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B2B glossarySalesNo-show rate

No-show rate

No-show rate

No-show rate

Sales

The percentage of booked meetings where the prospect does not attend, used to evaluate booking quality and confirmation processes.

The percentage of booked meetings where the prospect does not attend, used to evaluate booking quality and confirmation processes.

What is No-show rate?

What is No-show rate?

What is No-show rate?

No-show rate is the percentage of booked meetings where the prospect does not attend as scheduled, either by not appearing, cancelling at the last minute, or rescheduling indefinitely without a new date confirmed. It is the inverse of show rate and is useful as a diagnostic metric for identifying process failures in the meeting confirmation and pre-meeting engagement workflow.

High no-show rates indicate one or more of: meetings are being booked with prospects who were not genuinely interested, the gap between booking and meeting date is too long, insufficient confirmation and reminder processes are in place, or the meeting was booked in a context where the prospect felt social pressure to agree without actual intent.

No-show rate should be tracked alongside qualified meeting rate and meeting source. No-show rates that are significantly higher for a specific outbound campaign or channel may indicate that the leads from that source are saying yes to meetings without genuine intent, which suggests an ICP or messaging problem in that campaign rather than just a process problem.

Managing no-show rate requires both upstream and downstream interventions. Upstream: qualify prospects more rigorously before booking and confirm meeting intent in the booking exchange. Downstream: send a confirmation same-day with an agenda, send a 24-hour reminder, and send a morning-of message that makes cancellation easy for genuinely uninterested prospects while keeping motivated ones on track. The goal is to convert soft yesses into attended meetings and surface genuine disinterest before it wastes calendar time.

For sales teams, the value is less about terminology and more about decision quality. A strong definition lets managers inspect deals the same way across reps, compare conversion honestly, and spot problems before they show up as a missed quarter. It usually becomes more useful when it is defined alongside Show rate, Qualified meeting, and Lead quality.

No-show rate is the percentage of booked meetings where the prospect does not attend as scheduled, either by not appearing, cancelling at the last minute, or rescheduling indefinitely without a new date confirmed. It is the inverse of show rate and is useful as a diagnostic metric for identifying process failures in the meeting confirmation and pre-meeting engagement workflow.

High no-show rates indicate one or more of: meetings are being booked with prospects who were not genuinely interested, the gap between booking and meeting date is too long, insufficient confirmation and reminder processes are in place, or the meeting was booked in a context where the prospect felt social pressure to agree without actual intent.

No-show rate should be tracked alongside qualified meeting rate and meeting source. No-show rates that are significantly higher for a specific outbound campaign or channel may indicate that the leads from that source are saying yes to meetings without genuine intent, which suggests an ICP or messaging problem in that campaign rather than just a process problem.

Managing no-show rate requires both upstream and downstream interventions. Upstream: qualify prospects more rigorously before booking and confirm meeting intent in the booking exchange. Downstream: send a confirmation same-day with an agenda, send a 24-hour reminder, and send a morning-of message that makes cancellation easy for genuinely uninterested prospects while keeping motivated ones on track. The goal is to convert soft yesses into attended meetings and surface genuine disinterest before it wastes calendar time.

For sales teams, the value is less about terminology and more about decision quality. A strong definition lets managers inspect deals the same way across reps, compare conversion honestly, and spot problems before they show up as a missed quarter. It usually becomes more useful when it is defined alongside Show rate, Qualified meeting, and Lead quality.

No-show rate is the percentage of booked meetings where the prospect does not attend as scheduled, either by not appearing, cancelling at the last minute, or rescheduling indefinitely without a new date confirmed. It is the inverse of show rate and is useful as a diagnostic metric for identifying process failures in the meeting confirmation and pre-meeting engagement workflow.

High no-show rates indicate one or more of: meetings are being booked with prospects who were not genuinely interested, the gap between booking and meeting date is too long, insufficient confirmation and reminder processes are in place, or the meeting was booked in a context where the prospect felt social pressure to agree without actual intent.

No-show rate should be tracked alongside qualified meeting rate and meeting source. No-show rates that are significantly higher for a specific outbound campaign or channel may indicate that the leads from that source are saying yes to meetings without genuine intent, which suggests an ICP or messaging problem in that campaign rather than just a process problem.

Managing no-show rate requires both upstream and downstream interventions. Upstream: qualify prospects more rigorously before booking and confirm meeting intent in the booking exchange. Downstream: send a confirmation same-day with an agenda, send a 24-hour reminder, and send a morning-of message that makes cancellation easy for genuinely uninterested prospects while keeping motivated ones on track. The goal is to convert soft yesses into attended meetings and surface genuine disinterest before it wastes calendar time.

For sales teams, the value is less about terminology and more about decision quality. A strong definition lets managers inspect deals the same way across reps, compare conversion honestly, and spot problems before they show up as a missed quarter. It usually becomes more useful when it is defined alongside Show rate, Qualified meeting, and Lead quality.

No-show rate — example

No-show rate — example

An SDR team has a 38% no-show rate on meetings booked from email sequences. An analysis of cancelled meetings reveals that 65% of no-shows were from meetings booked more than 7 days in advance with no intervening contact. The team implements a maximum 5-day booking window for outbound meetings and a confirmation task on the day of booking. No-show rate drops from 38% to 22% within one month without any change to outreach strategy or messaging.

A company rolling from founder-led sales to a team model formalizes No-show rate so new reps do not learn it through guesswork. They put the rule into onboarding, CRM guidance, and forecast review language at the same time. They also make sure it connects cleanly to Show rate and Qualified meeting so the definition is not trapped inside one team.

Frequently asked questions

Frequently asked questions

Frequently asked questions

What no-show rate should trigger a review of the booking process?
Above 30% for cold outbound is a signal to investigate. Above 40% suggests a significant process or qualification problem. For warm inbound leads, above 20% warrants review since higher intent should produce higher attendance. Track no-show rate monthly and compare against prior periods to identify whether it is improving or worsening.
How far in advance should outbound meetings be booked to minimise no-shows?
Three to five business days is the optimal window for most B2B outbound. Short enough that the meeting stays top of mind for the prospect. Long enough to fit within their calendar. Meetings booked two or more weeks in advance have significantly higher no-show rates because context is lost and competing priorities accumulate.
Should I charge or penalise no-shows?
No, for prospect meetings. Creating friction or penalising no-shows damages the relationship and the brand. Instead, focus on building processes that reduce no-shows structurally. Prospect no-shows are a signal about your process and their intent level, not a behaviour to punish.
Can I recover a no-show into an active deal?
Yes. Respond to no-shows with a brief, no-pressure message acknowledging the missed meeting: 'Looks like something came up — no problem. Worth rescheduling this week, or has the timing shifted?' A brief, warm message about 30 to 60 minutes after the scheduled start converts a significant percentage of no-shows into reschedules with genuinely interested prospects.
Is a high no-show rate always the seller's problem?
Not entirely, but the seller controls more variables than they typically acknowledge. External factors like competing priorities, last-minute crises, and market conditions affect no-shows. Process factors like reminder quality, booking window, and relationship strength before the meeting are controllable. Focus improvement effort on the controllable variables rather than attributing no-shows entirely to external circumstances.

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