HomeServicesAbout BlogCareersContact Book a Consultation →
Insights

B2B acquisition
thinking. Applied.

Practical frameworks, real data, and no-nonsense takes on what's actually working in B2B marketing right now.

📊
Email Marketing
Sethu NdlovuFeb 18, 20267 min read

Why Your Email List Isn't Generating Revenue (And the 5-Flow Fix)

Most B2B companies are sitting on a goldmine of unconverted contacts. Here's the exact flow architecture we use to turn dormant lists into consistent pipeline.

Read Article →
🎯
Paid Media
Sethu NdlovuJan 29, 20268 min read

The B2B Paid Ads Mistake That's Burning Your Budget (And How to Fix It in 2 Weeks)

Most B2B companies running paid ads are optimising for the wrong metric. We break down exactly what to measure instead — and the targeting strategy that actually works.

Read Article →
⚙️
Client Acquisition
Sethu NdlovuJan 10, 20269 min read

The SaaS Acquisition System: From Cold Traffic to Closed Deal Without a Sales Team

How we helped a SaaS company go from $0 to $25K MRR using an inbound system that runs without a dedicated sales team. The full blueprint.

Read Article →
Newsletter

Get the playbook, not the fluff.

One email per month. Real frameworks, real numbers, no filler.

📊
Email Marketing

Why Your Email List Isn't Generating Revenue (And the 5-Flow Fix)

Most B2B companies have a list. They've been collecting emails from webinars, gated content, trade shows, and contact forms for years. And most of them are doing almost nothing with it.

We've audited dozens of email programmes in the past two years. The most common finding isn't a targeting problem, or a deliverability problem, or even a copy problem. It's a sequence architecture problem.

There is no logical path that takes a new contact from "interested stranger" to "ready to buy." The email programme is reactive — newsletters, occasional campaigns, maybe a welcome email that was written two years ago and never revisited.

💡 For Lemkus, we rebuilt their entire Klaviyo architecture from scratch. Within 90 days, email was driving 32% of their monthly revenue — not as a nice add-on, but as a core acquisition channel.

The 5 flows every B2B email programme needs

These aren't complicated. What makes them work is that each one is designed for a specific stage of the buyer's journey — and they run automatically once built.

1. The Welcome Sequence (Days 1–7)

This is your most important flow and the one most companies get wrong. Most welcome emails say: "Thanks for signing up! Here's a discount." That's a consumer tactic, not a B2B tactic.

A proper B2B welcome sequence does three things: establishes your authority, surfaces the contact's key problem, and sets the expectation for what they'll get from you. Three to four emails, spread over seven days, focused entirely on value before you ask for anything.

2. The Nurture Sequence (Weeks 2–8)

This is where most B2B email programmes fall apart. Companies send a welcome email, then add the contact to a "newsletter" list and wonder why nobody converts.

A nurture sequence is a deliberate series of eight to twelve emails over six to eight weeks. Each email builds on the last. You're systematically dismantling objections, demonstrating expertise, and building the case for why your approach is different — before the contact has even had a conversation with you.

3. The Re-engagement Flow

Every list has a segment of contacts who haven't opened an email in 60–90 days. Most companies either ignore them or delete them. Neither is right.

A targeted re-engagement sequence — three to five emails with a direct, honest subject line — will consistently pull 10–20% of dormant contacts back into active engagement. The ones who don't re-engage? Suppress them. Your deliverability will thank you.

4. The Lead Magnet Follow-Up

If you're running any kind of paid acquisition — ads driving to a lead magnet, a free audit offer, a gated resource — the follow-up sequence is where the ROI is made or lost.

Most companies deliver the lead magnet and then do nothing. A proper follow-up sequence starts within 10 minutes of the opt-in and runs for three to five days. It's contextual to what the contact just downloaded, and it moves them logically toward the next step in your funnel.

5. The Win-Back Sequence

These are past leads or clients who went dark. They already know who you are. They've seen your work. The win-back sequence isn't about re-introducing yourself — it's about giving them a reason to re-engage now.

We've seen win-back sequences generate more pipeline in a single quarter than six months of new lead generation. The reason: the cost of reactivating a warm contact is a fraction of the cost of acquiring a new one.

The compound effect nobody talks about

Here's what makes email truly different from paid media: it compounds. A paid ad campaign stops performing the moment you stop spending. An email system, once built, generates pipeline every single week without additional spend.

After 12 months of consistent email, our clients typically see 25–35% of their total pipeline coming from the email channel alone. Not because they're sending more — because the architecture is right.

📌 The single highest-ROI action most B2B companies can take right now is not running more ads. It's building a proper email sequence architecture for the contacts they already have.

Where to start

If you're starting from nothing, build the welcome sequence first. Get three emails live within a week. Then build the nurture sequence over the following month. The lead magnet follow-up comes when you have an active acquisition programme running.

