Insights & Strategy

B2B Marketing that actually
generates pipeline.

Practical frameworks for APAC market entry, AI-powered ops, and GTM strategy — written from the field.

APAC Market Entry

Why B2B tech companies take 18 months to crack APAC — and how to do it in 90 days

Most companies enter APAC with the wrong channels, the wrong rooms, and the wrong message. Here's the framework that compresses 18 months into a single quarter.

Read article → 8 min read
AI Marketing Ops

Your marketing team costs $150k/year. Here's what AI can replace — and what it can't

A practical breakdown of which marketing tasks AI handles better, faster, and cheaper — and where human strategy still wins.

Read article → 6 min read
GTM Strategy

The CFO question every B2B marketing budget should be able to answer

If you can't draw a straight line from marketing spend to pipeline, you don't have a marketing problem — you have a measurement problem.

Read article → 5 min read
APAC Market Entry

India vs SEA vs Middle East: which APAC market should B2B tech enter first?

Three very different buying behaviours, decision cycles, and channel mixes. Here's how to sequence your APAC entry based on your product and ICP.

Read article → 7 min read
AI Marketing Ops

How to build a marketing ROI dashboard that your CFO will actually trust

Most marketing dashboards show vanity metrics. Here's how to build one that connects every channel back to pipeline — and earns budget approval.

Read article → 6 min read
APAC Market Entry

Why APAC is not one market — and why treating it like one is killing your pipeline

India, Southeast Asia and the Middle East have completely different buyers, decision cycles, and channel mixes. One GTM strategy for all three is the most expensive mistake in APAC expansion.

Read article → 7 min read
GTM Strategy

The fractional CMO model is exploding in the US. Here's why APAC is next

US and European B2B companies discovered fractional leadership years ago. APAC is just catching up — and the companies that adopt it first will have a structural cost advantage over everyone still hiring full-time.

Read article → 6 min read
APAC Market Entry

How to build an APAC agency relationship map before you spend a dollar on marketing

The companies that crack APAC fast share one thing — they mapped the agency ecosystem before they started. GroupM, Publicis, IPG, Omnicom. Here's the framework.

Read article → 6 min read
AI Marketing Ops

Why your AI marketing stack is generating activity but not pipeline — and how to fix it

Most companies using AI for marketing can show you content calendars and outreach volume. Very few can show you a pipeline number. The difference is one thing: attribution.

Read article → 7 min read
APAC Market Entry

The B2B marketer's guide to LinkedIn pipeline in India, SEA and the Middle East

LinkedIn works differently in every APAC market. What gets a response from a CMO in Mumbai will be ignored in Singapore and seen as too aggressive in Dubai. Here's the market-by-market playbook.

Read article → 8 min read
April 2025 · 8 min read

Why B2B tech companies take 18 months to crack APAC — and how to do it in 90 days

APAC represents over 30% of global digital ad spend. Every B2B tech company with a product that sells to marketers, agencies, or enterprise buyers knows this. Most of them also have a slide in their board deck that says "APAC expansion — Year 2."

Year 2 becomes Year 3. Year 3 becomes "we're still figuring out the market." Eighteen months of effort, a handful of pilot conversations, and no meaningful pipeline to show for it.

This is not a product problem. It's a GTM problem — and it's almost always caused by the same three mistakes.

Mistake #1: Wrong channels

The playbook that works in the US — cold outreach, inbound content, paid digital — doesn't translate to APAC. Asian B2B buyers are relationship-led. They don't respond to cold email sequences. They don't convert from content marketing. They buy from people they've met in the right rooms.

"APAC decisions are made through relationships with agencies and holding groups — not inbound enquiries."

Companies that enter APAC with a US outbound motion spend 6–9 months generating zero pipeline, then blame the market. The market isn't the problem. The channel is.

Mistake #2: Wrong rooms

In India, Southeast Asia, and the Middle East, buying decisions for most B2B tech categories run through holding groups and agency trading desks before they reach brand marketing teams. GroupM, Publicis, IPG, Omnicom — these are the gatekeepers in every major market.

