How to Build a Sales Cadence That Books Meetings
A sales cadence is the difference between hoping prospects reply and systematically following up until they do. It’s a structured sequence of touches — across email, LinkedIn and sometimes calls — spaced over time. Build a good one and your outreach stops depending on memory and willpower.
What is a sales cadence?
A sales cadence is a defined, repeatable sequence of outreach touches aimed at a prospect over a set period, specifying the channel, timing and message of each step. It’s sometimes called a sequence or a flow. The point is consistency: every prospect gets the same well-designed series of touches instead of a one-off email and a maybe-follow-up.
LinkedIn + email in one sequence. Outboundry runs multichannel sequences that follow up automatically and stop the moment someone replies — so reps spend time on live conversations. See how it works →
Why a cadence matters
Most replies come from follow-ups, not the first touch — and without a cadence, follow-ups don’t happen consistently. A cadence ensures every prospect is worked properly, makes your outreach measurable (you can test and improve each step), and lets you scale without dropping people. (See cold email follow-up sequences.)
The elements of a cadence
- Number of touches — usually five to eight across the whole cadence.
- Channels — email, LinkedIn, and sometimes calls; multichannel out-performs single-channel.
- Timing — spacing between touches (a few business days is typical).
- Content — what each touch says; every one should add something.
- Duration — how long the whole cadence runs (often two to three weeks).
How to build a sales cadence (step by step)
- Define your audience and ICP.
- Choose your channels based on where they respond (email + LinkedIn for most B2B).
- Decide the number of touches and total duration.
- Map each step — channel, timing, and message.
- Write each touch to add value, ending with a breakup.
- Set the rule: stop the cadence the instant someone replies.
Example multichannel cadence
| Day | Channel | Touch |
|---|---|---|
| Day 1 | Connection request (no pitch) | |
| Day 2 | Opener: relevant problem + soft CTA | |
| Day 4 | First message (if connected) | |
| Day 6 | Value-add follow-up | |
| Day 9 | Nudge / resource | |
| Day 12 | Proof point + CTA | |
| Day 16 | Breakup |
Cadence best practices
- Add value at every touch; never “just checking in.”
- Personalize the opener on each channel.
- Keep messages short and stop on reply.
- Mind deliverability (email) and safe limits (LinkedIn).
- Test one step at a time and improve.
Automate your cadence
A multi-day, multichannel cadence is impossible to run by hand at volume — steps get missed and replies get followed up anyway. Sequencing tools run the cadence automatically and stop on reply. Outboundry runs email + LinkedIn cadences in one flow, branching on behavior and pausing the moment someone responds.
Frequently asked questions
What is a sales cadence?
A structured, repeatable sequence of outreach touches across channels, with defined timing and messaging for each step.
How many touches should a sales cadence have?
Usually five to eight over two to three weeks, ending in a breakup; most replies come from the follow-ups.
What channels should a cadence use?
Email and LinkedIn for most B2B (and calls if you do them) — multichannel cadences out-perform single-channel.
How do I run a sales cadence at scale?
Use a tool that automates the steps across channels and stops on reply, so nothing is missed and no one is over-contacted.
Run your cadence automatically
Outboundry runs your sales cadence automatically — email and LinkedIn in one sequence that stops on reply, on infrastructure that keeps you in the inbox. Start your free trial.