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Two Case Studies in Winning Consulting Business. Connect the Dots.

Two case studies reported to me by consultants in the past couple of weeks:

Rich, in South Carolina, nabbed a $64,000 project from a state agency.

To win the project, he submitted a proposal that was easily accepted because he was the only consultant bidding.

The proposal built on three phone calls between Rich and the agency’s Grand Poobah.

The first phone call consisted of Rich following up on an introduction made by one of his colleagues at his boutique firm.

4-steps-to-grand-poobah3

Maria, up here in chilly New England, closed an introductory 12-month, $36,000 engagement with a tech startup.

Closing the deal required about fifteen minutes negotiating the details, preceded by roughly two hours drafting the proposal.

The proposal emerged from a single conversation—the Context Discussion—conducted via telephone two weeks ago.

That Context Discussion started with an outreach call to the decision-maker, whom Maria had met at a party held by a mutual acquaintance.

4-steps-to-tech-poobah2

What’s the common starting point for these two case studies? Was it incomparable command of their subject matter? Decades of industry experience? A breakfast bowl of Wheaties (with chocolate nibs added)?

They took it upon themselves to connect, personally, to prospective clients.

Rich regularly reaches out to three contacts each week. That doesn’t sound like stellar networking, but when we started working together, he wouldn’t reach out to anyone and lived off the revenue produced by his firm’s primary rainmaker. Now he’s joining their ranks.

Maria typically talks with up to ten people in her network each week—sometimes in person and sometimes over the phone.

These case studies are emblematic of one of the most reliable patterns in consulting:

Consultants who routinely connect with prospects consistently find opportunities for lucrative new business.

To enjoy a steady stream of consulting opportunities, you have to connect with people one-on-one; “voce a voce.”**  That means picking up the phone or meeting in person. pasta-fagioli

Are you sitting in your office pounding out client deliverables, or sending emails, or “working on marketing” by which you mean writing terrific content? That’s not enough. You must be in front of people.

An exercise:

  1. Grab a piece of paper and a pencil. (Note to millenials: you can find paper by flattening the box your virtual reality goggles came in.)
  2. Draw a dot in the center of the page and label it with your name.
  3. Scatter ten-to-twenty more dots around the page and label them with the names of people you’ve met who could be decision-makers or significant influencers on a consulting project.
  4. Every time you reach out to someone on the phone or in person, draw a line connecting you to that person.
  5. Repeat this for at least four weeks.

End your weeks with sunshine, starbursts, and comets.

4-outreach-patterns

You’ll find that winning consulting business isn’t particularly complex. In fact, as long as you’re consistent, it’s downright easy: just connect the dots!

Does outreach work for you? Let me know in the comments section below.


4 Comments
  1. Jaime Campbell
    January 11, 2017 at 6:42 am Reply

    A fun visual to put a spin on the required action!

    (noted)

    • David A. Fields
      January 11, 2017 at 8:15 am Reply

      Jaime, sometimes we just need a slightly different approach, look, framework or visual to get an idea we’ve heard in the past to finally take root. Whatever jolts us into motion is exactly what we need. Thanks for the feedback!

  2. Edna
    January 11, 2017 at 8:08 am Reply

    Spot on! Great article!

    • David A. Fields
      January 11, 2017 at 8:18 am Reply

      Double extra bonus points to you, Edna, for including a relevant, on-point pun in the comments section.

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