How to Run a LinkedIn Outreach Campaign for Garage Door Repair Company B2B Leads in 2026
Step-by-step guide to sending personalized LinkedIn sequences to garage door repair business owners from inside Origami — from refining your list to 3-touch copy you can steal.
Founder @ Origami
Quick Answer: You can run a complete LinkedIn outreach campaign for garage door repair company leads directly inside Origami — because Origami now includes a built-in LinkedIn sequencer that sends connection requests, follow-ups, and tracks replies, all from the same dashboard where you built your list. No exporting, no third-party tools.
This guide walks through exactly how to refine your garage door repair B2B prospect list, craft a 3-touch LinkedIn sequence that gets responses, and send it all from one platform. If you haven’t built the list yet, start with our how to build a list of Garage Door Repair Company B2B Leads and come back when you have a few hundred enriched profiles ready.
Step 1 – Build the list in Origami (recap)
You don’t need a fresh tool — you’re already in Origami. If you followed the parent guide, you likely have a list of garage door repair business owners, operations managers, and general managers, each enriched with verified email, phone number, LinkedIn profile URL, company size, and location.
Here’s the prompt that built it:
“Find owners and decision-makers at garage door repair companies in Dallas, Houston, Austin, and San Antonio with fewer than 20 employees. Include LinkedIn profiles, email, and phone.”
Origami’s AI chains data sources and returns a table. A free account gives you 1,000 credits — no credit card needed — enough to build a test list of 200-300 contacts and run a small campaign. Paid plans start at $29/month, and the sequencer itself is free. You pay only for the credits used to enrich leads.
If your list is ready, open it in Origami and let’s refine.
Step 2 – Refine and qualify the list for LinkedIn
Before you message anyone, kill the noise. A list of 500 garage door repair owners looks good until you notice 30% are residential handymen with a DBA, another 10% are closed businesses, and a chunk are overlapped with general contractors who don’t specialize in garage doors.
What to filter inside Origami
1. Title. Only keep real decision-makers: Owner, President, General Manager, Operations Manager. Remove “Technician”, “Installer”, or “Office Assistant” unless they’re clearly the secondary buyer. Garage door repair is a lean industry; 80% of purchase decisions (marketing software, parts supply, job management tools) are made by the owner or a family member running operations.
2. Company size. For B2B services aimed at garage door repair companies, the sweet spot is 3–15 employees. Under 3 is often a solo operator doing everything by hand, not yet ready to pay for a SaaS platform that costs more than their monthly gas. Over 15 employees and they’re a regional operation with existing vendor contracts — harder to break in with a cold LinkedIn message.
3. Location precision. Garage door repair is hyper-local. A company in “Dallas” might mean they serve only Richardson. When you segment, focus on service areas you can actually serve. In Origami, you can filter by city or zip code directly on the enriched data — no need to cross-reference Google Maps.
4. Activity signals. Origami sometimes captures recent job postings or tech stack snippets. If a garage door company just posted for a “dispatcher” or “sales rep” on Indeed, they’re growing — and probably overwhelmed. Those are gold. Prioritize them.
What “qualified” looks like
A qualified garage door repair B2B lead for LinkedIn outreach:
- Has decision authority (Owner, Ops Manager, GM)
- Company size between 3 and 15
- Located in a city/market you actually cover
- Active LinkedIn profile (profile picture, recent activity is a bonus)
- No obvious competitor already embedded (e.g., using a specific software) — though if you’re a competing tool, that’s a green flag
After filtering, a list of 500 often shrinks to 180–220 real, reachable leads. That’s still a full campaign. Better to have 200 relevant people than 500 you’ll annoy.
Step 3 – Create the LinkedIn sequence
Now you have a clean list. Open the list in Origami and click Sequence. You’ll see two options:
- Paste your own templates — you write a 3-touch sequence (connection request note, Day 3 follow-up, Day 7 follow-up) and set delays between each touch. Then Origami sends those exact messages to every prospect, automatically filling in first name, company name, etc., using the enriched data.
- Let the agent write it — you describe your goal (“book a demo for a job scheduling and invoicing tool”) and Origami’s AI generates a personalized three-day sequence for each lead. It uses their profile info (title, company, industry) to tailor the copy, so messages feel custom even though they’re generated at scale.
For garage door repair owners, I’ve tested both approaches. The agent-written versions often pull engagement phrases from their profile (like “noticed you’re expanding to commercial doors”) that you’d never include manually. But if you want full control, here’s a sequence you can steal and paste directly into Origami.
Full 3-touch sequence for garage door repair B2B leads
Context for this sequence: You’re selling a lead generation tool that helps garage door repair companies get more local inbound calls without relying on Angi or HomeAdvisor leads that eat 20–30% of the job. The persona you’re messaging is an owner running a 5-person crew, doing $400k–$800k a year, burned by lead-buying platforms but too busy to build their own marketing.
Touch 1 (Day 0) – Connection request note
Hey , I noticed you’re running in . I help garage door repair shops in get more local calls without paying for Angi leads. Worth a connect?
