Post:
I’ve spent the past year building a cold outreach system from the ground up — campaign logic, batching, domain setup, spam control, email sending infrastructure. None of it was easy. It’s still not.
But somehow… sales feels harder.
The system works. I’ve run real campaigns, delivered warm leads, and solved problems that most people selling outbound don’t even know exist.
And yet getting someone to say “yes”?
Feels like a gamble every time.
It’s not just about pricing or copy or timing.
It’s about trust — and the reality that most people have been burned before.
By overpromises. Lazy execution. Noise.
So even when you do the hard work, build something real, and show receipts… you’re still starting from zero.
I don’t have a tidy conclusion here. Just wanted to share this moment — because I know I’m not the only one feeling it.
If you’ve figured out how to earn trust faster — or how to stay patient when it doesn’t come — I’d love to hear it.
#founderjourney #sales #buildinpublic #coldemail #leadgeneration
Selling is the real deal
Assif, I feel this. Building the thing feels easy compared to getting people to trust it. Everyone's been burned.
Been thinking: what if instead of telling people we're legit, we show them, upfront? Like, tiny case studies right in the outreach, just offering real value. And make saying "no" lower-stakes – a free, genuinely helpful audit, for example.
Otherwise? It's probably about patience, man. Keep showing up, being real, and building that trust over time. Or maybe some junior help to really personalize those first touches.
It's tough out there. Keep building.
100% this. You can build something real, with proof, and still feel like every new convo starts from scratch. Have you ever thought about bringing in junior help for ops or outreach (even short-term)? I’m finding more folks are open to async project support lately.