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How to handle sales rejections and follow up

How to handle sales rejections without damaging the relationship: the email approach, follow-up timing, and objection tactics that work.

Written by

Tassia O'Callaghan
Tassia O'Callaghan

May 20, 2026

How to handle sales rejections and follow up

Knowing how to handle sales rejections is mostly a question of what you do after the no lands in your inbox. The reply you send, whether you follow up and when, how you keep a relationship alive when the timing wasn't right. Most of the practical work happens over email, and most B2B sales reps don't think about it carefully enough. don't think about it carefully enough.

Handling sales rejections well comes down to three email habits: sending a short, professional reply that keeps the door open; following up at the right interval (60-90 days for most B2B deals); and reviewing your outreach sequence when patterns emerge across multiple rejections. The work happens in writing, not mindset.

A well-handled rejection response can keep a door open for months. A poorly handled one, whether too pushy or too silent, tends to close it. The same is true of follow-up: the right email at the right time reopens conversations that looked finished. The wrong one confirms the prospect was right to say no.

Research from Monash University, published in the Journal of Financial Services Marketing (Ewe & Ho, 2023), found that resilience and self-efficacy were stronger predictors of long-term sales performance than technical skill. But resilience in practice isn't a mindset. It shows up in specific habits: how you write the reply after a rejection, how your follow-up emails are timed and framed, and how you manage the inbox volume that comes with running a large pipeline.

How to handle sales rejections over email

The email you send after a rejection is the part most people get wrong. The instinct is either to push back or to disappear, and neither serves you well.

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Pushing back immediately puts the prospect on the defensive before you've had a chance to understand what actually drove the decision. Going silent signals that the relationship only existed because of the potential deal, which makes any future outreach feel transactional rather than genuine.

A better approach is short and straightforward. Acknowledge the decision without relitigating it, leave the door open without forcing it, and give them a clear expectation of when they might hear from you again. Something like: "Thanks for letting me know. If priorities shift or the timing changes, I'd be glad to pick this up. I'll check back in later in the year." That's it. No extended pitch, no request to reconsider.

If the rejection came with a specific reason, acknowledge it directly in your reply. "Understood on the budget freeze" reads very differently from a generic sign-off. It signals you were paying attention, which matters when you do come back.

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Writing a follow-up email after sales rejection

"Not right now" is not a permanent no, and in B2B sales especially, the gap between those two closes faster than most people expect. Budget cycles reset. Teams change. The problem your product solves becomes more urgent. The people who benefit from these shifts are the ones who stayed in contact after the initial rejection without being a nuisance.

The practical version: if a prospect said the timing wasn't right, put a reminder in your calendar for 60 to 90 days. When you do follow up, don't restart from scratch. Reference the original conversation briefly, note anything relevant that has changed on your end, and ask a specific question rather than sending a vague check-in.

The tone of that email matters a lot. You're not chasing. You're picking up a conversation that was left open, which is a different posture entirely and one that comes through in the writing.

Review your outreach before assuming the rejection is about you

One rejection tells you almost nothing, whereas ten rejections with a common pattern tells you something worth acting on.

If prospects are consistently dropping off after an initial reply, look at what your follow-up sequence actually looks like. Are the emails too frequent? Too generic? Do they add something new each time, or are they just variations of "just checking in"? Most cold outreach sequences fail not because the product is wrong for the prospect but because the emails don't give them a reason to re-engage.

A few things worth checking if your rejection rate feels high:

  • Are your emails clear about what you're actually asking for? Vague outreach gets ignored more consistently than direct outreach that misses the mark.
  • Are you following up enough? Most replies in cold outreach come after the second or third touchpoint, not the first.
  • Is the same objection coming up repeatedly? If so, it might be a gap in how the value is being communicated rather than a timing problem.
  • Are you reaching the right person, or are you pitching to someone without budget authority who can't say yes even if they wanted to?

Handling objections before they become rejections

A lot of outright rejections are preceded by softer signals that didn't get handled well in the email exchange: "We're not really looking at this right now," "We already have something in place," "I'd need to run this by my manager." How you respond to those in writing determines whether the deal stays alive or quietly dies in someone's inbox.

The instinct is to counter immediately, but written pushback often lands harder than intended, and it puts the prospect in a position where they feel the need to defend their original objection rather than reconsider it.

A more effective approach is to acknowledge what they've said and ask a question that opens things up rather than closes them down.

