This signals that I understand their priorities right from the get-go, and it helps keep my emails from being identified as spam. According to a study by Return Path, 21% of emails never make it to the inbox. Understanding your recipient’s needs can help dodge these mental filters. Additionally, take into account elements such as avoiding overly promotional language and steering clear of spam trigger words like “free” or “urgent.” Personalization ensures that the email is relevant to the recipient, which is a crucial aspect to avoid mental spam filters.

In this article, we dissect the perfect cold email to understand its constituent parts. Whilst each writer might have a different idea of what a cold email should look like, everyone will agree that it involves a few things.

Hook – catch attention and hold it

Credibility – introduce oneself and your reputation

Offer value – solve the problem, or otherwise lend a hand

Soft ask – gauge their interest, without being demanding

Following up – getting a suitable next step

The Hook: Subject Line and Preview Text

A lot of people swear by the subject line as the most crucial first impression. In reality, after you’ve built some rapport through marketing efforts, your name alone can carry weight. Folks associate your name positively, making them more likely to open your email. But let’s not forget about the preview text. This is like a peephole into the content of your email. A shorter subject line means a longer preview text, and trust me, getting this right is just as important for that all-important open rate. According to Invesp, 47% of email recipients open emails based on the subject line alone, but combining this with a well-crafted preview text can boost your open rates by 26%. A compelling subject line paired with a strong preview text can create curiosity and provide enough information to entice the recipient to open the email. Keep testing different variations of your subject lines and preview text to determine what works best for your audience.

Establishing Credibility

So, who am I, and why should the recipient care? Establishing credibility is crucial. I always highlight my relevant experience or mutual connections. For example, I might say, “Having worked with clients like Acme, we typically find that they face problems such as…” This helps build trust, indicates you understand the specific context of the business problem, and data from LinkedIn shows that personalized emails that mention a mutual connection or relevant experience can increase reply rates by up to 29%. Including testimonials, case studies, or any affiliations with reputable organizations can further solidify your credibility. Additionally, providing links to your professional profiles or website can offer the recipient a quick way to verify your credentials.

Offering Value

Now, onto the meat of the email – why should they care? It’s all about offering clear, tangible value. I make sure to explain exactly how I can help solve a problem they’re facing. Specificity is key here. For example, I might say, “In my twenty years at Acme, I encountered a number of C-suite executives who had difficulty with GTM strategy.” This both establishes credibility and frames oneself as providing an answer. According to HubSpot, emails that clearly outline a value proposition can increase engagement rates by as much as 69%. Make sure your value proposition is not only clear but also tailored to the specific needs and pain points of the recipient. A well-crafted value proposition can differentiate your email from the myriad of other emails the recipient receives daily.

On the other hand, a value proposition might not necessarily involve a problem statement but might merely offer value. Take Y-Combinator CEO Michael Siebel for example – his 2019 YC video details how he tries to answer all cold emails (exemplifying willingness to be pitched to), and how he is interested in the problem you’re trying to solve, what your solution is, have you launched, do you have growth, how big you think the market could be, do you have co-founders, can you code, and do you know something about the problem that you think is controversial. It’s that last point that provides the most value, by proffering privileged information.

Soft Ask

When it comes to the ask, I like to keep it low-effort and easy to act upon. Rather than requesting a lengthy meeting, I might suggest a quick chat or offer a resource they can review on their own time. “Would you be open to a 10-minute call next week to discuss how we can help?” Alternatively, you could try the Chris Voss no-oriented question “Would you be opposed to a call?”. This is particularly powerful, as they imply your prospect’s choice to ‘be opposed’, creating a sense of safety and building rapport.

Research by Yesware indicates that emails with a soft ask have a 30% higher response rate than those that make a more demanding request. The key here is to make your ask as frictionless as possible. Offer flexible scheduling options, or suggest a brief and straightforward initial interaction. This lowers the perceived commitment from the recipient, making them more likely to agree.

Following Up

Follow-ups are a critical part of the process. Most people who read the full email will reply, but let’s be honest, most don’t get around to reading it right away. A polite reminder can make a big difference. Emails that would’ve elicited a response a few years ago are immediately filed away under spam: “Just checking in to see if you had a chance to review my previous email. I’m confident we can add value to your team and would love to discuss further.” Such fake humility and presumption on your part will not lead anywhere. Instead, try adding value in a new way in your follow-up. According to Boomerang, follow-up emails can increase response rates by 48%. Don’t be discouraged by an initial lack of response; persistence pays off. However, it’s essential to strike a balance between being persistent and respectful of the recipient’s time. Regular follow-ups, spaced a few days apart, can keep your email top of mind without coming across as overly aggressive.

Conclusion

Gaining a prospect’s attention in a crowded inbox is no small feat. The anatomy of a perfect sales email involves grabbing attention, relating to the recipient, offering value, and establishing trust. By understanding and applying these elements, I’ve been able to make meaningful connections and drive real results, one cold email at a time. Remember, a well-structured cold email can make all the difference in turning an opportunity into a success. Each element—from avoiding mental spam filters to crafting a compelling subject line, establishing credibility, offering value, making a soft ask, and following up—plays a critical role in the overall effectiveness of your email. Keep refining your approach, and you’ll see a significant improvement in your response rates and overall success.

Benji has been trained with thousands of hours of theory to produce succinct, effective cold emails and LinkedIn messages. Try the demo today and optimise your outreach and engagement.