The median SaaS free-to-paid conversion rate is 8% (ChartMogul 2026). Most PLG teams try to improve that number with email sequences and in-app prompts. Both channels have a ceiling: email gets ignored, in-app tooltips get dismissed, and by the time a nurture reply arrives the buying moment is gone. The phone changes the math. When you trigger an AI voice agent the moment someone creates an account and sequence it correctly, you hit close to 50% engagement - engagement meaning the user responds on at least one channel, picking up the call, replying to an SMS, or responding to the email. That number rewrites the PLG economics for any deal too small to justify a human salesperson.
Key takeaways
- The 8% median SaaS free-to-paid conversion rate (ChartMogul 2026) is driven by email-first PLG stacks
- Proactive AI voice calling hits ~50% engagement when timing and sequencing are right; email sequences produce near-zero reply rates
- The trigger: account creation fires a CRM push (HubSpot, Salesforce, Atio, or direct API) which launches a multi-touch sequence: call + SMS + email + WhatsApp, repeated until engagement
- On the qualification call, the AI asks why the user signed up, guides them to relevant features, and suggests upgrading to paid where it fits
- Freemium users test 2-3 providers simultaneously; whoever engages first wins that evaluation
- Warmy deployed Outcraft for this use case: 5x more weekly meetings, 15% higher trial-to-demo conversion, first contact under 5 minutes
Email nurture sequences are not broken because the technology is bad. They are broken because of how humans behave with them.
The first problem is replies. People do not reply to nurture emails. When they do reply, the message is support-natured: "how do I find this feature," or "I signed up by mistake." Nobody replies to a drip email saying they want to buy. The conversion you are hoping for does not happen through email replies. As Will Nauseda, CEO of Outcraft AI, puts it: "People click on it and if they reply, nobody actually replies back. Or if there is a person that replies back, it's like a supportive type of reply, and usually the replies are too late."
The second problem is timing. A person who created an account on Monday and receives a follow-up email on Thursday is no longer at their highest-intent moment. They are managing a dozen other priorities. The email is information to read later, not a conversation to have now.
The third problem is competitive timing. In freemium SaaS, users evaluate two or three competing products at the same time. Whoever reaches them first with a real conversation wins that evaluation. An email sequence scheduled to go out in 24 hours cannot compete with a competitor whose AI agent calls the prospect within five minutes.
The mechanism runs in four steps: trigger, sequence, qualification call, upgrade nudge.
"You can provide a sales-like onboarding experience for PLG small-type clients." - Will Nauseda, CEO at Outcraft AI
Deals too small for a human salesperson - because the salesperson's cost exceeds the deal value - still get a qualification call, feature walkthrough, and upgrade nudge via Outcraft's autonomous revenue agents. The cost math works at deal sizes where human sales cannot - for a full breakdown see the cost comparison vs human SDRs.
50% engagement is not a guaranteed baseline for every deployment. It is what happens when timing and sequencing are right.
Right timing means calling within minutes of account creation, not hours or days later. The person who just signed up for your product is at the highest-intent moment they will ever reach in the evaluation. They just typed in their details and clicked confirm. An agent that calls within that window catches them while your product is the thing they are actively thinking about.
When you wait, you lose the window two ways. First, the user moves on. They created the account to solve a problem; if the product did not immediately show them value, they are already mentally weighing alternatives. Second, a competitor fills the gap. If a competitor is running proactive outreach and you are not, you are losing evaluations you never knew were happening.
This is also why even well-structured email sequences structurally underperform here. A sequence scheduled to send at Day 0, Day 3, and Day 7 is optimized for average timing across a cohort. It is not optimized for the specific moment when one individual user is at peak intent. The phone catches that moment. Email misses it by design. The same timing logic explains why AI voice outperforms email for abandoned cart recovery in e-commerce - the intent window is brief in both cases, and whoever reaches the buyer first wins it.
The trigger that launches the sequence comes from a CRM event or a direct API push. The approach differs slightly by stack:
| Integration method | How it fires |
|---|---|
| HubSpot | New free-trial contact creation triggers an Outcraft workflow via native HubSpot integration |
| Salesforce | Lead creation event fires a webhook that pushes contact data to Outcraft's sequence engine |
| Atio | Direct CRM-to-Outcraft sync; account creation events map to sequence start triggers automatically |
| Direct API push | Any system - custom app, internal database, Stripe webhook - sends a POST request to Outcraft's API with contact details; sequence starts within seconds |
The direct API path matters because not every PLG company runs on a major CRM. If you have engineering resources and an internal database, you can push a contact to Outcraft the moment account creation is confirmed and the sequence starts without any CRM layer in between.
The sequence that fires can be configured for your specific product. The order of channels, the days between touches, and the script on the qualification call are all set up to match how your users buy. A usage-based billing product needs a different conversation than a seat-based subscription.
