The average B2B buyer needs 7-13 meaningful touches before buying. The Nurture phase builds multi-touch sequences from first awareness to confident purchase through the right content, right sequences, and right sales handoffs.
Build Your Nurture SystemThe Nurture phase is where generated demand gets converted into pipeline. The Generate phase fills the top of the funnel with qualified buyers. Nurture builds the journey those buyers travel from first contact to the moment they are confident enough to buy. Without nurture, demand generation produces lead lists that sales ignores and pipeline that never materializes. With nurture, demand generation compounds - every lead becomes more valuable because the system is working it.
The Nurture phase designs and deploys multi-touch sequences across every stage of the funnel, builds the sales enablement assets that move buyers through objections, and designs the marketing-to-sales handoff so the highest-intent leads reach sales at exactly the right moment. Nothing in this phase is left to chance or to whoever has time to follow up. The system handles it, documented and tested.
"Most companies capture a lead and hope. We build the journey that converts. Every touchpoint is designed, every sequence is tested."
Nurture failure is one of the most expensive silent problems in B2B marketing. It is invisible on the surface - leads are coming in, the team is sending emails, the CRM shows activity. But conversion rates are poor, sales cycles drag on, and a significant percentage of qualified leads go cold before they ever reach a meaningful sales conversation.
Three patterns account for the majority of nurture failure across growth-stage B2B companies:
The Nurture phase addresses all three of these with designed sequences, buyer-stage-specific content, and a documented handoff protocol that treats the marketing-to-sales moment as a critical conversion event rather than an administrative task.
Research consistently shows that B2B buyers need between 7 and 13 meaningful touchpoints before they are ready to make a purchase decision. The range varies by deal size, complexity, and sales cycle length - enterprise software deals with six-figure contract values require more touches than mid-market service contracts. But the lower bound of seven meaningful touchpoints is well-established across virtually every B2B category.
Meaningful does not mean seven emails sent to an address that may or may not be monitored. Meaningful means touchpoints that deliver value, address a real concern, move the buyer's understanding forward, or reduce a perceived risk. A case study that mirrors the buyer's exact situation is a meaningful touch. An email subject line that speaks directly to their primary objection is a meaningful touch. A LinkedIn ad that keeps your brand visible during their active research window is a meaningful touch. A voicemail from a sales rep who has context on what content the prospect consumed is a meaningful touch.
The Nurture phase is designed around this reality. It is not about volume of touches. It is about designing the right seven to thirteen touchpoints for each buyer stage, deploying them across the right channels in the right sequence, and measuring which combinations produce the fastest and highest-value conversions.
The Nurture phase is built in parallel with the Generate phase and deployed as the first leads enter the top of the funnel. Building nurture after demand generation launches means the first weeks of leads receive no structured follow-up - which is exactly the scenario this phase is designed to prevent.
Every segment of your audience gets a defined nurture path. New leads from paid media receive a different sequence from webinar attendees, referral contacts, or re-engaged cold leads. Each segment's path is mapped before any sequences are written - defining the stage entry point, the expected journey length, the content themes for each touchpoint, and the exit criteria that trigger either a handoff to sales or a transition to a new sequence.
For each segment path, the sequence is architected: number of touchpoints, channel mix, timing cadence, and message focus at each step. Content planning maps what asset or message lives at each touchpoint, drawing from the messaging hierarchy established in the Architect phase. The goal is a sequence that reads like a logical, helpful conversation rather than a series of disconnected marketing messages.
Sequences are built in your automation platform - HubSpot, Marketo, ActiveCampaign, or equivalent - with full workflow logic, conditional branching for engagement behavior, and integration with your retargeting audiences and LinkedIn cadences. Email copy is written in the buyer's language, addressing the pain and questions that surface most often in the sales process. Every sequence ends with a defined next step, not an open loop.
The assets that sales needs to accelerate deals are produced and organized into a structured sales library. Case studies are built around the ICP's specific situation and written to be forwarded by a sales rep in a relevant email thread. One-pagers address the most common late-stage objections. ROI calculators let buyers model their expected return in their own terms. Objection scripts give sales reps language that has been tested and refined rather than improvised in the moment.
Lead scoring criteria are built from actual closed-won data - which behaviors and engagement patterns correlate most strongly with deals that close. MQL thresholds are set at the point where sales contact adds value and has a measurable positive impact on conversion rate. The handoff protocol defines what information transfers with each lead, how quickly sales must respond, and what the first outreach should reference. This is the step that most companies skip, and it is the step most responsible for pipeline that marketing generates but sales cannot close.
A 90-day testing calendar is set before sequences go live. Subject line tests, CTA variations, timing experiments, and message frame tests are scheduled systematically so there is always a test running and always a recent result informing optimization. Performance baselines are established in the first 30 days - open rate, click rate, reply rate, meeting booked rate - and used as benchmarks for all future optimization decisions.
Most nurture programs are built reactively - someone decides to "do email marketing" and sequences get built without reference to the buyer journey, the sales process, or the objections that actually exist in the market. The Nurture phase is different because it is built on a foundation of evidence and designed to integrate with every other phase of the MAGNET Framework.
Companies that implement the Nurture phase correctly typically see a 20-40% improvement in lead-to-opportunity conversion rate within the first 90 days, because they are replacing ad hoc follow-up with a designed system that meets every buyer at their current stage with the right message.
Stop losing leads to silence. Build the multi-touch system that works every buyer toward a confident decision.
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