In 2014 I was walking into logistics offices in Chennai with a friend, pitching computer services cold with no appointments and no introductions. In 2026 I am running AI-powered outbound engines for B2B SaaS companies across India, the US, and the UK.
A lot has changed. The channels are different. The tools are different. The buyer's inbox is more crowded than it has ever been. What has not changed: the fundamentals of what makes a business willing to have a conversation with you.
What works in 2026
Cold email is not dead. It is crowded. There is a difference. Crowded means the bar has risen. Generic cold email gets ignored at a rate that was unimaginable five years ago. Genuine cold email still gets replies at rates that justify the investment.
The numbers from our current campaigns using three-layer personalisation — account intelligence from Clay, contextual research, and lived experience from the personal narrative repository:
What kills cold email in 2026: automated warmup, primary domain sending, fake personalisation, CTAs that ask for too much, and sequences that follow up without adding value. All fixable — and all covered in earlier posts.
LinkedIn automation tools are increasingly detected and restricted. The accounts I have seen restricted mid-campaign belong to founders running Dripify, Expandi, or Phantombuster sequences. Manual LinkedIn outreach — real humans, real profiles, real DMs — still works at meaningful rates.
The sequence that consistently produces these numbers:
Profile visit — creates familiarity before the connection request arrives
Non-salesy connection request — genuinely personalised, no pitch in the note
First DM after acceptance — conversation starter, not a pitch
One follow-up — new angle if no reply within 5–7 days
Email fallback — if LinkedIn stalls, move to cold email with LinkedIn context as the opener
This sequence takes more time per contact than automated outreach. For high-value accounts it is worth it. For lower-value accounts, cold email at scale with strong personalisation is more efficient.
I recently worked with an early-stage AI company on their GTM strategy. No ads. No heavy content engine. Just partners and communities. We talked to 10 practitioners to understand where they were stuck, aligned with two who became informal partners, then made four Reddit posts with no links and no pitch — just real questions about where teams struggle.
Community-led GTM is not faster than outbound. But it builds trust faster — because you demonstrate value publicly before asking for anything privately. For markets where buyers are active in identifiable communities, it is a powerful complement to outbound.
Our Tacticalism blog currently generates 2,250 organic visits per month. Not from buying backlinks or gaming algorithms — from publishing genuinely useful content, humanised with real experience, consistently over time.
The compounding effect of SEO is real but slow. For early-stage companies that need immediate pipeline, SEO is a complement to outbound — not a replacement. The combination that works: outbound for immediate pipeline, SEO and content for compounding inbound over time. Both running from day one.
What does not work in 2026
In 2014 this worked. In 2026 it damages your domain reputation, burns your market, and generates negative brand associations at scale. The 3 to 5 percent of your market that is ready to buy at any given time does not need volume to find — they need precision.
Spray and pray reaches them, but it also reaches the other 95 to 97 percent who are not ready. The negative signals from that majority — low engagement, spam complaints, unsubscribes — damage the deliverability and reputation you need to reach the ready 3 to 5 percent effectively.
The fastest way to become invisible in your market is to produce content that reads like a variation of what every other company in your space is saying. This applies to both outbound copy and content marketing.
Differentiation in 2026 comes from genuine perspective — things you have actually observed, experienced, and formed views on that your competitors have not. That requires having done the work, not just having read about it.
The combination that works for early-stage B2B
Outbound only — generate revenue as fast as possible
Cold email and LinkedIn. Manual and personalised. ICP hypothesis tested with each campaign. The goal is qualified conversations and early revenue — not scale.
Outbound plus content — start building compounding inbound
Outbound continues carrying the revenue burden. Start publishing 2–3 pieces of genuinely useful, experience-backed content per week — SEO-optimised but written for humans, not algorithms.
All three channels — each supporting the others
Outbound for immediate pipeline. Content for compounding inbound. Community for trust and referrals. Each channel reinforces the others — content makes outbound more credible, community makes content more visible, outbound keeps the pipeline immediate while the others build.
Key takeaways
- Cold email works when personalisation is genuine — three-layer personalisation produces 8–12% reply rates consistently
- LinkedIn manual outreach works at 15–20% acceptance and 8–12% reply — automation is increasingly detected and restricted
- Community-led GTM builds trust faster than outbound for markets with identifiable communities
- SEO compounds over 6–12 months — start now, carry revenue with outbound in the interim
- Spray and pray damages more than it generates in 2026 — precision beats volume every time
- The combination: outbound months 1–3, add content from month 3, add community from month 6