If you already have some flows in place, audit them. Check the open rates at each step. Find where contacts drop off. Usually one or two emails are doing the heavy lifting — and everything after a certain point has near-zero engagement. That's your rebuild target.

The goal isn't a clever email programme. The goal is a predictable, automated system that turns your list into revenue while you sleep.

Want us to audit your email programme?

We'll review your current flows and show you exactly where the revenue is being left on the table — free, no pitch.

Book a Free Email Audit →
🎯
Paid Media

The B2B Paid Ads Mistake That's Burning Your Budget

When we take on a new paid media client, we ask them one question before we look at a single ad: "What happens to a lead after they click?"

Nine times out of ten, the answer is either silence, or a vague description of a sales process that starts several days later. And that, more than anything — more than the targeting, more than the creative, more than the bid strategy — is why most B2B paid campaigns underperform.

The ads are not the problem. The system downstream is.

The metric most B2B companies are optimising for

Most B2B companies running paid ads measure success by Cost Per Lead (CPL). How much did it cost to get someone to fill in a form? This feels logical. It's measurable, it's easy to track, and it gives your reporting something to point at.

The problem is that CPL has almost no relationship to revenue. A $15 CPL is meaningless if none of those leads ever become clients. A $200 CPL might be exceptional if a percentage of those leads become $50,000 accounts.

💡 The metric that matters is Cost Per Acquired Client (CAC) — and the only way to improve CAC is to optimise the entire funnel, not just the ads.

The targeting mistake B2B companies consistently make

On Meta Ads, most B2B companies target interest-based audiences. They pick categories like "Business," "Marketing," "Entrepreneurship," "B2B," and assume they're reaching decision-makers.

They're not. Interest-based audiences on Meta are built from engagement signals, not professional identity. You're just as likely to reach someone who likes a business meme account as you are to reach a CFO looking for IT consulting services.

What actually works for B2B on Meta

Lookalike audiences built from your actual client list. Not website visitors — clients. Upload the contact data of your best clients and build a 1–2% lookalike. The algorithm will find other people with similar demographic and behavioural profiles.

Combine this with job title and seniority filters on LinkedIn if budget allows. For most B2B companies, a combined Meta + LinkedIn approach — using Meta for awareness and retargeting, and LinkedIn for precise targeting at higher CPLs — outperforms either channel alone.

The retargeting gap

Most B2B companies run cold traffic ads and forget about retargeting entirely. This is a significant missed opportunity. The average B2B buying cycle is weeks or months long. Someone who visited your site last Tuesday is not lost — they're just not ready yet.

A retargeting sequence that serves progressively deeper content — from awareness-level ads to social proof to direct offer — will typically generate 3–5x the conversion rate of cold traffic for a fraction of the spend. Most B2B companies are leaving this untouched.

The creative problem

B2B ad creative tends to look like B2B ad creative. Stock photos of people in boardrooms, blue gradients, bullet points about features, and a CTA that says "Learn More."

The creative that actually performs in B2B paid media right now is the opposite of this. It looks native. It's direct. It opens with a specific problem, not a product pitch. The best-performing B2B ad we've ever run looked like a LinkedIn post from a founder talking candidly about a problem their target audience was dealing with.

Test three creative directions for every campaign: a social proof ad (numbers, results, client logos), a problem-agitation ad (name the pain, escalate it, offer the solution), and a direct response ad (a clear offer with a clear CTA and no ambiguity about what you get).

The two-week fix

If your paid ads are underperforming, here's where to start in the next two weeks:

  • Week 1: Audit what happens after a lead clicks. Map every step from ad click to first conversation. Find the drop-off point. Fix it before spending another rand on ads.
  • Week 1: Pull your last 90 days of lead data. What percentage of leads became proposals? What percentage of proposals became clients? If you don't have these numbers, you don't have a paid ads problem — you have a tracking problem.
  • Week 2: Rebuild your targeting around lookalikes from your actual client base. Kill interest-based audiences. Test one social proof creative and one problem-agitation creative head-to-head.
  • Week 2: Set up a basic retargeting campaign for everyone who visited your site but didn't convert. Run it at 20–30% of your cold traffic budget.

The honest truth about paid media for B2B

Paid media for B2B companies is not a quick win. The buying cycles are too long and the sales values are too high for a click-to-purchase dynamic. What paid media does — when done correctly — is fill the top of a system that closes deals over weeks and months.

If your system downstream isn't built to capture, nurture, and close leads over a longer cycle, paid ads will always disappoint you. Fix the system first. Then turn up the spend.

Is your paid media system leaking?

We'll audit your ads, your targeting, and your post-click funnel and show you exactly where the budget is going to waste.

