When a client is already running an ABM email sequence against a curated prospect list, layering LinkedIn outreach on top of that same list creates a multi-channel touchpoint effect that reduces the perception of cold outreach. The LinkedIn touch feels warmer because the prospect is simultaneously receiving emails from the same company — creating a sense of familiarity before any direct conversation occurs.
This approach is particularly useful when the client lacks bandwidth to execute LinkedIn outreach themselves, even though their ABM cadence explicitly calls for it.
LinkedIn's industry taxonomy can be a poor fit for certain target audiences. Retail and direct-to-consumer (D2C) product companies, for example, are categorized under "Retail" but tend to be relatively inactive on LinkedIn compared to service-sector professionals. Broad industry-based targeting in these cases yields thin results.
Solution: Bypass LinkedIn's native targeting entirely by uploading a curated list of known prospects via their LinkedIn profile URLs. This trades reach for precision — you're only touching people already identified as qualified.
A typical ABM cadence might look like:
1. Email 1
2. Email 2
3. LinkedIn outreach ← often skipped due to time constraints
4. Email 3
5. Email 4
6. Additional touchpoint
The LinkedIn step is frequently dropped because it requires manual effort at scale. Delegating this step to an outreach partner (e.g., [1]) allows the full cadence to execute as designed without adding load to the client's sales team.
"If I've got these people in a sequence and you're simultaneously reaching out to them on LinkedIn, you'll just know that those same people are getting emails from me — so it won't be a cold outreach like what you might see otherwise."
— Mark Hope, Asymmetric (2026-03-18 check-in call)
The coordinated timing means the LinkedIn connection request or message arrives in a context where the prospect has already seen the brand name in their inbox. This lowers the psychological barrier to engaging with an otherwise unfamiliar outreach.
Asymmetric / PEMA.io (March 2026)
Mark Hope (Asymmetric) was running an ABM email cadence that included a LinkedIn outreach step he consistently skipped due to time. His prospect list of 400–500 contacts included LinkedIn profile IDs. PEMA.io agreed to run a 1-month test, executing the LinkedIn outreach step in parallel with Mark's email sequence.
See: [2] | [3]