I help businesses design services that are easier to sell and more fun to deliver.
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This one is for you Reader.
People like you... but could you be making it hard to refer you?
This week, I grabbed a zoom coffee with a brilliant consultant. Sharp. Smart. But struggling to get traction. She was exhausted. “I keep getting the wrong leads... and referrals to the wrong people. I’m going in circles here.” It’s frustrating to know you’ve got the skills, but not seeing the traction. Searching for the find the words and coming up blank. As we unpacked her intro, I noticed the problem. She was saying too much, and nothing specific. It’s so, so common. Here’s what she used to say: “I’m a culture anthropologist. I use my research background to help teams do their best work, serve customers well, and grow a thriving business.” Nice words. But no visual picture. No problem. No hook. A bit too much about her background. This makes it SUPER HARD for people to file you away in their brain. Or remember who you want to meet. Let's look at the words a bit...
Let's make it easier for brains to SEE what you mean. Let's tell them a story. So I asked:“What type of company hires you? And what’s going wrong before they call?” Turns out, she works with fast-growing companies who keep hiring the wrong people and it’s slowing everything down. All sorts of people problems. All slowing down growth. There’s the story. That’s the hook. We rewrote her pitch in 10 minutes:
“For fast-growing companies scaling past 200 employees, growing quickly can make it hard to hire and keep the right people. I’m a culture consultant that helps C-suite leaders figure out their people problems, so they can keep up with growth.” See the shift? ✅ Clear size and stage Just two sentences. And now? Way easier to refer. The words you choose need to MEAN something. They need to pop a picture into people's minds. If your message doesn’t paint a picture, no one’s going to pass it along. The brain needs a hook. Your network needs a story. So ask yourself: ➡️ What’s the one problem you solve? Put a stake in the ground. Be the one they remember. — Josh Need help with your pitch? Here's a few ways I can help:
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I help businesses design services that are easier to sell and more fun to deliver.