Companies that go direct to brands too early get politely told to "send more information." Companies that build relationships with the agencies that advise those brands get shortlisted before the brand even issues an RFP.

Mistake #3: Wrong message

A global pitch deck with US and European case studies lands flat in APAC. Regional buyers want regional proof points. They want to know that your product works in their market, with their buyers, against their specific constraints.

The fix: Localised collateral. Regional proof points. Messages built for each market's specific buying context — not a translated version of your global deck.

How to compress 18 months into 90 days

The companies that crack APAC quickly share one characteristic: they put someone in-market who already knows the rooms. Not a consultant who will research the market. Not an agency that will run some campaigns. An embedded operator who has existing relationships with the agencies, holding groups, and brand teams that make purchasing decisions.

That's what a Fractional Marketing Director does for APAC. From week one, you're in conversations. Not planning to have conversations — actually having them, with the right people, using the right message.

The 90-day framework looks like this:

  • Week 1: Market audit — ICP mapping, channel selection, competitor landscape for your specific product in each target market
  • Weeks 2–3: GTM strategy sprint — localised positioning, collateral brief, agency relationship map
  • Month 1: Execution live — LinkedIn pipeline, agency introductions, event presence if relevant
  • Month 2+: Pipeline tracking — every conversation logged, every introduction followed up, monthly reporting on what's moving

The difference between 90 days and 18 months is not budget. It's not headcount. It's knowing who to call on day one.

Ready to build APAC pipeline in 90 days?

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April 2025 · 6 min read

Your marketing team costs $150k/year. Here's what AI can replace — and what it can't

The question isn't whether AI will change B2B marketing. It already has. The question is which parts of your marketing operation should be handed to AI agents — and which parts still need a senior human making the call.

Most companies get this backwards. They use AI for the strategic work (generating ideas, writing strategy documents) and humans for the execution work (scheduling posts, writing email sequences, pulling reports). That's the wrong way around.

What AI handles better than humans

Execution at scale. Specifically:

  • Content creation: Blog posts, social content, email campaigns — generated, reviewed, and published at a volume no human team can match
  • Outreach sequences: Personalised LinkedIn and email sequences for every ICP segment, with A/B testing baked in
  • Lead scoring: Automated prioritisation based on engagement signals, so your sales team talks to the right people first
  • Reporting: Weekly and monthly reports generated automatically, with anomalies flagged for human review
"AI doesn't get tired, doesn't forget to follow up, and doesn't have bad days. For execution tasks, that's a significant advantage."

What still needs a human

Strategy and relationships. Specifically:

  • PR and media: Building journalist and analyst relationships requires genuine human connection
  • Brand positioning: The decisions about how you want to be perceived require human judgment and market intuition
  • Events: Standing at a booth, having a dinner, working a room — this is irreducibly human
  • Senior pipeline conversations: The CMO-to-CMO or CEO-to-VP calls that move enterprise deals forward

The CFO calculation

A standard B2B marketing team at a Series B company costs $100k–$200k per year in salaries alone, before tools, agencies, and events. That team produces inconsistent output, takes 3–6 months to ramp up, and rarely produces reporting that traces spend to pipeline.

An AI-powered marketing operation — with senior human strategy on the decisions that matter — costs a fraction of that. Starts in two weeks. Produces more output. And tracks every dollar to revenue.

The companies that move to this model first will have a structural cost advantage over competitors who are still paying for traditional marketing teams. That advantage compounds over time.

Want to see what this looks like for your business?

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March 2025 · 5 min read

The CFO question every B2B marketing budget should be able to answer

Here's the question: can you draw a straight line from your last marketing spend to a closed deal?

Not a dotted line. Not "we ran a campaign and then three months later a deal came in." A straight, traceable, defensible line — this activity generated this lead, which became this opportunity, which closed for this amount of revenue.

Most B2B marketing teams can't answer this question. According to industry data, less than 30% of B2B marketing spend is directly traceable to revenue. Which means more than 70% of marketing budgets are essentially operating on faith.

