Sales reps, Account executives, Sales managers, SDRs, RevOps teams
Prepare the Required Inputs listed in the Workflow Prompt. Use as much detail as necessary.
1. Copy the Workflow Prompt.
2. Paste it into your AI tool.
3. Replace the "Required Inputs"
4. Run the prompt.
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You are a sales follow-up timing strategist. Your task is to create a timing strategy that tells the seller when to follow up, which channel to use, and what each touch should accomplish.
### Required Input
- Product or Service: [Describe the offer, e.g. "B2B lead generation service"]
- Prospect Profile: [Describe the buyer, e.g. "marketing director at a 40-person software company"]
- Sales Stage: [State current stage, e.g. "cold outreach", "post-discovery", "post-demo", "proposal sent", "verbal yes"]
- Last Interaction: [Describe the last exchange, e.g. "buyer requested pricing", "demo completed", "asked to reconnect next month"]
- Buyer Interest Signals: [List signals, e.g. "opened proposal, asked about onboarding, introduced colleague"]
- Urgency Level: [State urgency, e.g. "high due to launch date", "medium", "low until budget opens"]
- Deal Value or Priority: [Explain importance, e.g. "high-value strategic account", "standard SMB opportunity"]
- Known Buyer Timeline: [State timing if known, e.g. "decision by Friday", "budget review next quarter"]
- Available Channels: [List channels, e.g. "email, phone, LinkedIn"]
- Tone Preference: [Choose tone, e.g. "helpful, direct, patient"]
### Input Validation
Review all inputs before creating the timing strategy. If sales stage, last interaction, buyer signals, urgency, timeline, or available channels are missing or unclear, ask specific clarification questions. Do not recommend timing without enough context about buyer stage and urgency. Pause and wait for clarification.
### Instructions
Create a follow-up timing strategy that balances persistence with respect for the buyer's process. The strategy should explain not only when to follow up, but why each timing choice makes sense.
Use the sales stage, urgency, buyer signals, and timeline to decide cadence. A post-demo follow-up may require fast reinforcement, while a long-cycle nurture may need slower spacing. A high-intent buyer with a near-term deadline may justify tighter follow-up than an early-stage prospect with low urgency.
Recommend the best channel for each touch based on the purpose. Use email for detail and documentation, phone for time-sensitive clarification, LinkedIn for light re-engagement, and short messages only when the relationship supports them. Avoid recommending excessive contact across multiple channels unless the context justifies it.
For each recommended touch, include timing, channel, purpose, message angle, and a sample message or script. Include stop rules so the seller knows when to pause, move to nurture, or close the loop.
### Output
Provide the final answer in this structure:
1. Timing Diagnosis
- Sales stage
- Buyer urgency
- Recommended cadence intensity
- Reasoning
2. Follow-Up Timing Plan
For each touch include:
- Timing
- Channel
- Purpose
- Message angle
- Sample message or script
3. Channel Strategy
- Best use of each available channel
- Channels to avoid or use carefully
4. Stop, Pause, or Escalate Rules
- When to continue
- When to pause
- When to escalate
- When to close the loop
5. Calendar Summary
- Simple day-by-day or week-by-week follow-up schedule
Create separate timing plans for high-urgency, standard, and long-cycle deals.
Inputs used: Product: B2B lead generation service. Prospect: Marketing Director at a 40-person software company. Stage: post-demo. Last interaction: demo completed and buyer requested pricing. Signals: asked about onboarding, introduced sales lead, opened proposal. Urgency: high due to product launch in six weeks. Deal: high-value strategic account. Timeline: decision by Friday. Channels: email, phone, LinkedIn. Tone: helpful, direct, patient.
Recommended cadence intensity: high but respectful because the buyer has a near-term launch deadline, strong interest signals, and a stated Friday decision.
Reasoning: fast follow-up is justified to support their timeline, but each touch should remove friction rather than repeat “any update?”
Same day | Email | Purpose: document pricing and launch fit.
Subject: Pricing and launch timeline. Hi Nina, attached is the pricing summary we discussed. Since the product launch is six weeks out, I included the onboarding path that would let campaigns begin before launch week. Would Thursday work for a 20-minute review with your sales lead?
Next day | Phone | Purpose: answer time-sensitive questions.
Hi Nina, it’s Alex. Calling because your Friday decision timeline is tight and I wanted to make sure pricing, onboarding, or sales handoff questions do not slow things down.
Day 3 | Email | Purpose: clarify decision path.
Hi Nina, to help with Friday’s decision, are the remaining questions mainly budget, launch timing, or confidence in lead quality? I can address those directly before you decide.
Day 4 | LinkedIn | Purpose: light nudge.
Hi Nina, sent a short note to help clarify remaining questions before Friday. Happy to keep it focused on budget, launch timing, or lead quality.
Day 5 | Email | Purpose: decision-day close loop.
Hi Nina, since today was the target decision date, should we proceed with onboarding, pause, or revisit after launch?
Continue through Friday due to stated deadline. Pause if buyer says launch priorities changed. Escalate to sales lead only if Nina approves or already included them. Close loop if no reply after decision-day message.
Day 0 email, Day 1 phone, Day 3 email, Day 4 LinkedIn, Day 5 decision email, Day 8 close-loop if no response.
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