Most outbound teams burn through their TAM with the same generic sequences and wonder why CAC keeps climbing. Parthi Loganathan, CEO of LetterDrop, runs a one-person BDR team that books seven-plus meetings a week using a different approach: identify the small slice of buyers actively evaluating competitors, then build campaigns that lead with value instead of pitch.
In this conversation, Parthi breaks down how LetterDrop reverse-engineers competitor pipelines from public online signals - who is commenting on whose posts, who is connecting with which AEs, who is engaging with which content. He explains the highest-converting outbound campaign he has ever run (giving competitors' qualified leads away for free to VPs of Sales), why agentic systems will absorb the brittle Zapier-style workflows BDRs run today, and what part of the BDR job is permanent: face-to-face channels, creative campaign design, and intelligence work that requires actually understanding the buyer.
He also shares why he believes SaaS is entering a compression cycle - where the software that survives exposes itself as APIs and MCPs for agents instead of dashboards for humans - and why his team just shipped 70% of LetterDrop as MCP endpoints for Claude Code users.
Key Takeaways
Only 5% of your TAM is in-market at any time. Reaching out to the other 95% is what is killing BDR economics. Parthi's whole thesis is that outbound stops working when you spray and starts working when you read public signals to find the active 5% before competitors do.
You can reverse-engineer your competitor's CRM from public data. LetterDrop builds a graph of who is talking to whom online - comments, connections, engagement patterns - and uses that to guess which prospects are actively talking to your competitors. Without scraping anything proprietary.
The "free lead" campaign is LetterDrop's highest-converting outbound play. Identify someone evaluating a competitor, send the lead directly to that competitor's CMO or VP of Sales as a free gift. Perceived value is hundreds to thousands per qualified lead, so it gets opened, replied to, and converts at rates a pitch sequence cannot touch.
BDRs keep the face channels and the creativity. Agents take everything else. Account intelligence, sequencing, decisioning, and brittle Zapier-style workflows go to agents. BDRs own calls, video DMs, in-person, and the campaign creativity that requires understanding why your buyers actually buy.
SaaS is compressing toward APIs and MCPs. The software that survives the agent era will not be dashboards. It will be hard-to-replicate data exposed as MCP endpoints. LetterDrop already shipped 70% of its product as MCPs for Claude Code users - a preview of where B2B SaaS pricing power is heading.
LetterDrop - Signal-based outbound and competitive intelligence platform
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