Why this matters more than ever

In a growth market, CFOs tolerate marketing spend they can't attribute. In a tighter environment — higher interest rates, longer sales cycles, more scrutiny on every budget line — they don't. Marketing is increasingly asked to justify itself the same way sales does: in pipeline and revenue, not impressions and engagement rates.

"Activity reports are not pipeline. Content calendars are not pipeline. Qualified meetings in your CRM are pipeline."

The measurement problem is solvable

The reason most B2B marketing teams can't trace spend to revenue isn't because it's technically impossible. It's because they haven't built the systems to do it. UTM parameters, CRM hygiene, attribution models, pipeline reporting — these are not complicated to set up. They're just not set up.

A full marketing ROI dashboard tracks:

  • Pipeline generated by channel (LinkedIn, events, content, outreach)
  • Cost per MQL by channel
  • MQL-to-SQL conversion rate by source
  • Revenue influenced by marketing activity in closed deals

When you have this data, budget conversations change entirely. You're not defending marketing spend — you're showing the CFO the return on a portfolio of investments, some performing, some not, with a clear plan to double down on what's working.

Ready to build marketing ops that your CFO trusts?

Full ROI dashboard included in every RayGTM engagement.

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March 2025 · 7 min read

India vs SEA vs Middle East: which APAC market should B2B tech enter first?

APAC is not one market. It's at least three very different buying environments — each with its own decision-makers, sales cycles, agency ecosystems, and cultural nuances. The mistake most companies make is treating them as one.

India: the volume play

India has the largest number of B2B tech buyers in APAC outside of Japan and China. Mumbai, Delhi, and Bangalore between them account for the majority of programmatic, AdTech, and MarTech spend in South Asia. Decision cycles are relatively fast by regional standards, and English is the working language of business.

The challenge: it's competitive. Every global vendor is in India. Differentiation requires either a very strong local case study, a competitive price point, or access to the right agency relationships — ideally all three.

Southeast Asia: the relationship play

Singapore is the regional hub. Decisions are made there, even when the budgets sit in Jakarta, Ho Chi Minh City, or Bangkok. The agency trading desk ecosystem is strong, and relationships built in Singapore open doors across the region.

The challenge: longer cycles. Enterprise deals in SEA take longer to close than in India or the Middle East. The ROI is real, but patience is required.

Middle East: the budget play

Dubai and Riyadh have the highest per-deal values of any APAC market. Brand budgets are large, and the appetite for new technology is high — particularly in the lead-up to major events and vision-aligned government initiatives. Relationships are everything, and deals often move faster than SEA once the relationship is established.

The challenge: you need to be physically present. Video calls don't close deals in the Middle East. Events, dinners, and in-person relationship-building are non-negotiable.

"The right sequencing depends on your product, your ICP, and your capacity to be physically present in each market."

How to sequence your entry

For most B2B tech companies entering APAC, the recommended sequence is: India first (fastest pipeline, English-language, strong agency ecosystem), Singapore second (regional hub, opens SEA), Middle East third (highest deal value, but requires more investment).

The exception: if your product is specifically strong for a particular vertical that over-indexes in one market, start there. A brand safety product should start in India. A government technology product should start in the Middle East.

Not sure which APAC market to enter first?

That's exactly the conversation we have in our 30-minute discovery call.

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February 2025 · 6 min read

How to build a marketing ROI dashboard that your CFO will actually trust

Most marketing dashboards are built to impress marketers, not CFOs. They're full of impressions, reach, engagement rates, and other metrics that look like progress but don't connect to revenue. A CFO looks at that dashboard and asks one question: so what?

Building a dashboard that earns CFO trust requires a different starting point — not "what can we measure?" but "what does the business need to see?"

Start with the business outcome, not the marketing metric

The business cares about three things: pipeline, revenue, and cost. Your dashboard should speak those three languages first, and explain the marketing inputs second.

The top-line view should show: pipeline generated by marketing this month, pipeline generated year-to-date, and cost per qualified meeting. Everything else is a drill-down.

