15 Best Cold Calling Books to Take Your Sales Team to New Levels

Most successful sales reps have a wealth of experience with cold calling. They are used to consistent action: qualifying prospects, sending cold emails, booking meetings, maybe following up a couple of times, and finally closing the deal.

Occasionally, though, you need to go back to the drawing board and identify gaps in your selling process.

You can revisit the fundamentals of selling, acquire a new soft skill that will enable you to close more deals, or leisurely read some sales and business literature. Reading books is one of the cheapest ways to acquire knowledge, improve your thinking skills, and, as a result, sell more.

We’ve already introduced you to amazing sales books. If you want to add more cold-calling books to your reading list, I've got you covered. This article covers the 15 best cold calling books, divided into four categories. Let’s get started.

Best Cold Calling Books with Sales Tactics

Whether you’re a seasoned professional or completely new to sales, the following books will provide techniques and tips for improving the conversion rate of your cold calling efforts.

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1. Gap Selling

Author: Keenan

Published: December 3, 2018

Who should read this: Experienced and new sales professionals ready to unlearn detrimental sales axioms they have formed for their careers.

Why salespeople need this book: The author shatters many limiting beliefs around selling, such as “people buy from people they like” (customers buy from anyone who can bring them value) and “customers don’t change” (they will embrace change if you prove that their future state is better than the present). The book shreds such beliefs and outdated sales tactics in a no-nonsense, engaging style.

Gap Selling involves genuinely helping customers, acting as a consultant, and becoming an expert that people can rely on to solve their problems. It shows you how to engage in the buying process with your customers instead of selling to them. Instead of taking orders, you turn into sales influencers.

Whether you’re a sales professional who likes reading or doesn’t, you’ll find fresh frameworks and many insights in the book.

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2. Smart Calling: Eliminate the Fear, Failure, and Rejection from Cold Calling

Author: Art Sobczak

Published: April 8, 2013

Who should read this? Inside sales reps will find valuable advice on smarter cold calling and actionable techniques for tackling specific sales challenges.

Why salespeople need this book: It’s one of the best cold calling books on B2B sales prospecting—for inspiration and insights. You can use it as a guide for creating a systematic process and a welcoming environment to conduct business over the phone.

The material is divided into four sections. The first introduces intelligent calling. The second is about prepping for your call by creating your value proposition, using social engineering to gather intelligence, setting smart call objectives, etc.

The third section features examples of opening statements you can use at the beginning of the call to create interest, handle early resistance, listen intently, get a commitment, etc. The final section sums up how to sound smart and stay motivated and concludes with a case study on smart calls.

To get the most value from the book, reading it in chunks is best. Apply the tips and strategies discussed in one chapter before you move on to the next one.

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Hey you! Yes, you. Want to know the best real estate prospecting tactics? Check out our guide.

3. Take the Cold Out of Cold Calling

Author: Sam Richter

Published: July 9, 2009

Who should read this: Inside sales professionals who do a lot of outbound prospecting.

Why salespeople need this book: The author shares search techniques and websites that you can use to find hidden information about your prospects, customers, and competition (including the “invisible web” that’s not accessible to search engines). You can use the info to foray into warm sales to make a great first impression, deepen your relationships with your clients, and close more business.

The book is an excellent resource for researching prospects, deriving sales insights from social networks, accessing premium information and highly qualified lead lists at low to zero cost, “warm call scripts,” and more. The last update of the book came out in 2015, yet many of its research techniques remain relevant for finding information about your prospects on the web.

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4. Hyper-Connected Selling: Win More Business by Building Personal Influence & Creating Human Connection

Author: David J.P. Fisher

Published: May 12, 2017

Who should read this: All kinds of sales professionals.

Why salespeople need this book: The world is now hyper-connected, and how customers buy has changed drastically. However, you can still leverage social selling technology in your daily sales activities and integrate yourself into the customer’s buying journey. The author introduces you to tools and tactics you can use alongside old-school sales techniques.

The book covers the modern evolution of selling, how to build relationships so that closing opportunities are always available for you, and still rely on selling the way it’s always been: human-to-human (by becoming a sales sherpa). It’s an excellent read for any sales professional who wants to leverage technology to sell more.

Best Cold Calling Books for Beginners

If you’re just getting started with prospecting cold leads and want to increase your chances of converting them into business, the books below will serve as invaluable resources.

