Skills · 15 June 2026 · 3 min read

How to Run Follow-Up Sequences Without Sounding Like a Robot.

A follow-up sequence saves you time, but only if it still sounds like you. Here is how to run one every day and keep each message personal.
Will Koning
Will Koning
Founder, meritt
meritt illustration: sales tech & ai fluency

Most deals are won in the follow-up, not the first email. The trouble is that follow-up is boring work. A sequence tool can carry the load for you. But used badly, it fires off the same stiff message to everyone and your replies dry up. The fix is simple. Let the tool do the heavy lifting, and keep the human touch where it counts.

The mistake most people make

There are two ways people get this wrong. The first is ignoring the tool and trying to chase every prospect by hand. You forget half of them and the list slips through your fingers. The second is worse. You load a sequence, hit go, and let it spray the same robotic note to fifty people. Buyers can spot a mass email from a mile off. So they tune it out, and you wonder why nobody writes back.

What good follow-up looks like

Good reps do both jobs at once. They lean on the tool to stay organised, so no prospect gets dropped. But they still treat each person like a person. They open the list every day. They tweak the first line of each message so it speaks to that one buyer. The tool handles the timing and the reminders. You handle the part that needs a human. That mix is the whole skill.

How to do it

Build one sequence with room for a personal line

Set up a short series of emails with sensible gaps between them. Leave the first line of each one open so you can make it personal before it sends.

Email 1 today, email 2 in three days, email 3 a week later. Each one starts with a blank line I fill in.

Write a fresh first line for every prospect

This is the part you never automate. One line that proves you know who they are turns a mass email into a real one.

Saw meritt just opened a second sales team in Berlin, so this felt worth a note.

Work the list every single day

Open your sequence tool each morning. Clear the prospects due that day, personalise each one, and send. A daily habit beats a big catch-up once a week.

Ten minutes after my coffee, I clear today's follow-ups before anything else.

Review the sequence each month and cut what flops

Once a month, look at which emails earned replies and which got silence. Drop the dead ones. A leaner sequence works harder than a long one.

Email 4 got zero replies in thirty sends, so it is gone.

See the difference

Weak

Hi there, just following up on my last email. I wanted to circle back and see if you had any thoughts on meritt. Let me know a good time to chat. Sent to fifty people, word for word. It says nothing about the reader, so the reader skips it.

Strong

Hi Sam, you mentioned last week that hiring was the bottleneck this quarter. Quick thought on that before I let it go. Same tool, same timing. The difference is one honest first line that only fits Sam. That is the line that gets a reply.

Same tool and same timing both ways. The strong version adds one honest first line that could only go to Sam, and that is what earns the reply.

How you'll know it's working

You have got this when you work your follow-up list every day and every message still sounds personal. Check yourself. Are you clearing the list daily, not in a panic on Friday? Would each first line make sense to only one buyer? If yes, you have found the balance. The tool keeps you on track, and you keep it human. That is what makes follow-up land.

Questions people ask

How do I keep a follow-up sequence from sounding automated?

Keep the tool for timing and reminders, but write a fresh first line for each prospect by hand. One honest line that names their company or their last reply turns a mass email into a real one. The mistake is letting the sequence send the exact same words to everyone. Buyers spot a robotic note at once, and they stop replying.

How often should I work my follow-up list?

Work it every day. Open your sequence tool each morning, clear the prospects due that day, personalise each message, and send. A short daily habit beats a big weekly catch-up. Prospects slip through the cracks when you only check the list now and then. Ten focused minutes a day keeps every deal moving.

How many emails should a follow-up sequence have?

Start with three to five emails spread over a couple of weeks, then trim it. Review the sequence once a month and cut any email that earns no replies. A short sequence that all pulls its weight beats a long one full of dead messages. Let the reply data, not a guess, decide what stays.

Should I use a sequence tool at all, or just follow up by hand?

Use the tool. Chasing every prospect by hand means you forget half of them and lose the list. The tool handles timing and reminders so nothing gets dropped. Your job is the human part: a personal first line on each email and a quick daily pass through the list. The tool organises, you personalise.

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