The four layers of a CFO-ready dashboard

  • Layer 1 — Pipeline: Meetings booked, MQLs generated, SQLs accepted by sales. By channel, by month.
  • Layer 2 — Revenue influence: Which closed deals had a marketing touch? What was the total contract value of deals marketing influenced?
  • Layer 3 — Cost efficiency: Cost per MQL by channel. Cost per SQL. Return on ad spend if running paid.
  • Layer 4 — Activity: Content published, outreach sequences active, events attended. This is the bottom layer — it explains the inputs, not the outcomes.
"When your dashboard leads with pipeline and revenue, the budget conversation changes from 'defend your spend' to 'where should we invest more?'"

How AI makes this easier to build and maintain

The biggest barrier to a proper marketing ROI dashboard has historically been the manual work of pulling data from multiple tools — CRM, LinkedIn, email platform, events — and stitching it together into something coherent. AI agents now do this automatically. The data is always current, the report is always ready, and the anomalies are flagged before the CFO has to ask about them.

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Every RayGTM engagement includes full pipeline and revenue tracking from day one.

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May 2026 · 7 min read

Why APAC is not one market — and why treating it like one is killing your pipeline

Every B2B tech company that expands into APAC makes the same mistake at the beginning. They build one deck, one set of case studies, one outreach sequence, and one campaign — and they point it at "APAC." Then they wonder why nothing moves.

APAC is not a market. It is three distinct regions with different buyers, different decision-making structures, different agency ecosystems, and different channel mixes. What works in India will not work in Singapore. What works in Singapore will not work in Dubai. Treating them as one is not a minor inefficiency — it is the primary reason most APAC expansions take 18 months to generate their first meaningful pipeline.

India: volume, velocity and the agency gate

India has the largest number of agency and brand decision-makers in South Asia. The market is English-language, decision cycles are relatively fast, and the programmatic and AdTech ecosystem punches above its weight globally. Mumbai, Delhi and Bangalore account for the majority of relevant spend.

The critical thing to understand about India is that agencies gate brand access. GroupM, Publicis, IPG, Omnicom and Dentsu all have strong presences in Mumbai and Delhi, and most brand marketing budgets are planned in close consultation with agency partners. If the trading desk does not know you, the brand will not shortlist you — even if the CMO is personally enthusiastic.

In India, the sequence is always: agency relationship first, brand conversation second. Companies that reverse this add six months to every deal.

The right India playbook: build holding group relationships in Mumbai first, generate agency endorsement, then approach brand teams with a warm introduction. Content, LinkedIn outreach and events support this — they do not replace it.

Southeast Asia: the Singapore hub and the long game

Southeast Asia looks like six separate countries — Indonesia, Thailand, Vietnam, Philippines, Malaysia, Singapore — but for most B2B tech vendor decisions, it is one market with one strategic entry point: Singapore. Regional VPs sit in Singapore. Holding group regional hubs are in Singapore. The budget authority for pan-SEA technology decisions is in Singapore.

Companies that try to run six individual country strategies simultaneously spread their relationship capital too thin in all of them. Win Singapore — build the right relationships at the regional hub level — and the in-country conversations in Jakarta, Bangkok and Ho Chi Minh City become significantly shorter.

The trade-off: deal cycles in SEA are longer than India. Enterprise decisions take three to six months from first meeting. The relationships are stickier once established, but patience is required in the early stages.

Middle East: presence, relationships and the highest deal values in the region

Dubai and Riyadh account for the majority of B2B tech vendor decisions across MENA. Brand budgets are large, the appetite for new technology is high — particularly in categories adjacent to Vision 2030 priorities — and deals can move faster than SEA once a relationship is established.

The non-negotiable in the Middle East is physical presence. Video calls do not close deals here. In-person relationship building — dinners, events, face time at GITEX and UAE EXPAND — is how vendor trust is established. Companies that try to cover the Middle East remotely consistently underperform against competitors who show up.