"That makes sense, can I ask what you're currently using?" keeps the conversation moving. "That makes sense, but let me explain why we're different" tends to end it. In writing especially, the second version reads as dismissive even when it isn't meant to be.

Objections about timing are often genuine. They're also sometimes a polite way of saying the value isn't clear enough yet. If you're consistently hearing "not right now" from qualified prospects, the fix is usually in the email, not the calendar.

Managing inbox volume when you're running a high-rejection pipeline

Running a large sales pipeline means a high volume of email, and a lot of that email is rejection-adjacent: non-replies, soft nos, stalled threads, follow-ups that need drafting. It adds up quickly, and the administrative weight of it compounds the difficulty of staying on top of everything.

According to Fyxer's Admin Burden Index 2026, a survey of 5,000 UK and US office workers, email is the single biggest time-wasting admin task, with 32% of US workers citing reading, writing, and replying to emails as their top drain. For salespeople running high-volume pipelines, that overhead compounds fast.

Salespeople who are already stretched across a busy inbox find it harder to write thoughtful rejection responses and well-timed sales email follow-ups consistently. When you're behind, the instinct is to send something fast rather than something considered, and fast is usually where the relationship gets damaged.

One practical fix is to remove the inbox admin from the equation entirely. When replies are drafted and threads are pre-prioritized before you open them, the mental overhead of a busy pipeline drops significantly. The time you'd have spent triaging goes back to writing the follow-ups that are actually worth sending.

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Keeping perspective across a pipeline that runs on rejection

Cold outreach converting at 2-3% is performing well by most B2B benchmarks. Which means the overwhelming majority of what you send won't land, and a well-managed rejection rate is still a high rejection rate in absolute terms.

The salespeople who hold up well over time have built habits around the email side of this: how they respond to a no, how their follow-up sequences are structured, how they keep threads alive without being persistent to the point of being ignored. None of it is complicated, but it requires consistency, and consistency is hard when your inbox is out of control and your drafts folder is empty.

Handling sales rejection is a communication discipline. The reply email, the follow-up timing, the way you address objections in writing. Get those right consistently and the no you get today has a reasonable chance of becoming a closed deal six months from now.

Handling sales objections FAQs

How do you respond to a sales rejection email?
Keep it short. Acknowledge the decision, leave the door open without pressing on it, and give them a clear sense of when they'll hear from you again. Something like: "Thanks for letting me know. If the timing changes, I'd be glad to pick this up. I'll check back in later in the year." If the rejection came with a specific reason, name it in your reply. That signals you were paying attention, which matters when you do follow up.
How long should you wait before following up after a rejection?
For most B2B rejections, 60 to 90 days is a reasonable window. Budget cycles reset, teams change, and the problem your product solves can become more urgent quickly. Following up too soon reads as not having listened. Following up after too long means starting the conversation over from scratch. When you do reach out, reference the original exchange briefly rather than treating it as a cold contact.
What's the difference between a sales rejection and a sales objection?
An objection happens during an active conversation: "we already have something in place," "I need to run this by my manager." A rejection is a decision, not a discussion. The practical difference is in how you respond: objections invite a question that keeps things moving; rejections call for acknowledgment and a clear, low-pressure close that leaves the relationship intact for later.
What do you say when a prospect says "not right now"?
Treat it as a timing issue rather than a no. Acknowledge it directly, ask if it's okay to check back in at a specific point, and leave it there. Don't ask them to reconsider or explain the value again: the decision has been made for now, and pushing back in writing tends to come across harder than intended. A clean, professional reply at this stage is what keeps the door open three months from now.
Why do salespeople get rejected so often?
Cold outreach converting at 2 -3% is considered strong by most B2B benchmarks. The rejection rate is high by design: you're contacting people who didn't ask to hear from you, at a time that may not suit their priorities, about a problem they may not be actively trying to solve. When rejection feels excessive, the more useful question is whether a pattern is emerging (the same objection repeatedly, or drop-offs at the same point in the sequence) rather than treating each no in isolation.
How do you write a follow-up email after a sales rejection?
Reference the original conversation so they know this isn't a generic sequence. Note anything that's changed on your end since you last spoke. Ask one specific question rather than a vague check-in. Keep the tone neutral, because you're picking up a conversation that was left open, not chasing a deal. The emails that reopen closed conversations tend to be short, specific, and written as if the rejection was a pause rather than a permanent answer.