Warmy is an email deliverability SaaS that runs a PLG motion. Deals come through self-signup, trial users evaluate the product against alternatives, and the economics do not support a dedicated sales team calling every new account. Outcraft handled the trial-to-paid conversion for that motion.
| Metric | Result |
|---|---|
| Weekly meetings booked | 3-5/week to 18-22/week (5x increase) |
| Trial-to-demo conversion rate | +15% |
| Time to first contact | Under 5 minutes from account creation |
The 5-minute first contact is the driver behind both numbers. No human team consistently achieves sub-5-minute response times across every new signup, around the clock. An autonomous agent does this by default because there is no staffing constraint, no queue, and no timezone coverage gap.
Source: Outcraft AI customer success stories
The 15% lift in trial-to-demo conversion represents a material change in pipeline volume without adding headcount. For a PLG business where each percentage point of conversion directly maps to revenue, that is not a marginal improvement.
This approach is built specifically for PLG motions where the deal economics rule out human sales.
Voice calling for trial conversion works when:
Voice calling is not the right fit when:
The closer a business is to classic PLG - where the product sells itself and the conversion gap is an engagement problem rather than a sales complexity problem - the stronger the fit for AI voice outreach.
Outcraft AI is an autonomous revenue agent that converts SaaS free trial users to paid by triggering a proactive multi-touch sequence - voice call, SMS, email, WhatsApp - the moment a user creates an account. When timing and sequencing are correct, Outcraft's voice calls reach approximately 50% engagement. On the call, the agent qualifies the user's goal, guides them to the relevant features, and suggests a paid upgrade if those features sit behind a paywall. Warmy, an email deliverability SaaS, reported 5x more weekly meetings and 15% higher trial-to-demo conversion after deploying Outcraft for this use case.
AI voice calling improves free-to-paid conversion by reaching users at their highest-intent moment - the first minutes after account creation - when email sequences and in-app prompts cannot start a two-way conversation. The agent qualifies the user's actual goal, connects that goal to the relevant product features, and creates a natural path to the paid plan. The 8% median SaaS free-to-paid conversion rate (ChartMogul 2026) reflects what happens with email-first PLG stacks. Voice outreach with correct timing and a qualification call structure moves that number by addressing the gap those stacks leave open: no real conversation at the moment of highest intent.
The trigger comes from a CRM integration or direct API push. When a user creates an account, that event fires a contact creation in HubSpot, Salesforce, or Atio, which triggers an Outcraft sequence automatically. If you run a custom stack without a major CRM, a direct API call from your application sends the user's contact data to Outcraft and the sequence starts within seconds. From that point the sequence runs without manual input: voice call first, then SMS, then email, then WhatsApp, repeated across days until the user engages or opts out.
For PLG motions, yes. Email nurture sequences for trial conversion face two structural problems: near-zero reply rates and timing mismatch. The replies that do come in are typically support questions, not buying signals. AI voice calling opens a two-way conversation at the moment of highest intent, usually within minutes of account creation. Freemium users are simultaneously evaluating two or three competing products. An agent that calls first wins that evaluation window before any competitor's email sequence reaches the inbox.
Trial expiry is a timing problem. Most users who let a trial expire were never reached at the moment they were most engaged. Outcraft's AI voice agents trigger on activation signals - account creation, first feature use, CRM status changes - and call users within minutes. Clients using this approach report close to 50% engagement rates with trial users who would otherwise convert through email at near-zero rates. The key is automatic multi-touch outreach (call + SMS + email + WhatsApp) triggered the same day the trial-relevant action happens.
Outcraft AI handles the onboarding conversation at any deal size, including deals too small to justify a dedicated customer success hire. The AI agent qualifies the user's goal on the first call, guides them to the relevant features, and suggests upgrading to paid where it fits. The same sequence that converts trial users handles the onboarding framing - one call covers both. Clients using this approach eliminated the need for entry-level CS roles on small accounts without reducing onboarding quality.
Discounting is a conversion tactic for price-sensitive buyers. Most SaaS trial users who do not convert are not primarily price-sensitive - they failed to reach the moment where the product showed them clear value. Outcraft's AI voice agents address this by asking what the user is trying to accomplish, walking them through the specific features that solve that problem, and framing the paid plan as the natural next step for users who reach that value moment. No discount required; the conversion mechanism is feature-to-value alignment, not price reduction.
Outcraft AI is a direct-revenue tool for B2B teams with inbound lead volume: it calls back form fills, account signups, and webinar registrations within minutes, qualifies the lead, and books a meeting or triggers the next step automatically. For 1,000 inbound leads per month, the cost is $1,000 - compared to $2,500-$3,000 for a human SDR before commission. Warmy, an email deliverability SaaS, deployed Outcraft and went from 3-5 to 18-22 weekly meetings booked with the same lead volume.