The practical implication: build a sequenced APAC entry strategy — not a simultaneous one. Most B2B tech companies should start with India (fastest pipeline, English-language, strong agency ecosystem), move to Singapore (regional hub, opens SEA), and then invest in the Middle East (highest deal value, but requires physical presence). The exception: if your product over-indexes for a specific vertical that dominates in one market, start there.

One GTM strategy for all three will produce mediocre results in each. Three market-specific strategies, executed sequentially, will build compounding pipeline that a single unified approach never can.

Not sure which APAC market to enter first?

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May 2026 · 6 min read

The fractional CMO model is exploding in the US. Here's why APAC is next

In the US and Europe, fractional leadership is no longer a novelty. Fractional CFOs, CTOs, and CMOs are standard fixtures in the Series A-to-C growth stack. The model is simple: senior expertise, embedded in your team, at a fraction of the cost of a full-time hire. Companies that figured this out early have a structural advantage — access to experience that would otherwise take years and significant capital to build internally.

APAC has been slower to adopt the model. The reasons are partly cultural — there is a stronger default toward full-time employment in many APAC markets — and partly informational: the founders and CFOs who would benefit most simply have not been exposed to the model in a regional context.

That is changing. And the companies that adopt fractional marketing leadership for their APAC operations first will have the same advantage that early adopters of the model had in the US three years ago.

Why the traditional hiring approach fails in APAC

The standard playbook for APAC expansion involves one of two approaches: hire a regional Marketing Director (expensive, slow, high-risk) or task the existing global marketing team with covering APAC alongside their other responsibilities (underpowered, no in-market relationships, consistently deprioritised).

The hiring approach has three problems. Finding the right person takes four to six months. Ramping them up in your product and market takes another three to six. And if it does not work out, you have lost twelve months and a significant amount of cost. For a market you are not yet sure about, this is a significant bet on a single hire.

The fractional model inverts the risk. You get senior in-market expertise from week one, a 30-day exit clause if it is not working, and a cost structure that scales with your APAC ambition rather than ahead of it.

What fractional marketing leadership actually looks like in practice

A fractional Marketing Director for APAC is not a consultant who delivers a strategy document and disappears. It is an embedded senior operator who attends your leadership calls, builds relationships on your behalf with agencies and brands, develops your in-market collateral, runs your LinkedIn pipeline, and attends the events where APAC deals get made.

The difference from a full-time hire: they bring existing relationships and in-market knowledge from day one. There is no ramp time. The first agency introduction can happen in week two, not month six.

Why APAC specifically is where this model pays off most

In most Western markets, B2B marketing is primarily digital — content, paid, email, and outbound sequences. Relationships matter, but the digital channel does significant work. In APAC, the balance is different. Relationships are the primary channel. Knowing the right person at the right agency, being in the right room at the right event, having a direct introduction rather than a cold email — these things determine whether a deal gets shortlisted or ignored.

That relationship capital takes years to build. A fractional APAC Marketing Director who already has it is not just cheaper than a full-time hire — they are fundamentally more effective, because the thing that matters most in APAC is the one thing that cannot be hired for and trained quickly.

Want to see what fractional APAC marketing looks like for your business?

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April 2026 · 6 min read

How to build an APAC agency relationship map before you spend a dollar on marketing

The single most reliable predictor of how quickly a B2B tech company builds pipeline in APAC is not their product, their pricing, or their marketing budget. It is whether they understand the agency ecosystem before they start spending.

In APAC — particularly in India, Singapore and the Middle East — most brand marketing budgets are planned and allocated in consultation with agency partners. Holding groups control significant amounts of vendor access. Trading desks influence which technology solutions get evaluated. If you have not mapped this ecosystem before you launch your APAC marketing, you are building a strategy without knowing who the actual decision-makers are.

The four layers of the APAC agency ecosystem

Understanding the structure first makes the relationship map much clearer.