Why it works: Puts locality front and center, calls out the pain (paid leads), and it’s a low-commitment ask. 50 words.
Touch 2 (Day 3) – Follow-up message
, quick thought — I looked at how many garage door repair companies in show up in the map pack for “garage door repair .” Most aren’t optimized. We fix that, and we don’t charge per lead. Just a monthly flat rate. Happy to show you how one shop in went from 20 calls/mo to 60+ with zero ad spend. Not selling, just sharing if you want to see.
Why it works: References specific local SEO pain (map pack), gives a real anecdote, and disarms with “not selling.” 98 words.
Touch 3 (Day 7) – Final message
, last note — I know you’re in the field, not staring at a dashboard. That’s why our thing works: it brings jobs in while you’re on the truck. If you want 5 extra calls this week, here’s a 2-min loom that shows how: [link]. If not, no hard feelings. —
Why it works: Respects their time, offers a low-friction video instead of a meeting, and frames the benefit in concrete terms (5 calls, while on the truck). 79 words.
You can paste these three messages into Origami’s sequencer, set your touch delays (Day 0, Day 3, Day 7), and choose whether you want to manually review each message before sending or let it fly unattended. Origami will pull , , , etc. from the enriched data. If it can’t find a field, you can set a fallback like “your area.”
If you choose “Let the agent write it,” Origami will generate similar messages but with more personalized hooks. For example, for a lead who’s VP at a 12-person shop in Austin, the agent might write: “Saw you opened a second location in Pflugerville — scaling is tough. We help shops like yours automate booking so you don’t miss calls while managing multiple crews.” That’s harder to template, and it works at scale.
Step 4 – Send the sequence directly from Origami
Here’s where most guides stop — they give you copy and tell you to figure out the sending part. Not here. You’re sending everything from the same Origami dashboard where you built the list. No CSV exports, no syncing to a separate sequencer, no Zapier hacks.
- Inside your prospect list, select the contacts you want to sequence (or all of them after refinement).
- Click Sequence > New Sequence.
- Paste your messages (or generate them), set delays (I recommend Day 0, Day 3, Day 7 — shorter if urgency is high).
- Hit Launch.
Origami’s built-in LinkedIn sequencer will begin sending connection requests from your LinkedIn account. It respects daily limits (safe sending: 20–30 connection requests per day) and randomizes timing slightly to avoid patterns. Once a connection request is accepted, the follow-ups fire automatically on the schedule you set.
Sending & tracking
As messages go out, the same Origami dashboard shows:
- opens, clicks, and replies
- which stage each prospect is in (Pending invite, Connected, Messaged, Replied)
- full conversation thread if the prospect replies
You can click any contact and see their enriched profile — title, company size, tools used, location — alongside the outreach activity. So if a garage door owner replies “tell me more,” you immediately know they’re using QuickBooks and ServiceTitan, and you can tailor your response without digging through notes.
Automatic un-enrollment
If a prospect replies at any point, Origami automatically removes them from the rest of the sequence. No accidentally sending “Just checking in” after they’ve already booked a demo. It also marks them as “Replied” and highlights that conversation.
One platform, not a workflow patch
The power here is that it’s one platform from list-building to outreach. Find leads, enrich data, segment, write messages, send sequences, and track replies — all without switching tabs or tools. The sequencer is included on all paid plans. You’re only paying for credits to enrich leads (starting at $29/month); the sending itself is free.
What response rate to expect (and when to pivot)
For garage door repair B2B leads, outreach from a genuine business-service provider (not a spammy “I can grow your business” message), expect:
- Connection acceptance: 20–30% if your note is local and relevant. Garage door owners are used to getting vendor pitches, but a hyper-local angle (mentioning their city or a specific pain) stands out.
- Reply rate: 8–15% of those who connect. Of those replies, half will be “not interested” or “busy,” but the other half will engage.
If your connection rate is below 15% after 100 sends, rewrite the note. If your reply rate stays below 5% despite solid acceptances, the sequence messaging needs work — likely it’s too salesy or too generic. The good thing is, inside Origami you can pause, tweak the messages, and resume. You’re never stuck with a dead sequence.
If after tweaking messages twice you still see low engagement, go back to Step 2 — your list quality or targeting might be off. Maybe you’re hitting solo operators who don’t use LinkedIn, or companies too small to afford a monthly tool. Refine the filters and try again.
The full loop: from no list to booked meetings in one morning
Here’s the end-to-end flow in 2026:
- Open Origami.
- Describe the garage door repair companies you want: “Owners of garage door repair businesses in Texas with 3–15 employees and active LinkedIn profiles.”
- Get 400 enriched contacts. Refine down to 200 qualified leads.
- Paste the 3-touch sequence above into the sequencer (or let the agent write one) and set delays to Day 0, Day 3, Day 7.
- Launch. Go repair your own garage while Origami sends invites and follow-ups.
- Check back to see replies, respond to interested owners, and book demos.
That’s a garage door repair B2B outreach machine that runs on one platform, with no Excel juggling, no tool-hopping, and no missed follow-ups. The built-in sequencer changed the game — because having a great list means nothing if you can’t message it right there.