The Drop-Off Problem
The biggest leak in most LinkedIn ads funnels isn't the ads — it's what happens after someone converts. A prospect fills out a demo request form. Then... nothing happens for two days. By the time an SDR reaches out, the prospect has forgotten they signed up, is busy with other things, and doesn't respond.
We saw this across multiple accounts before we built the follow-up automation. The conversion from "demo form fill" to "actually booked in calendar" was shockingly low. People were raising their hands and then evaporating. The fix was simple: automate the follow-up so it fires within hours, not days.
Flow 1: Demo Lead Fast Follow-Up
Step 1: Automated LinkedIn connection request from the SDR or AE's profile
Step 2: Automated email: "I saw you signed up for a demo with [Company]. Here's my calendar link — pick a time that works for you."
Step 3: Slack notification pings the SDR with the lead details
Step 4: SDR follows up manually with anyone who connects but doesn't book, or who replies with questions
That's it. No complex multi-step nurture. No three-week drip campaign. Just a fast, direct message that says "you asked for a demo, here's how to book it." The simplicity is what makes it work — it catches the prospect while interest is hot and removes every friction point between intent and booking.
This single flow significantly improved form-to-meeting conversion across every client we implemented it for. It's now standard in our onboarding — every new account gets this set up in the first week.
LinkedIn's new Calendly integration for lead gen forms lets prospects book directly in the form — eliminating the follow-up gap entirely. But not everyone uses lead gen forms, and conversation ad leads still need fast follow-up. Keep this flow running as a safety net even if you're using the Calendly integration.
Flow 2: Content Lead Nurture
Step 1: Automated email with more useful content related to what they downloaded
Step 2: Second email 3–5 days later with additional content + soft CTA ("If you'd ever like to discuss how this applies to your business, happy to chat")
Step 3: Third email with case study or social proof
Step 4: Slack notification to SDR ONLY when the prospect replies positively or clicks the CTA
Step 5: SDR handles the warm conversation
The critical difference from the demo flow: the SDR never touches the unresponsive 97%. Only warm replies get routed to a human.
Why Content Leads Need a Different Approach
Only about 3% of content leads are in-market. The other 97% downloaded your LinkedIn Ads OS because it looked interesting, or they were curious about a specific topic, or they wanted the PDF for later. They're not looking for a demo. They're not evaluating solutions. They're just... learning.
If you push all of these leads to your SDR team for outbound calls, two things happen:
- SDR demoralisation: They spend all day following up with people who aren't interested. Reply rates are terrible. Morale drops. Turnover increases.
- Brand damage: The prospect downloaded a helpful guide and immediately gets a pushy sales call. Their perception of your company goes from "helpful" to "salesy." You've undone the goodwill the content created.
The automated nurture sequence solves both problems. It continues delivering value (more content), includes a low-pressure CTA, and only escalates to the SDR when there's a genuine warm signal. The SDR spends their time on conversations that matter.
A demo lead and a content lead have completely different intent levels. A demo lead said "I want to talk to sales." A content lead said "I want to learn something." Treating them with the same follow-up flow — immediate SDR outreach — wastes the SDR's time on content leads and delays the response to demo leads. Separate the flows. Automate both. Let humans focus on human conversations.