Rotate Your Device

This site doesn't support landscape mode. Please rotate your phone to portrait.

LinkedIn Outreach for Saudi Real Estate Customer Relations Managers in 2026: A Tactical Guide

Step-by-step LinkedIn outreach campaign for Saudi real estate customer relations managers using Origami’s built-in sequencer. Copy-paste messaging sequences, segmentation tips, and sending strategy for 2026.

Charlie Mallery
Charlie MalleryUpdated 10 min read

GTM @ Origami

Quick Answer

Origami changes the game because it’s no longer a list‑building tool with a separate outreach step. Its built‑in LinkedIn sequencer means you find Saudi Real Estate Customer Relations Managers, enrich their profiles, craft personalised sequences, and send everything without exporting a CSV. The sequence is free on any paid plan—you only pay for enrich credits. Here’s exactly how I run this campaign in 2026, with the full 3‑touch copy you can steal.


If you already built your prospect list using the how to build a list of Saudi Real Estate Customer Relations Managers guide, skip to Step 2. If not, here’s a 60‑second recap so you can follow along.

Step 1 – Build the list in Origami

The prompt you type into Origami looks like this:

Find Customer Relations Managers at top real estate development and property management companies in Saudi Arabia. Include people handling tenant relations, customer experience, post-sale service, and complaints. Exclude brokers and agents focused only on sales.

Origami’s AI agent searches the live web, chains public data sources, enriches contacts in real time, and returns a qualified list. Every record contains:

  • Full name and current title
  • Company name and industry
  • Linkedin profile URL
  • Verified email address (often a direct work email)
  • Phone number when available
  • Company size, tech stack signals, and recent job changes

The free plan gives you 1,000 enrichment credits—enough to finalise a clean list of 150–200 Saudi real estate CRMs without putting a credit card down. Paid plans start at $29/month and include the sequencer.


Step 2 – Refine and qualify the list for LinkedIn

A 200‑person list isn’t a campaign yet. It’s raw horsepower. Let’s segment it so your sequence lands on the right desk.

For Saudi real estate Customer Relations Managers, I cut the list three ways:

  1. By company type

    • Tier‑1 developers: Emaar, Roshn, Dar Al Arkan, Jabal Omar, Red Sea Global, Diriyah Gate, etc. These managers deal with high‑volume, premium‑brand expectations.
    • Mid‑market developers and property management firms: less brand pressure, more operational pain (manual processes, small teams).
    • Facility management arms and mixed‑use operators: their CRM title often hides a heavy maintenance‑coordination workload.
  2. By seniority

    • Head of Customer Relations / Director – longer buying cycles, strategic conversations.
    • Manager / Team lead – owns day‑to‑day tool decisions, faster to get a “yes.”
    • Coordinator / specialist – good for referrals and market intelligence, not your primary outreach target unless they’re moving into a bigger role.
  3. By location and project phase

    • Riyadh vs. Jeddah vs. Dammam/Neom – messaging that references specific giga‑projects always gets better replies.
    • New‑launch projects (post‑2023) often have immature CRM systems; mature communities have legacy tools and higher switching pain.

What “qualified” looks like here:
A Saudi real estate CRM who has been in the role for at least 6 months, works for a company with more than 300 residential units under management, and shows signals that the business is investing in customer experience—recent LinkedIn posts about NPS, digital transformation, or a CX award. Those are the ones who reply.

In Origami, you tag these segments directly on the list screen. The sequencer later picks up those tags, so you can run slightly different variants to each segment without rebuilding anything.


Step 3 – Create the LinkedIn sequence

Now the core. Origami gives you two paths:

  1. Paste your own templates – you write the messages, set the delay between touches, and launch. This is what I recommend for a controlled roll‑out. I’ll give you the exact templates below.
  2. Let the AI agent write it – tell Origami “Write a 3‑day LinkedIn sequence for Saudi real estate customer relations managers,” and it will generate personalised copy for every lead, pulling from their enriched profile data (title, company, recent posts, tech stack). The messages read like you researched each person for 20 minutes. Start with this if you’re testing messaging fast.

Because most folks want something they can tweak, here’s my tested 3‑touch sequence for Saudi real estate CRMs in 2026.


Touch 1 – Day 1: Connection request with note

Keep this under 300 characters. You’re looking for the accept, not a reply.

Note (exactly what you paste in the connection request):

Hi , I see you manage customer relations at . With Vision 2030 pushing property handover volumes up, post‑sale service is under real pressure. I help teams like yours cut complaint resolution time in half. Worth connecting?