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1. Fanatical Prospecting

Author: Jeb Blount

Published: October 5, 2015

Who should read this: It is most useful for new sales reps but has practical takeaways for experienced sales development representatives (SDR).

Why salespeople need this book: The material begins with an emphasis on relentless prospecting and details the mindsets of successful prospectors. In the following chapters, though, it moves beyond standard sales motivation. There are specific examples and practical frameworks experienced SDRs (as well as beginner sales reps) can leverage in their selling process.

The author is a sales acceleration specialist who has developed a detailed prospecting methodology in the book.

For instance, he shares the 30-day rule to keep the pipeline full, the law of familiarity to reduce prospect friction, scripts and frameworks for cold calling, cold emails, text messages, social selling, and more. Overall, it’s an excellent resource for learning successful prospecting across multiple channels.

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2. The Complete Idiot's Guide to Cold Calling

Author: Keith Rosen

Published: August 3, 2004

Who should read this: Good for newbies in the world of sales.

Why salespeople need this book: It provides a comprehensive selling framework for new sales reps in five sections. You can use the material to develop your process of prospecting and follow-up that runs on autopilot and aligns with your selling philosophy, strengths, and natural talents.

The book starts with sections on taking care of your inner game and delves into developing robust systems for generating new business. In the following sections, the author covers converting cold calls into warm calls through better conversations and getting past the gatekeeper to close more sales. It concludes with a section on securing your position at the top.

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3. How To Crush It, Kill It, & Master Cold Calling Now!

Author: Anthony Iannarino

Published: April 8, 2013

Who should read this: Salespeople who are getting started with cold calling.

Why salespeople need this book: Anthony Iannarino is a seasoned B2B sales coach. This 13-page E-book is a boot camp to dip your toes into cold calling. The material is succinct and insightful, and the questions after every chapter aid you in absorbing the concepts.

The book is a compilation of blog posts by the author. The subjects include why sales gurus detest cold calling, why salespeople don’t like cold calling, prospecting to C-level executives, offering value to your prospects during sales calls, and six principles of effectual cold calling.

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4. The Psychology of Selling: Increase Your Sales Faster and Easier Than You Ever Thought Possible

Author: Brian Tracy

Published: July 18, 2006

Who should read this: Salespeople beginning their careers will derive the most value from the book.

Why salespeople need this book: The author has delivered a healthy dose of motivation and psychological principles that play a crucial role during sales. Professionals getting started with sales will find the fundamental concepts and strategies in the book valuable.

The material is divided into eight easy-to-consume chapters. It starts with the inner game of selling, setting and achieving sales goals, why people buy, creative ways to sell, getting more appointments, the power of suggestions, and making the sale, and ends with the ten keys to success in selling.

Best Cold Calling Books for Startups

I've had a wealth of experience with startup sales, and it’s a subject close to my heart. If you’re a B2B startup venturing into sales, I recommend you take a bite at the books below (a couple of them are written by yours truly)!

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1. Your Growth Hacks Aren’t Working

Author: Steli Efti

Published: 2017

Who should read this: Startup founders looking to evaluate and set up cold calling for their business.

Why salespeople need this book: As a co-founder of a successful startup, I can tell you that cold calling is incredibly effective for customer acquisition. Most founders are fascinated by the idea of AI-powered chatbots and online sales funnels. But they rarely work. As most of your competitors are zigging, you can leverage the good old tactic of “cold calling” to zag and enable rapid growth for your company.

The book comprehensively covers how to create a sales process based on cold calling, from validating your idea to finding your ideal customer.

There are also a couple of sections on the psychology of sales success, the five most common sales mistakes, and how the most successful sales teams are using technology—like predictive dialers—to improve their sales productivity.

Even if you have zero sales experience, the book's examples and tactics will help you set up cold calling to reach your customers.

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2. The Founder's Guide To Sales Negotiation

Author: Steli Efti

Who should read this: Startup founders (especially those that sell SaaS products).

Why salespeople need this book: Startups often deal with negotiations in which fear of rejection looms. However, giving out discounts is not the way out. You can charge what your product’s worth by becoming a better sales negotiator.

Selling more does not require adopting clever tricks and complex strategies. Instead, it’s about changing your mindset and following a set of simple principles in this book.