  • Holding groups: GroupM, Publicis Groupe, IPG, Omnicom, Dentsu. These are the parent companies that own most major agency brands. Regional leadership at holding group level sets vendor policy and influences trading desk direction across their entire portfolio of agencies.
  • Agency brands: Within each holding group sit the agency brands — Mindshare, Wavemaker, MediaCom (GroupM), Starcom, Zenith, Blue 449 (Publicis), UM, Initiative (IPG) and so on. These are where day-to-day planning and buying happen.
  • Trading desks: Each holding group has a programmatic trading desk — Xaxis (GroupM), Publicis Media Exchange (PMX), Cadreon (IPG), etc. For AdTech and programmatic vendors, relationships with trading desks are often more important than relationships with the agencies themselves.
  • Independent agencies: Outside the holding groups, there is a growing independent agency sector in India and Singapore. These are often faster to evaluate new technology and can be valuable early adopters.

Building your relationship map

Start with a simple spreadsheet. Columns: holding group, agency brand, trading desk name, key market (India/SG/UAE), contact name if known, relationship status (none / aware / meeting / active). Rows: every relevant holding group and agency in your target markets.

The goal of the relationship map is not to contact everyone on it. It is to know who the ten most important relationships are for your specific product category — and to build those ten relationships before you start broad outreach.

For most AdTech and MarTech products, the ten most important relationships in India will be: two or three holding group heads of programmatic or technology, two or three agency trading desk leads, and three or four independent agency heads of digital. Get those ten relationships right, and your first 90 days of APAC pipeline will outperform a year of cold outreach to brand marketing teams.

How to start when you have no existing relationships

LinkedIn is your primary tool. Most senior agency people in India and Singapore are active on LinkedIn and responsive to well-crafted outreach — particularly if the message demonstrates knowledge of their market and does not lead with a product pitch. Events are your secondary tool: Goafest, DigiPlus and IAMAI summits in India; Advertising Week Asia and Marketing Show Asia in Singapore. One well-attended event can compress three months of outreach into a single day of introductions.

Want a complete APAC agency relationship map built for your product?

It is part of the Week 1 deliverable in every RayGTM engagement.

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April 2026 · 7 min read

Why your AI marketing stack is generating activity but not pipeline — and how to fix it

There is a pattern appearing consistently across B2B tech companies that have invested in AI marketing tools over the last two years. The tools are producing content at scale. Outreach sequences are running. Social media calendars are full. Reports are being generated. And yet, when the CFO asks for the pipeline number that marketing contributed to last quarter, nobody in the room can answer with confidence.

This is not an AI problem. AI is producing what it was asked to produce. It is an attribution problem — and it is solvable.

The gap between activity and pipeline

Most AI marketing deployments are built around a single question: how do we produce more output with fewer people? That is the right starting question. But it leads to an implementation that measures the wrong things. Content volume. Outreach sent. Engagement rates. These are activity metrics. They tell you that the machine is running. They do not tell you whether the machine is producing revenue.

The companies that have closed this gap did so by starting from a different question: for every dollar of AI marketing spend, what pipeline should it produce — and how will we know when it does?

Activity metrics and pipeline metrics look similar on a dashboard. The difference is that only one of them earns budget approval in a board meeting.

Three specific fixes

The attribution gap in AI marketing operations typically has three root causes, each with a practical fix.

  • Fix 1 — UTM discipline: Every piece of content, every outreach sequence, every LinkedIn post should have UTM parameters that track through to your CRM. If you cannot see in your CRM that a specific blog post or email sequence produced a meeting, you cannot attribute pipeline to it. Most companies have UTMs on paid media and nothing else. Fix the tracking first.
  • Fix 2 — Define what a qualified outcome looks like before you build the sequence: Most AI outreach is built around volume — send more messages, get more replies. The better model is to define what a qualified response looks like (a specific type of reply from a specific type of person at a specific type of company), and then optimise for that rather than for reply rate.
  • Fix 3 — Weekly pipeline review, not monthly reporting: Monthly marketing reports are too slow to catch attribution gaps. A weekly 15-minute review — what conversations did marketing generate this week, where are they in the pipeline — forces the connection between marketing activity and commercial outcome that monthly reports obscure.