Why it works: Saudi real estate is in a middle of a massive delivery cycle. The “post‑sale service under pressure” line recognises their daily reality. No pitch, just a peer connection. The “cut complaint resolution time” hook opens a curiosity gap.


Touch 2 – Day 3: Follow‑up message (different angle)

Send this as a regular LinkedIn message after the connection is accepted. Use the “thank you for connecting” opener, then pivot to a specific operational pain point.

Message:

Thanks for connecting, .

Quick question: how does your team track and prioritise maintenance requests across your portfolio right now? A lot of developers we talk to in Riyadh and Jeddah still rely on spreadsheets and WhatsApp groups, and it’s eating into resident satisfaction scores.

We built something that auto‑routes and tracks issues, and it’s been cutting tenant complaints by around 35% for a few of the largest management firms.

No pitch—just happy to share how they set it up if you’re open to a quick call.

Angle: The maintenance‑tracking pain point is universal for Saudi CRMs who oversee residential assets. Mentioning “spreadsheets and WhatsApp groups” shows you’ve done this before and you know their current state. The 35% figure is a loose social proof, not a competitor stat—it’s from my own clients’ results.


Touch 3 – Day 7: Final message (soft close)

This is the last touch. No need to hide the intent—you’re asking for a yes or a no‑thank‑you. Keep it light.

Message:

Last message, —I know you’re busy.

One of our clients, a Jeddah‑based developer, cut customer churn by 20% in six months just by automating post‑sale communication and giving residents a self‑service portal. The uplift in renewal rates paid for the platform in the first quarter.

If that outcome is on your radar, I’d love to show you how it works in a 10‑minute screen share. Otherwise, genuinely no worries—and I won’t send another ping.

Soft close: The “20% churn reduction” is specific enough to feel real but doesn’t name a competitor. The offer is a 10‑minute share, not a demo. That lowers the mental hurdle. Ending with “genuinely no worries” actually increases response rates because it respects their time.


A note on personalisation fields: Origami fills , , ``, and dozens more automatically from the enriched profile. You can also inject recent LinkedIn activity tags, like “I saw you commented on X.” Test that in your second campaign; for the first one, simplicity wins.


Step 4 – Send the sequence directly from Origami

This is where the built‑in sequencer changes your workflow.

  1. Launch in one click. You stay on the same dashboard where you built the list. Select your qualified leads, choose the sequence (either your pasted templates or the AI‑generated one), set the delays—Day 1, Day 3, Day 7 is what works for Saudi real estate—and hit Launch.
  2. Automatic sending. Origami sends connection requests and follow‑up messages without grabbing a separate tool. No CSV export, no LinkedIn Sales Navigator sync, no Zapier ducks in a row.
  3. Live tracking. Opens, clicks, and replies appear next to each contact. While you’re looking at a contact’s activity, you can still see their enriched profile—title, company, tools used, recent job moves—so you remember exactly why you reached out.
  4. Auto‑un‑enrolment. If someone replies, Origami immediately removes them from the rest of the sequence. You’ll never send a breakup message right after they booked a meeting.
  5. Cost. The sequencer itself is free on all paid plans. You only pay for the credits you used to enrich and verify the contacts. So once you’ve spent your $29/month plan credits building the list, sending the campaign costs nothing extra.

What response rates should you expect?

For Saudi real estate Customer Relations Managers in 2026, here’s what a well‑targeted campaign typically returns:

  • Connection acceptance rate: 25 – 40% (higher if you’re active in the same industry groups)
  • Reply rate of accepted connections: 8 – 15%
  • Meeting‑booked rate (if you’re selling a solution): 3 – 8%

If you’re under 20% acceptance, re‑visit your list: you’re likely too broad or reaching people who aren’t actually in a CRM role. If reply rates are under 5% but acceptance is fine, iterate on the messaging—test the maintenance angle vs. an NPS/experience angle.


When to iterate

  • Messaging first: week one data tells you if the sequence resonates. Low reply but decent open/click? Change the Call‑to‑Action or tweak the 2nd touch angle.
  • List second: if acceptance stays low after two message variants, filter harder. Target only managers with “CRM” or “Customer Relations” in their title and companies with 300+ units under management. That’s when the sequencer rings the cash register.

Ready to run yours?

You already have the exact prompt from the parent guide to build the list. Now log into Origami, drop these templates into your sequencer, set your cadence, and hit Launch. The whole workflow—find, enrich, qualify, sequence, send, track—lives inside one platform, and your first 1,000 credits are free. In 2026, running a LinkedIn campaign without the built‑in sequencer is like showing up to a giga‑project without blueprints.

Frequently Asked Questions

Find leads in these industries