The first chapter covers the negotiation mindset. For the rest of the book, we deep-dive into negotiation tactics, including the importance of silence, showing vulnerability, postponing, approaching the customer's demand for a discount, handling questions when you don’t know the right answer, and other tactics to get past most of your negotiation roadblocks. The book ends with a proven LOI template and instructions on renegotiating a deal.

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3. Outbound Sales, No Fluff: Written by two millennials who have actually sold something this decade

Author: Rex Biberston and Ryan Reisert

Published: December 7, 2017

Who should read this: Great for newly recruited SDRs straight out of college.

Why salespeople need this book: It contains a relatively quick overview of the world of outbound selling, which you can finish reading in about 30 minutes. There isn’t any immediately actionable advice in the book. On the other hand, it's also free of self-promotional jargon and fluff.

In eight crisp chapters, beginners can read and learn how to build their sales cadence. The first half covers fundamentals about creating prospecting lists, defining your “swimming sales,” targeting companies and using lead scraping tools.

The second half covers the specifics of a cold call, cold email, social selling, creating bucket leads, using technology tools, and funnel math to improve conversions.

To enhance your outbound sales strategy, consider utilizing these top-tier outbound sales tools.

Best Cold Calling Related Skill Development Books

To become more effective at cold calling, you need to work on a set of sales skills. Here are some books that will set you on the right track.

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1. Difficult Conversations: How to Discuss What Matters Most

Author: Douglas Stone, Bruce Patton, and Sheila Heen

Published: November 2, 2010

Who should read this: All sales professionals who want to apply emotional intelligence and learn the art of excellent communication during formal negotiations.

Why salespeople need this book: The book provides you with a practical framework for having difficult conversations with your clients, employees, and people in general. Whether you’re a sales organization leader, a sales development representative, or any other sales professional, the authors teach you the art of fruitful and effective conversations.

The book covers the underlying structure of difficult conversations, why people avoid having them (or worse, manage them poorly), how to listen for the meaning of what’s not said, how to stay balanced when attacked, and how to move from emotions to problem-solving.

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2. How to Get a Meeting with Anyone: The Untapped Selling Power of Contact Marketing Kindle Edition

Author: Stu Heinecke

Published: February 16, 2016

Who should read this: All kinds of sales professionals.

Why salespeople need this book: Bypassing the gatekeepers and reaching high-level decision-makers is tricky. The author (a cartoonist) relied on a personalized approach of “contact campaigns” to get attention and book meetings with CEOs and VIPs. The book lays out his unorthodox techniques, tips, and tactics for anyone to execute.

The material begins with an introduction to contact marketing and covers twenty categories of contact campaigns. After a couple of sections, it might become a tad repetitive, but you can walk away, adding a rather unconventional “contact marketing” toolset to your arsenal.

Hey you! Elevate your cold calling game with our article spotlighting the top 8 sales headsets you can't afford to miss.

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Bonus: The Introvert's Edge: How the Quiet and Shy Can Outsell Anyone

Selling is supposed to involve aggressive pitches, in-your-face conversations, and dealing with strangers. However, it’s a nightmare for introverts who lack these “natural talents.” In the book below, the introverted author describes a proven sales process that works for all kinds of personalities.

Author: Matthew Pollard, with Derek Lewis as a contributor

Published: January 4, 2018

Who should read this: Introvert sales professionals (although other personalities will also find it helpful).

Why salespeople need this book: While introverts might not make small talk easily or strike conversations with prospects, they can rely on their strengths for selling. The author discusses sales as a skill that can be acquired, and all personalities can follow it.

The book lays down the process of selling sincerely in seven steps by acting as a consultant. As the author puts in the first chapter, “...in the long-run, process beats personality. Every time.” All kinds of sales professionals can emulate the process laid out by the author and master selling.

Boost Your Sales with These Must-Read Cold Calling Books

Whether you’re getting started with cold calling or have extensive experience, it isn’t just about dialing numbers continuously. You need to take breaks and analyze the gaps in your selling process. Reading books is a guaranteed way to make you introspect, learn new techniques, and help you do better in your career.

So please pick up a book from the fifteen I shared in this article. If you’re confused about which one to read first, start with our free cold calling guide for startups.

Are there any other cold calling books that you would like to recommend? Let me know on LinkedIn!

Want to dive into the deep end with cold calling? Watch our B2B Cold Calling Crash Course! It'll teach you to build rapport and trust, display authority, and increase the desire for your product or service.


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