The Follow-Up Formula: How Operators Are Closing Spots on the Second, Third, and Fifth Touch
The Spot You Already Sold (You Just Don't Know It Yet)
I keep hearing the same thing from community card operators who are consistently filling cards: the sale almost never happens on the first touch. It happens on the second. The third. Sometimes the fifth.
And yet, most operators send one email or make one call, get silence, and move on to the next prospect. That "interested" reply sitting in your inbox from two weeks ago? That's not a dead lead. That's a warm prospect waiting for you to follow up.
Why the First Touch Rarely Closes
Think about it from the business owner's perspective. You're a dentist or an HVAC contractor. Some person you've never met sends you a message about advertising on a community card. You're intrigued, maybe — but you're also in the middle of running your business. You reply "sounds interesting" and then your day takes over.
That's not rejection. That's distraction.
Operators who understand this have a massive advantage. They treat every "interested" reply as the beginning of a conversation, not the end of one.
The Follow-Up Cadence That's Working
Here's a simple rhythm I've been seeing operators use:
- Day 1: Initial outreach (email, DM, or call)
- Day 3: Quick follow-up — reference the first message, add one new detail
- Day 7: Different angle — share a photo of the card, mention a neighboring business that's already on it
- Day 14: Social proof — "We've got X spots filled, wanted to make sure you had a chance before we lock the card"
- Day 21: The last-chance touch — short, no pressure, just checking if they're still interested
Five touches over three weeks. Not aggressive. Not desperate. Just present.
The One Email That Reactivates Dead Prospects
One operator shared a tactic that's been working for prospects who went completely cold — the kind who showed interest months ago and then vanished. The email is almost embarrassingly simple:
"Hey [Name], are you still interested in moving forward with the community card?"
That's it. No pitch. No bullet points. No attachments. Just a straightforward question that's easy to answer.
One operator used this on an HVAC contractor he'd been chasing for nearly a year. Chamber events, emails, the whole routine — always "call me next week" followed by silence. He sent that one sentence. The contractor responded and closed.
Why does it work? Because it gives the prospect a graceful way to re-engage without feeling sold to. It reads like you're about to move on, which creates just enough urgency to get a response.
The Activity Problem
Here's something experienced operators keep saying: a card that's not filling isn't a capacity problem. It's an activity problem.
If you emailed 400 businesses and got 3 replies, the issue isn't that there's no demand. It's that email alone isn't enough. The operators filling cards fast are hitting all three channels — email, phone, and face-to-face — and they're following up on every warm reply multiple times.
One operator reported that cold calls alone filled his entire card when email and door-to-door weren't working. Another sold out a full card in two hours by knocking on 20 doors on a Saturday morning — 16 said yes on the spot. The common thread isn't the channel. It's the persistence.
What to Do With Your "Maybe" List
Right now, you probably have prospects in one of these buckets:
- Replied "interested" but went quiet — Send the simple reactivation email above
- Said "not right now" — Circle back in 2-4 weeks with a card update ("3 spots left")
- Never replied at all — Try a different channel (called but didn't email? Email them. Emailed but didn't call? Pick up the phone)
- Said "no" once — That was a "no" to that moment, not to the concept. Revisit next drop
Your next sale is probably already in your inbox or call log. You just need to go back and touch it again.
Make Follow-Up Automatic
The hardest part of follow-up is remembering to do it. If you're tracking prospects in a spreadsheet or your head, stuff falls through the cracks. That's where having a system matters — even a simple one.
If you're using SpotLeads, you've already got your prospect list organized with contact info and status tracking. Pair that with SpotDrops to manage your card fill rate and payment collection, and you've got a pipeline instead of a pile of sticky notes.
The operators filling cards consistently aren't doing anything magical. They're just not giving up after the first touch.
If you're serious about building a postcard business, the best place to learn from operators who are actively doing this is the EDDM Skool Community. Real operators, real results, and the tactics actually working right now.