Sales Follow-Up Cadence — Local Government Edition
A defined sequence of touchpoints and timing intervals for following up with prospects after initial contact or proposal delivery. Ensures consistent engagement without overwhelming the buyer.
Purpose
To maintain prospect engagement through systematic follow-up, prevent leads from going cold, and improve conversion rates through disciplined outreach timing.
Scope
Covers follow-up activities across all deal stages from post-initial-contact through to post-proposal delivery, including phone, email, and social touchpoints.
Prerequisites
- CRM system with task and reminder functionality configured
- Approved email templates for each follow-up stage
- Defined escalation paths when prospects become unresponsive
- Understanding of the typical sales cycle length for your offerings
Supports Local Government Act compliance, freedom of information requirements, and public accountability standards.
Step-by-Step Procedure
Set Up the Cadence in the CRM
Configure the follow-up sequence for the prospect based on the deal stage and priority level.
- 1.1Select the appropriate cadence template (e.g., post-discovery, post-proposal, re-engagement)
- 1.2Assign the prospect to the cadence in the CRM sequencing tool
- 1.3Verify the start date and first touchpoint are scheduled correctly
- Use different cadences for different deal stages — one size does not fit all
Execute First Follow-Up Touchpoint
Deliver the first follow-up within 24-48 hours of the triggering event (meeting, proposal, or initial contact).
- 2.1Send a personalised email referencing the previous interaction and next steps
- 2.2Include a specific question or call to action to prompt a response
- 2.3Log the touchpoint in the CRM with the date, channel, and content summary
- Reference something specific from your last conversation to show attentiveness
Deliver Value-Add Touchpoints
Send two to three follow-ups over the next 7-14 days, each providing new value such as a relevant article, case study, or insight.
- 3.1Select content that directly relates to the prospect expressed challenges
- 3.2Alternate between email and phone calls to vary the channel
- 3.3Keep each message brief and focused on one piece of value
- 3.4Log every touchpoint in the CRM
- Do not ask for a meeting in every message — provide value first, ask second
Make a Direct Phone Call
Place a direct phone call to the prospect to check in, address any concerns, and advance the conversation.
- 4.1Prepare two to three talking points before dialling
- 4.2If voicemail, leave a concise message with a specific reason to call back
- 4.3Document the call outcome in the CRM immediately
- Calling at different times of day increases your chance of connecting
- Voicemail followed by an email creates a multi-channel touchpoint
Send a Social Media Touchpoint
Engage with the prospect on professional social media to stay visible and add a personal connection.
- 5.1Like or comment on a recent post by the prospect or their council
- 5.2Share a relevant piece of content and tag the prospect if appropriate
- 5.3Send a brief direct message if the platform relationship supports it
- Keep social interactions genuine and professional — avoid being salesy on social
Evaluate Prospect Responsiveness
After completing the initial cadence (typically 5-7 touchpoints over 2-3 weeks), assess whether the prospect is engaged, unresponsive, or has disengaged.
- 6.1Review all logged touchpoints and responses in the CRM
- 6.2Categorise the prospect as Active, Unresponsive, or Opted Out
- 6.3For Active prospects, schedule the next phase of follow-up
- 6.4For Unresponsive prospects, proceed to the break-up message
- Lack of response does not always mean lack of interest — timing may be wrong
Send the Break-Up Message
For unresponsive prospects, send a final message that clearly states you will stop reaching out unless they indicate otherwise.
- 7.1Acknowledge that now may not be the right time
- 7.2Summarise the value you could provide in one sentence
- 7.3Provide a simple way to re-engage (e.g., reply to this email or book a call link)
- Break-up messages often generate higher response rates than any other touchpoint
Move to Long-Term Nurture or Close Loop
Based on the break-up response (or lack thereof), either transition the prospect to a long-term marketing nurture sequence or close the opportunity.
- 8.1If no response, move the prospect to the marketing nurture list
- 8.2If they respond with future interest, set a CRM reminder for re-engagement
- 8.3Update the opportunity stage and close reason in the CRM
- Always close the loop in the CRM — ghost opportunities pollute pipeline data
Quality Checkpoints
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Expected Outcomes
Percentage of prospects who respond to at least one cadence touchpoint, targeting above 30%.
Percentage of cadences that result in a scheduled meeting or next step, targeting above 15%.
Percentage of cadences fully executed without steps being skipped, targeting above 90%.
Frequently Asked Questions
Should follow-up cadences be automated?
Semi-automated cadences work best. Use automation to schedule reminders and send initial templates, but personalise each message before it goes out. Fully automated sequences often feel impersonal and underperform.
What should I do if a prospect asks me to follow up later?
Pause the current cadence, set a CRM reminder for the requested date, and send a brief confirmation email. When the date arrives, resume with a fresh touchpoint referencing the original conversation.
What is the ideal spacing between follow-up attempts?
For the first week, space touchpoints 1-2 days apart. In the second week, extend to every 2-3 days. After 2 weeks, weekly contact is appropriate. Adjust based on the prospect engagement signals.
How many touchpoints should be in a follow-up cadence?
A typical cadence includes 6-8 touchpoints over 2-3 weeks. High-value enterprise prospects may warrant 10-12 touchpoints over 4-6 weeks. The key is to add value with each touchpoint rather than simply "checking in."
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