Your play
Most deals don’t go quiet because of a clear “no”. They stall because priorities shift, stakeholders change, or something else takes precedence. When things change inside an account, generic follow-ups give prospects no reason to act.
This play shows you how to review stalled opportunities, identify what changed within the account, and use that change as a relevant reason to re-engage, turning quiet deals into active conversations again.
Tools
Firmable: Review account intelligence and people movement to quickly identify what has changed since the deal went quiet and surface a new reason to reach out.
CRM: Use your CRM to identify stalled opportunities, set follow-up tasks, and update deal status so pipeline reflects reality.
Digital channels: You could use email and phone in this play. Call first for speed and clarity, then follow up with a short email to confirm next steps.
Actions
Step 1: Review pipeline and identify stalled deals
Start by reviewing your pipeline in your CRM and identifying open deals that have lost momentum. Focus on opportunities with a real path to progress, not just any deal that’s quiet. Export or pull that list into Firmable to quickly review account details and recent changes.
Step 2: Search for fresh context
Open the account in Firmable and review the latest snapshot. You’ll see an account overview including firmographics, decision-maker details, and recent activity, so you know what’s changed and where to take the conversation next.
Step 3: Find meaningful change
Identify information that can create a reason to re-engage, such as a new decision maker or a shift in structure or priorities. Use findings to reframe your message. Avoid “just checking in” language and lead with the change or updated context as the reason you’re reaching out now.
Step 4: Push to your CRM for follow-up (optional but recommended)
Push the company record and any relevant people you want to speak to into your CRM – like HubSpot or Salesforce – for follow-up. That way, your records reflect the current reality, and follow-up doesn’t stall again due to outdated contacts.
Step 5: Re-engage and progress the deal
Templates
Call opener
“[First name], it’s [your name] from [your company]. We spoke a little while back about [area/goal]. I noticed [change] at [company] and thought it was a good time to reconnect. When that happens, teams often re-prioritise [area], and it’s worth confirming where this sits now. Is [benefit] still a priority for you right now?”
Re-engagement email
Subject: Re: [change] at [company]
Hi [Prospect name],
Noticed [change] at [company] and it made me think of our conversation about [area/goal].
When things like this shift, teams often revisit how they’re approaching [area], so I wanted to check where this sits for you now. Is [goal] still a priority, or has timing moved?
If it’s still on, happy to line up 15 minutes and agree the next step.
Metrics
- Reactivated opportunities from fresh outreach
- Meetings booked from stalled opportunities
- Opportunities progressed to next stage
- Average time from re-engagement to next stage
- Win rate on reactivated opportunities
Bottom line
Stalled deals don’t need more follow ups, they need a better reason to re-engage. Use fresh account context to find what changed, reframe outreach with relevance, and restart momentum with a clear next step.
Run this play weekly as part of pipeline review or talk to us about making stall recovery a repeatable motion.



