Looply

Table of Contents

How We Turned LinkedIn Buying Signals Into 133 Replies With AI

One campaign. 133 replies. The difference was timing.

InvitedAcceptedReachedReplies
572339267133

If this is the campaign you wanted to run, start with one signal-based setup.

Build my first signal agent

Paste your website and Looply will draft the company profile, ICP, competitors, exclusions, and signal ideas.

Benjamin, co-founder of Looply
Benjamin - Co-founder of Looply

We ran this from buying signals, not a scraped list.

The people fit the ICP, and something recent made the timing relevant.

This is one campaign, not a promise. The useful lesson is simple: timing changed how the message landed.

Watch the complete workflow in 3 minutes

See how Looply reads the offer, understands the ICP, finds buying signals, and turns qualified leads into a campaign.

Why cold lists feel so hard

A cold list can be accurate and still be painful.

The person may fit your ICP. But if nothing has happened recently, your message has to create all the context by itself.

That is why more names often creates more work, not more pipeline.

Looply starts somewhere else: with a reason to reach out.

Looply signal-to-pipeline workflow slide
Looply connects live buying signals, ICP qualification, short messages, and campaign launch.
Cold listBuying signal
More namesBetter timing
More guessingA clear reason to reach out
The message carries the weightThe context does some of the work

Could you build this manually?

Yes. Sales Navigator, Clay, spreadsheets, GPT prompts, and campaign tools can all cover pieces of this.

The problem is the handoff. The offer lives in one place. The ICP in another. The signal in another. The reply somewhere else.

Looply keeps the offer, ICP, signal, lead reason, campaign, and reply context together. So when a lead appears, you can see why they matter and what should happen next.

What happens in the first 10 minutes

The first setup should not feel like building a full outbound machine.

You give Looply the offer. It drafts the company profile, market, competitors, ICP, exclusions, and first signal ideas.

Then you review. You tighten the buyer. You remove bad fits. You choose which events are worth watching.

Looply website analysis and brand profile setup
Start from the offer, not a blank campaign prompt.

The result is not a giant list. It is a review queue: people, context, and a reason to decide whether outreach makes sense.

What counts as a high-intent lead?

A high-intent lead is not just someone who matches your buyer profile.

They also did something recently that makes the timing better.

They engaged with a competitor.
They commented on a category post.
They started a new role.
Their company raised funding or started hiring.
They shared a pain point you solve.

Not every signal deserves a message. Looply filters for ICP fit, relevance, and recency before surfacing the lead.

The 300 warm leads review framework

The goal is not to message 300 people.

The goal is to review the best 300 moments and contact only the leads that deserve it.

1.
Start from the offer.
2.
Remove bad fits before outreach.
3.
Activate the signal agents that match your market.
4.
Review leads with the reason attached.
5.
Launch while the signal is still fresh.
Looply agents screen with active intent agent
Activate the agents once, then review the warm queue as leads appear.

Watch a complete agent being built from a website

Live onboarding: website analysis, ICP, exclusions, buying signals, warm leads, and campaign setup.

Where Claude fits

Looply finds the signal and checks ICP fit first.

Then Claude Coworker uses the signal, company context, and lead profile to draft a short outreach angle.

You review it before sending. AI helps with the draft; you stay responsible for the conversation.

Review the lead before you launch

A warm lead should answer one question quickly:

Why this person, and why now?

Looply contacts table showing leads and intent reasons
Every lead should have a reason: job change, competitor engagement, funding, hiring, or active ICP behavior.

When the reason is clear, the campaign does not have to sound like a pitch dropped from the sky.

What one Looply campaign showed

The numbers at the top are not a forecast.

The point is that timing, ICP fit, sender health, short messages, and fast follow-up all work together. Remove one, and the result gets weaker.

Looply campaign sequence and sender control screenshot
Campaign proof should show sender setup, pacing, and message steps without hiding signal context.

What happens after they reply?

The reply is not the finish line. It is where the real sales work starts.

Looply keeps the signal, profile, campaign, and LinkedIn conversation together, so you are not answering from a blank box.

The AI reply agent drafts a response you can review, edit, or send.

Looply inbox with reply context and AI draft
Looply keeps the reply, signal context, and AI draft together so you can review the next message before sending.

AI drafts. You decide. The conversation stays human.

Build my first signal agent

At this point, the next step is simple: build one signal-based setup and compare the first leads to your usual list.


Optional playbook: how to run it after setup

The main conversion path is above. Keep reading if you want the operating details: messages, prompts, weekly targets, and the 48-hour plan.

A short message sequence built around the signal

Use the signal as the reason for the note. Ask one question. Keep it short.

Connection request

Plain text
Hey {{first_name}}, saw your comment on [topic]. Timing seems relevant here, so I figured I would connect.

First DM after they accept

Plain text
Thanks for connecting {{first_name}}. Saw [specific signal] and thought this might be relevant. Are you looking at outbound timing right now?

After they reply

Plain text
Makes sense. We use a simple workflow to turn those signals into warmer conversations. Want me to send the 1-minute version?

Optional: prompts if you still do this manually

Skip this section if you are using Looply's AI workflow.

Plain text
Look at this LinkedIn signal and profile.

Return:
1. Why it matters now
2. ICP fit
3. Best outreach angle
4. One reason to skip

Keep it short.
Plain text
Write a LinkedIn opener under 35 words.

Rules:
- Mention one signal
- Sound human
- No pitch
- Ask one question

Your first four weeks

Use these as operating targets, not forecasts.

Week 1: build one agent, review the first warm leads, start a small campaign.

Week 2: review which signals created replies and tighten the ICP.

Week 3: add one proven signal source and move interested replies to the next step.

Week 4+: scale only the signal sources that create qualified conversations.

Your next 48 hours with Looply

1.
Start with one offer and one clear buyer.
2.
Choose three buying signals that would make someone relevant now.
3.
Review the first warm lead queue.
4.
Launch one short campaign while the signal is fresh.
5.
Reply while the context is still current.

If you keep treating LinkedIn like a database, you will keep writing cold messages. Treat it like a live market.


Customer proof

Looply customer proof about demos, SDR replacement, and intent signals
Customer examples shown with permission. Results vary by market, offer, targeting, signal quality, and execution.

Ready to try it on your own market?

Start with one signal-based setup, review the first leads, and keep the signal sources that create real conversations.

Trial and billing terms are shown before confirmation.