Book a Free Paid Media Audit →
⚙️
Client Acquisition

The SaaS Acquisition System: From Cold Traffic to Closed Deal Without a Sales Team

When a SaaS client came to us, they had a product, a small user base, and almost no system for bringing in new clients. They were growing through referrals and founder outreach — which works until it doesn't. They wanted something that could scale without hiring a sales team.

Within six months they were generating $25,000 in monthly recurring revenue from an inbound acquisition system. This is the blueprint we built for them — and the same framework we use for every SaaS client we work with.

Why most SaaS companies struggle with acquisition

SaaS founders are typically excellent at building products and terrible at building the systems that sell them. This isn't a criticism — it's a structural reality. The skills that make a great product builder are not the same skills that make a great acquisition strategist.

The typical early-stage SaaS acquisition "strategy" looks like this: some paid ads run by someone who primarily does e-commerce, a landing page that hasn't been touched in a year, an email that goes out when someone signs up for a trial, and a sales process that consists entirely of hoping the trial user books a demo.

📌 The gap isn't between traffic and signups. It's between signups and qualified conversations — and it's almost always a system gap, not a product gap.

The five components of the system

1. The Traffic Source

For most B2B SaaS companies, the most effective cold traffic source is a combination of Meta Ads and LinkedIn — Meta for volume and retargeting efficiency, LinkedIn for precision targeting of specific job titles and company sizes.

The ads don't sell the product. They sell the next step — typically a piece of high-value content (a guide, a framework, a template) that is genuinely useful to the target buyer. This is what marketers call a HVCO: High-Value Content Offer. Getting this right is the difference between a 2% opt-in rate and a 15% opt-in rate.

2. The Landing Page

The landing page has one job: convert ad traffic into email subscribers. Not product signups. Not trial users. Email subscribers.

This is a counterintuitive step for SaaS founders who want to get people into the product as quickly as possible. But pushing cold traffic directly into a product trial produces low activation rates, poor conversion-to-paid metrics, and a wasted acquisition spend.

A well-built landing page for a lead magnet offer will convert at 20–40% of ad traffic. The same page pushing directly to a trial sign-up rarely converts above 8–12% — and most of those trial users will never activate.

3. The Email Nurture Sequence

This is the engine of the entire system. A new subscriber enters a 10–14 email sequence built around a single goal: making the case for why your product is the best solution to the specific problem they just told you they have (by downloading your lead magnet).

The sequence does not pitch from email one. It delivers value for the first three to four emails. It introduces social proof in the middle. It addresses the top two or three objections explicitly. And it makes a clear, direct CTA only once the contact has seen your expertise demonstrated across multiple touchpoints.

4. The VSL (Video Sales Letter)

Embedded within the nurture sequence, typically around email five or six, is a link to a 12–18 minute video. This is the single most important piece of content in the system.

The VSL follows a specific structure: it opens with the problem, demonstrates deep understanding of the pain, introduces your framework for solving it, shows proof that it works (client results, before/after data), and closes with a clear call to book a consultation.

A well-executed VSL will do more selling than any sales call could — because the contact arrives at the consultation already sold on your approach. The call becomes a mutual fit assessment, not a pitch.

5. The CRM Pipeline & Consultation Booking

The final step is the booking mechanism. Contacts who watch the VSL and click the CTA are sent to a short qualification form — asking about company size, current challenges, and monthly revenue — before being taken to a calendar to book their consultation.

This qualification step is critical. It filters out non-ideal contacts before they take up time in your calendar, and it means every consultation that gets booked is with someone who has already demonstrated serious intent.

In GoHighLevel, this pipeline is managed automatically. Contacts move through stages — New Opt-in, VSL Viewed, Consultation Booked, Proposal Sent, Closed — with automated follow-ups triggered at each stage to prevent leads from going cold.

The numbers that actually matter

For a SaaS client, after 90 days the system looked like this:

  • Ad spend: $3,200/month (Meta + LinkedIn combined)
  • New opt-ins per month: 380–420
  • VSL watch rate (50%+): 27% of opt-ins
  • Consultation bookings per month: 22–28
  • Show rate: 78%
  • Close rate from consultation: 31%
  • New MRR per month: ~$12,000–$16,000

By month six, with a larger opt-in list and a more optimised nurture sequence, the system was generating $25,000+ in new MRR per month from $4,800 in ad spend. The sales team headcount: zero.

What makes this scalable

The reason this system scales is that each component is independent and measurable. You can see exactly where contacts drop out — whether it's at the opt-in, during the nurture sequence, at the VSL, or at the booking step — and optimise that specific component without rebuilding the whole thing.

Paid media is volume-adjustable. You can double the ad spend when the economics make sense and double the number of opt-ins without changing anything else. The sequence runs automatically. The CRM manages the pipeline automatically. The calendar books consultations automatically.

Once it's built, the system runs whether you're working or not.

Want us to build this system for you?

Book a free strategy session. We'll map out exactly what the system looks like for your specific product, market, and budget.

Book Your Free Strategy Session →