What the right AI marketing operation looks like

When AI marketing is built around pipeline attribution rather than activity volume, the output looks different. Content is written to attract a specific ICP, with tracking built in. Outreach sequences are targeted at specific accounts with specific messages, and replies are logged in the CRM with source attribution. The weekly dashboard shows meetings booked, pipeline value, and cost per qualified conversation — not impressions and reach.

The test: can you answer this question right now? How much pipeline did your marketing generate last month — and which specific activities generated it? If the answer requires a conversation with three people and a spreadsheet, the attribution infrastructure is not in place yet.

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March 2026 · 8 min read

The B2B marketer's guide to LinkedIn pipeline in India, SEA and the Middle East

LinkedIn is the most effective B2B pipeline channel in APAC — but it works completely differently in each market. A message that gets a response from a CMO in Mumbai will be ignored in Singapore and seen as too aggressive in Dubai. Understanding the market-by-market nuance is the difference between a LinkedIn strategy that generates meetings and one that generates silence.

India: volume, directness and the warm introduction

Indian B2B professionals on LinkedIn are active and relatively responsive to outreach — more so than their counterparts in SEA or the Middle East. Decision-makers at agencies and brands in Mumbai, Delhi and Bangalore regularly accept connections from unknown contacts and will engage with relevant content.

What works in India: a direct connection request with a short, specific message explaining why you are connecting and what you do. No long pitch in the first message. A genuine comment on their recent content before connecting helps significantly. Follow-up messages should be spaced four to five days apart — faster than Western markets, slower than US-style aggressive sequencing.

What does not work: generic connection requests with no context, immediate product pitches after connecting, and long first messages that read like cold emails. Indian professionals are polite but will simply not respond rather than engage with something irrelevant.

The warm introduction is the most powerful tool in India LinkedIn outreach. A mutual connection mentioning your name before you reach out increases response rates dramatically — often by 300% or more.

Southeast Asia: thought leadership before outreach

LinkedIn outreach in Singapore and Southeast Asia requires significantly more credibility established before the first message. Regional VPs and agency leads in Singapore receive high volumes of vendor outreach and have low tolerance for messages that feel transactional.

The effective sequence in SEA: publish relevant thought leadership content for four to six weeks targeting your ICP (LinkedIn's algorithm will surface it to relevant people in their network). Engage genuinely with content from your target contacts — comments, not just likes. Then connect with a message that references something specific about their work or a piece of content you engaged with. The conversion rate on this sequence is significantly higher than cold connection requests.

What works in SEA: patience, genuine engagement, and messages that demonstrate you understand their specific market context. What does not work: high-volume outreach sequences, generic messages, and any hint of urgency or pressure.

Middle East: events first, LinkedIn second

The Middle East is the market where LinkedIn outreach works least well in isolation. Dubai and Riyadh professionals respond far better to connections made in person — at GITEX, UAE EXPAND, or industry dinners — followed up on LinkedIn, than to cold LinkedIn outreach.

That said, LinkedIn does play a role: it is where Middle East professionals research vendors they have already heard about. If someone meets you at GITEX and looks you up on LinkedIn, a well-maintained profile with relevant content will reinforce the relationship. If someone hears your name from a mutual contact and searches you, your LinkedIn presence is often the deciding factor in whether they agree to a meeting.

  • Profile optimisation matters more in the Middle East than in other markets — senior buyers will look at your profile, your company page, and your content history before agreeing to a meeting
  • Arabic-language content for Saudi-focused outreach significantly outperforms English-only — even a bilingual post shows commitment to the market
  • Shared connection introductions are the most effective outreach mechanism — a warm introduction from a mutual connection within the GCC business community converts at dramatically higher rates than cold outreach

The one thing that applies across all three markets

In every APAC market, the quality of your LinkedIn profile and content is table stakes. A sparse profile, inconsistent posting, or content that reads like marketing copy will kill your outreach conversion rate before the first message is sent. Senior buyers in India, Singapore and Dubai all research you before they respond. Your LinkedIn is your credibility signal — treat it as such.

Want a market-specific LinkedIn pipeline strategy built for your APAC expansion?

LinkedIn outreach and pipeline is included in every RayGTM APAC engagement.

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