From Buying Signal to Booked Meeting in 24 Hours: The SDR Workflow That Beats Competitors to the Buyer
A buying signal has a half-life. Most SDR teams behave as if it does not.
The signal fires on Tuesday — a target account starts pricing pages on your competitor's site, a champion changes jobs into your ICP, a job posting goes up for the role that buys your category. Somewhere in the stack, that event gets written to a row in a database. By Thursday it shows up in a weekly digest. Friday afternoon someone exports a list. The following Monday, an SDR opens it, picks a few, and sends an email referencing "your recent activity" without any idea what the activity actually was. By then the buyer has had three calls with the vendor that responded the same day.
This is not a tooling problem. It is a workflow problem. The teams winning signal-driven pipeline in 2026 have collapsed the time between signal fires and human shows up in front of buyer to under twenty-four hours — sometimes under two. They are not faster because they have better tools. They are faster because they have an actual hour-by-hour workflow, with named owners, named decisions, and a hard stop at the end of every interval where someone has to act or escalate.
This is that workflow. It assumes you have a working signal source — visitor identification, intent data, job-change alerts, hiring signals, technographic shifts, or some combination. If you do not, start with the complete guide to buying signal tools for 2026 before reading further.











