80% of B2B sales require 5 or more touchpoints. Most cold sequences either stop after 2 emails or send 10 identical “just checking in” follow-ups that erode trust with each send. Sequences with 4–6 touchpoints across 2–3 weeks convert at 3x the rate of single-email outreach — but only when each touchpoint adds something new.
The failure mode for cold sequences falls into two categories. The first is giving up too early: one or two emails, no response, move on. This misses 80% of the sales that require persistence. The second is persisting the wrong way: sending the same message five times with different subject lines, which signals to the buyer that you have nothing new to say.
The root cause in both cases is the same — treating follow-ups as reminders rather than as new arguments. A follow-up that says “just checking in” is asking the buyer to do work for you (remember who you are, find time to respond) without giving them anything in return. A follow-up that leads with a new data point, a new angle, or a lower-friction ask is a different email, not a repeat of the first one.
Before rebuilding your sequence, audit the follow-ups you’re currently sending:
Five emails, three weeks, one new thing per email:
Email 1 — Day 1 (problem-first cold pitch, under 75 words): Name the specific problem, state that you solve it, and make one specific ask. Under 75 words. If you can’t explain why you’re emailing in 75 words, you haven’t diagnosed the problem clearly enough yet.
Email 2 — Day 3 (add value): Lead with a relevant data point, a short case study, or a piece of research that’s genuinely useful to this type of buyer — whether or not they ever reply to you. You’re demonstrating that you know their world, not just following up.
Email 3 — Day 7 (reframe the problem): Approach the same underlying problem from a different angle. If email 1 was about the cost of the problem, email 3 might be about the competitive risk of not solving it. Different buyers will respond to different framings of the same problem.
Email 4 — Day 14 (lower the ask): Instead of “30 minutes,” offer something smaller — a 10-minute conversation, a specific resource, a quick question they can answer in one sentence. Reducing the friction of the ask often converts prospects who were interested but didn’t have the bandwidth for a full meeting.
Email 5 — Day 21 (respectful breakup): Be explicit. “I’ll stop reaching out after this — wanted to make sure it didn’t get lost. If the timing ever changes, [simple action they can take].” A breakup email that’s honest and leaves a clear path back gets a higher response rate than a sixth follow-up. It also preserves the relationship for a future moment when the timing is right.
Knowing whether your sequence structure is the problem — versus your targeting, your subject lines, or your value proposition — requires tracking at the touchpoint level. RightEngagement shows you exactly where prospects drop off in your sequence so you can fix the right email instead of rebuilding everything.
Related: If your sequence is structured but still not getting responses, see Cold Email That Gets Responses to diagnose the message itself.