How to Run a LinkedIn Outreach Campaign to Purchase-Focused Mortgage Loan Officers in 2026
Step-by-step guide to running a LinkedIn campaign for purchase-focused mortgage loan officers in 2026. Includes copy-paste sequence, list refinement, and tracking.
Team
Quick Answer
You built a hyper-relevant list of purchase-focused mortgage loan officers using Origami's AI, but a list is just names unless you move them to a conversation. This companion guide walks through refining that list for LinkedIn, a 3-touch sequence you can copy and paste today, and exactly how to send and track so you get replies from LOs who close purchase business.
If you haven't built your list yet, start with the parent post: how to build a list of Purchase-Focused Mortgage Loan Officers to Sell To.
Step 1: Refine Your Origami-Built List for LinkedIn
Origami spits out verified names, emails, phones, company info, and role-specific signals. But not every contact belongs in your LinkedIn sequence. Messaging to a branch manager at a retail bank needs a different angle than an independent broker who’s doing 90% purchase volume. Spend 30 minutes segmenting the list before you queue the first connection request.
Filter out the noise
- Remove LOs whose volume is clearly refinance-heavy. In the mortgage industry, an LO at a call-center lender with no local agent partnerships is likely doing refi business, not purchase. Cross-reference company type: if it’s a direct-to-consumer refi shop, set them aside.
- Skip LOs who are inactive on LinkedIn. A quick profile check — no photo, 23 connections, last post in 2019 — tells you they won’t see your message.
Segment by purchase intensity Group your list into three buckets:
- Purchase pure-play — LOs who self-identify as “purchase-focused,” mention realtor partners in their headline, or show recent posts about buyer strategies.
- Hybrid but purchase-leaning — LOs with a mix of refi and purchase, but their content or title hints they want more purchase business.
- Newer LOs hungry for purchase — often at brokerages, they’ll entertain anything that helps them close more buyer deals.
Your highest-converting messages will go to the first bucket. Budget your outreach accordingly: 70% of volume to purchase pure-plays, 30% to the other two groups.
Additional segmentation levers
- Geography — if your offer (or your own business) only works in certain states, filter by license state now. Even if Origami gave you a national list, you’ll waste messages on LOs you can’t serve.
- Company type — independent mortgage brokers behave differently than LOs at depository banks. Brokers have more autonomy and are often quicker to adopt new services.
- Loan origination system (LOS) on profile — some LOs list their tech stack. If you’re selling a tool that integrates with Encompass, prioritize those mentions.
After you’ve cleaned the list, export a CSV with name, company, title, LinkedIn profile URL, and a custom field for the segment. This CSV is what you’ll load into your outreach tool (or reference manually) in Step 3.
Step 2: The 3-Touch LinkedIn Sequence (Copy & Paste)
This sequence is designed for purchase-focused LOs in 2026 — a market where rates are still elevated, inventory is tight, and LOs survive on agent referrals, speed, and conversion. The messages avoid generic “I help LOs” fluff and speak directly to the realities they face: competing for realtor loyalty, squeezing more funded units from their current pipeline, and justifying ROI on every minute they spend.
Rules before you send
- Always personalize the
,, and if possible reference one specific detail from their profile (a recent article, a shared connection, a niche like “VA purchase” or “first-time homebuyers”). - No links in touch one. LinkedIn deprioritizes connection notes with URLs.
- Keep messages under 100 words. LOs are busy and will scan before they decide to reply.
Touch 1 — Connection Request (no InMail)
Hi — I see you’re a purchase-focused LO in . The market’s tough right now, but you’re still closing deals. I help LOs like you build a repeatable referral pipeline that doesn’t depend on rates dropping. Would be great to connect.
Why it works: It acknowledges the environment without complaining about it, recognizes their purchase specialization, and hints at a system rather than a one-off trick.
Touch 2 — Follow-up Message (Day 3)
Subject: , quick thought on purchase volume
, been talking to a handful of LOs who are adding 2-3 extra purchase deals a month just by restructuring their agent outreach cadence — not more time, just smarter targeting. I put together a short breakdown on how they’re doing it in 2026. Want me to send it?
Why it works: It quantifies the outcome without overpromising, uses an industry-specific lever (agent outreach), and ends with a low-friction ask. No generic “check out my calendar.”
Touch 3 — Soft Close (Day 7)
Subject: Last try,
, I know you’re buried closing purchase loans. I’ll be brief: if you’re open to a 10-minute call, I’ll show you exactly how we help LOs turn one agent relationship into a predictable stream of pre-approved buyers. If it’s not a fit, no worries — I’ll leave you alone. Either way, appreciate what you do in this market.
Why it works: It respects their time, re-frames the conversation from “buy my product” to “let me show you a specific outcome,” and definitively closes the loop if they’re not interested.
Variant for hybrid LOs (swap into Touch 2 or 3): “I know you do some refi now, but the LOs who’ve future-proofed their income are the ones growing purchase share early. Curious if you’ve thought about building your agent network before the next rate cycle?”
Step 3: Send and Track Your Campaign
1. Choose Your Sending Method
Origami’s list view + Manual If your list is under 200, send connection requests directly from Origami’s list view. You’ll see better acceptance because the request looks native, and you can quickly personalize each note with profile cues.
Origami’s Sequencer (safe automation) For lists up to 500–600 LOs, LinkedIn-safe automation Origami’s built-in Sequencer handles automated sequences with human-like delays. This saves hours without risking account health. Import your segmented CSV, map and other variables, and let the sequence run over 7 days.
Important: Never automate InMail blasts to free LinkedIn accounts. Use connection requests with notes, never blank. Stay under 100 invites per week per personal account to keep deliverability high.
2. What Response Rates to Expect
For a clean list of purchase-focused LOs with a tight message, expect:
- Connection acceptance: 12–18% (slightly higher for purchase pure-plays if you personalize with a local reference)
- Replies from accepted connections (Touch 2+3): 4–8%, with most coming on Touch 2.
- Meeting booked: 1–3% of initial connects sent — those who convert to a call or demo.
These numbers are realistic in 2026, not inflated by spray-and-pray outreach. LOs are cold-messaged constantly; being purchase-specific and acknowledging the market cuts through.
3. When to Iterate
Wait until you’ve sent at least 50–60 connection requests per segment before tweaking messaging. If acceptance is below 10% after a full week, adjust your connection note — maybe the angle on “referral pipeline” isn’t resonating; test an alternative that calls out “closing agent-attached leads faster.”
If replies are low but acceptance is fine, Touch 2 is where you need a sharper hook. Split-test the “extra 2-3 purchase deals” line against something like “simplify pre-approval follow-up so agents trust you with their best buyers.”
If nothing moves the needle, return to your list. A poorly targeted list will never convert, no matter the message. This is where Origami’s AI-built lists shine — if you suspect the list is off, you can regenerate a fresh set of LOs with tighter purchase criteria in minutes.