One thing that keeps standing out to me while working on Lead Engine:
A lot of prospecting advice is really just volume advice.
More outreach.
More posts.
More channels.
More activity.
But a lot of the real problem is timing.
People are already describing needs in public all the time. They ask for recommendations, complain about broken workflows, look for alternatives, or talk about something they are actively trying to solve.
The issue is not always that demand is missing.
It’s that people find the conversation too late, after the shortlist is already formed or the decision window is already closing.
That changes how I think about prospecting.
The harder part is not just writing better outreach.
It’s getting better at:
That feels much more important than just doing more activity for the sake of activity.
Curious if other founders here have noticed the same thing.
Do you think the bigger bottleneck in early outbound is volume, or timing?
I think it’s both, but at different stages.
Early on, volume matters just to learn what works. But once you know your ICP, timing becomes way more important being early in the conversation vs being “another vendor” late in the cycle is a completely different game.
Really like this framing—timing vs volume is something most people miss.
Feels like there’s a second layer to it too:
Even when timing is right, most people still don’t convert because they haven’t actually clarified the problem well enough on their end.
They’ll say “I need a better way to manage X”… but haven’t defined what “better” actually means (time, cost, effort, outcome, etc.).
So you end up with well-timed outreach hitting poorly-defined needs.
Feels like the real leverage is:
timing + clarity.
Feels like everyone is circling the same idea from different angles.
Timing matters.
Message matters.
Detection matters.
But all of that still assumes you’re interpreting the signal correctly once you see it.
That’s where I see most things break.
Same signal, different operators, completely different actions.
One person sees urgency and responds to the actual problem.
Another sees activity and sends something generic that technically fits but misses the moment.
So it’s not just timing vs volume or even timing × message.
It’s:
signal → interpretation → decision → action
If the interpretation layer is off, better timing just gets you to the wrong conclusion faster.
Curious if anyone here has noticed that.
The volume advice persists because it's measurable. Timing is harder to track, so it gets ignored. But a perfectly crafted message delivered after the decision window closes is just noise with better grammar. The signal you're describing — someone actively describing a problem they need solved now — is the only outreach that doesn't feel like outreach. The challenge is building the alert system for that, not sending more emails.
interesting
Timing is real — but I think messaging still decides whether that moment converts or gets ignored.
Even if you hit the right signal, if it reads like:
→ generic outreach
→ unclear positioning
people still skip.
The ones I’ve seen work best feel like:
→ “this is exactly for my situation right now”
So it’s less:
timing vs volume
and more:
timing × precision of message
Curious — when you hit the right moment, what kind of message actually gets a response for you?