Module 5 · Chapter 3

Multi-channel sequences

11 min read

Email is the foundation of most outreach sequences, but it is not the only channel your prospects pay attention to. The most effective outreach campaigns layer multiple touchpoints — email, social interactions, phone calls, video messages, and more — into a coordinated sequence that meets prospects where they are.

Multi-channel outreach consistently outperforms single-channel campaigns. The reason is straightforward: different people prefer different channels, and a prospect who ignores your email might respond to a social touch. By diversifying your approach, you increase both visibility and the likelihood of a response.

+62%

Higher reply rate with multichannel

3+

Channels in top-performing sequences

2.5x

More meetings booked

The channels at your disposal

Before you design a multichannel sequence, understand what each channel does well and where it falls short.

Email

Email remains the workhorse of B2B outreach. It scales well, it is asynchronous (prospects respond on their own time), and it provides clear metrics for optimization. Email is best for detailed value propositions, resource sharing, and case studies. Its weakness is that inboxes are crowded, and cold emails face deliverability challenges.

Social touches

Social platforms are where your prospects build professional relationships and consume content. A well-timed social interaction — viewing a profile, engaging with their content, sending a connection request, or a direct message — creates familiarity before or after an email lands. Social touches are particularly effective as "warm-up" actions that make your email feel less cold.

The key to social touches is authenticity. Do not fire off generic connection requests or drop meaningless comments. Engage with content genuinely, leave thoughtful comments, and make your interactions feel human.

Phone calls

Cold calling is not dead — it is just different than it was a decade ago. A brief, well-timed call after a prospect has opened your emails or engaged with your social outreach can be extremely effective. The phone creates a level of personal connection that digital channels cannot match. It works best mid-sequence, once the prospect has some awareness of who you are.

Video messages

Personalized video messages (recorded via tools like Loom or Vidyard) stand out because so few people use them. A 60-second video where you walk through something specific to the prospect's business — their website, their product, their public metrics — demonstrates effort and builds trust. Use sparingly for high-value prospects.

Direct mail and gifts

For enterprise and strategic accounts, physical mail or a small, thoughtful gift can break through the noise in ways that digital channels cannot. A handwritten note or a relevant book to a C-suite prospect can open doors that hundreds of emails could not. This is expensive and does not scale, so reserve it for accounts that justify the investment.

Channel mixing strategies

Adding channels is not about doing more — it is about being strategic. Each channel should play a specific role in your sequence, and the order matters.

Strategy 1: Social-first warming

Start with social touches before sending your first email. This is especially effective for mid-market and enterprise prospects who are active on social platforms.

  • Day -3: View the prospect's social profile
  • Day -1: Engage with their content (like, comment, or share)
  • Day 1: Send your first email (they may recognize your name)
  • Day 3: Send a connection request with a brief, personalized note
  • Day 5: Email 2 (follow-up with value add)

The social-first approach works because it creates a sense of familiarity. When your email arrives, the prospect has already seen your name and face, making them significantly more likely to open and engage.

Strategy 2: Email-anchored with social reinforcement

This is the most common multichannel approach. Email is the primary channel, and social touches are layered in between emails to reinforce your message and maintain visibility.

  • Day 1: Email 1
  • Day 2: Social profile view
  • Day 4: Email 2
  • Day 6: Social engagement (comment on their post or share their content)
  • Day 9: Email 3
  • Day 11: Social direct message (short, value-driven)
  • Day 14: Email 4
  • Day 21: Email 5 (breakup)

Key insight

Social touches between emails keep you visible without adding to inbox fatigue. The prospect sees your name on their social feed and in their inbox — creating a "surround sound" effect that dramatically increases recall and response rates.

Strategy 3: Full-stack for high-value accounts

For strategic accounts where the deal size justifies the investment, use every channel available in a carefully orchestrated sequence.

  • Day -2: Social engagement (genuine comment on their content)
  • Day 1: Personalized email with research-backed opening
  • Day 3: Social connection request
  • Day 5: Email 2 with case study
  • Day 8: Phone call attempt (brief voicemail if no answer)
  • Day 10: Personalized video message via email
  • Day 14: Social direct message with a different angle
  • Day 18: Email 3 (value add)
  • Day 25: Phone call attempt 2
  • Day 30: Breakup email

Rules for effective multichannel sequences

Multichannel outreach can easily go wrong if you approach it without discipline. Here are the rules that separate effective multichannel from annoying multichannel.

1. Keep a consistent message across channels

Your email, social message, and phone script should tell the same story, adapted to each channel's format. If your email is about improving pipeline velocity, your social touch should not suddenly pivot to brand awareness. Consistency builds trust; inconsistency builds confusion.

2. Respect channel norms

Each channel has its own unwritten rules. Emails can be slightly longer and more formal. Social messages should be conversational and brief. Phone calls should be warm and to the point. A social message that reads like a cold email feels out of place and gets ignored — or worse, reported.

3. Do not double-touch on the same day

Sending an email and a social message on the same day feels aggressive. Space your touches across channels so there is always at least one day between any two interactions. The goal is presence, not pressure.

Watch out

Multi-channel outreach amplifies both good and bad targeting. If you are reaching the wrong person across three channels, you are three times as annoying. Make sure your targeting and messaging are solid before adding channels.

4. Track everything in one place

One of the biggest challenges with multichannel outreach is keeping track of what happened where. You need a system — whether that is your outreach platform, your CRM, or a combination — that logs every interaction across every channel so you have a unified view of each prospect's journey.

5. Automate what you can, personalize what you must

Emails can be largely automated with personalization variables. Social touches often require manual effort (though some platforms help automate profile views and connection requests). Phone calls are inherently manual. The key is to automate the repeatable parts so you have time to personalize the touches that matter most.

Measuring multichannel performance

When you run multichannel sequences, attribution gets more complex. A prospect might open your email, check your social profile, and then reply to a later email. Which channel "caused" the reply?

The honest answer is that you will never have perfect attribution, and that is fine. What you should track:

  • Overall sequence reply rate: The metric that matters most. Compare multichannel sequences against email-only sequences to validate the lift.
  • Reply channel distribution: Where do replies actually come in — email, social DM, or phone? This tells you which channels resonate with your audience.
  • Social acceptance and engagement rates: Are prospects accepting your connection requests? Are they engaging with your content? Low rates may indicate your social approach needs work.
  • Time to first reply: Multichannel sequences often generate faster replies because they create more touch density without overwhelming a single channel.

Multichannel outreach takes more effort to set up and manage, but the payoff is substantial. Start with email-anchored social reinforcement — it is the easiest to implement and delivers the biggest lift. Then layer in additional channels as you build confidence and capacity.

In the next chapter, we will explore how conditional logic can make your sequences even smarter by adapting to prospect behavior in real time.