
Ever had a month that started great and ended scary? You close a few deals, you feel good, so you stop reaching out. Then the deals dry up, you panic, and you blast outreach again. That up-and-down ride is exhausting. The good news is, steady outreach is a habit you can build. Once you do, your pipeline stops swinging and starts holding.
Most people do outreach in bursts. They go quiet for a week, then cram a hundred emails into one frantic afternoon. It feels like effort. But it builds a pipeline that swings high and low. When you are busy closing, you stop reaching out. Two weeks later, you have nothing new coming in, so you scramble. The work was never the problem. The on-off pattern was.
Good sellers keep outreach steady, rain or shine. They reach out a little every day, not a lot once in a while. Closing a big deal does not stop them. Having a slow week does not panic them. The number stays roughly the same each morning. Over two weeks, that small daily habit fills the pipeline more than any frantic blast ever could. It is boring. It also works.
Give your best, freshest hours to reaching out, before the day pulls you away. Same time, every day, no exceptions.
"9:00 to 10:30 is outreach. It's on my calendar like a meeting I can't miss."
Count your outreach each day so the number is real, not a feeling. A simple tally keeps you honest and shows you the steady line.
"30 today. I write it down so I can see if I'm holding the line all week."
This is the one most people get wrong. Do not let a call or a quick sync eat your outreach time. Move meetings around it, not into it.
"Sorry, mornings are blocked. Can we do 2pm instead?"
The burst seller: Monday is packed with calls, so no outreach. Tuesday, same. Wednesday, a deal closes, so they celebrate and still skip it. By Friday the pipeline looks empty, so they panic and send eighty cold emails in one go. Next week, the cycle starts again.
The steady seller: Every morning, 9:00 to 10:30, they reach out. Thirty a day, give or take. A deal closing does not stop them. A slow day does not either. After two weeks, the pipeline is full and even, and there is no panic in sight.
Same hours in the week. A completely different pipeline. The steady seller never has a feast or a famine, because they never let the work bunch up.
You have got this when you hit a steady daily outreach level over two weeks. Pull up your tally and look at the line. Is it roughly the same each day? Or does it spike then flatline? A steady line, even a small one, beats a jagged one every time. When the closing weeks and the slow weeks look the same on your tracker, you have built the habit. Your pipeline will thank you.
Block the same time each morning for outreach, do a set number, and guard that block so nothing eats it. Reaching out a little every day beats a big once-a-week blast, because it stops your pipeline from swinging. The big mistake is doing outreach in bursts. You go quiet while closing, then panic when the deals dry up. Steady wins.
Your pipeline swings because your outreach comes in bursts. When you are busy closing, you stop reaching out, so two weeks later nothing new is coming in. Then you scramble to catch up, which causes the next dip. The fix is steady daily outreach, even a small amount, so the pipeline fills evenly instead of riding a rollercoaster.
Yes, especially then. It feels fine to stop reaching out while you are closing, but that is exactly how the famine starts. Today's closed deals were last month's outreach. If you go quiet now, your pipeline goes quiet in two weeks. Keep a small steady amount going every day, no matter how busy the closing gets.
Give it about two weeks of holding a steady daily level. Outreach has a lag, so today's effort shows up later, not today. That lag is why bursty sellers panic and steady ones do not. If you keep the daily number roughly even for two weeks, you will see the pipeline fill out and the swings flatten. Patience here is the whole game.
£7-10k flat fee. The methodology, delivered.
See Hire with Assessment