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outside of our firm with whom we have a close relationship. This ties into the importance of Rainmaker Skills 3 and 4: building your professional ecosystem and developing trust‐based relationships. Chuck McDonald – an attorney in Columbia, South Carolina, specializing in serving the needs of clients in the construction industry – puts it this way:

      The best way to sell your services is not for you to sell your services, but to have someone else sell your services. Nobody wants to hear you say how good you are. It means so much more to have someone they trust say how good you are. Unless you screw up a good referral, you're going to get the business.

      Pathway 3: Inquiries (from Someone You Know)

      The next most common pathway is an inquiry from someone we know but have never worked with previously, similar to my friend John Senaldi's story from the previous chapter. Our survey data suggests that this pathway is the second leading source of nonrepeat client business at 17%, roughly half that of referrals.

      The client's buying decision journey is often nonlinear. We may meet someone, get to know them, they come to respect and trust us, but they are not in the market for what we do. Years later an opportunity arises where they find themselves in need of outside help, and you are top of mind. In this scenario, the risks a prospective client faces in hiring us are mitigated by the strength of our existing relationship.

      Sarah is a friend of mine who is a young partner with one of the big four accounting firms. She loves classical music and serves as the treasurer on the nonprofit board of her city's symphony. Richard, one of her fellow symphony board members, is the CFO of a Fortune 500 consumer products company. Sarah and Richard have known each other for about three years since joining the nonprofit board, and work closely together on the board's audit committee.

      About a year ago Richard began searching for a new accounting firm to handle his company's global audit responsibilities. He narrowed his search down to three firms and Sarah's was on his short list of candidates. After a rigorous evaluation process, Richard and his team selected Sarah as their new audit partner.

      Pathway 4: Inquiries (from Someone You Don't Know)

      It's wonderful when we get a call from someone interested in what we do. It's a pleasant surprise when it's from someone we don't know. Our survey data suggests that this pathway represents about 14% of our new clients.

      It can be very hard for prospective clients to tell when we're very good at what we do. One of the reasons for this is information asymmetry. Information asymmetry exists when there is a gap – sometimes a large gap – between what you know about your work and what a client knows. Because clients are not often experts at the type of help they need, it's usually difficult to identify the truly talented. Many in our professions may look the part, talk the part, and act the part.

      In some professions, there are credentials that serve to indicate that a person is capable of doing the work. Law, accounting, architecture, engineering, and medicine are a few examples. If we're looking to hire an accountant, we wouldn't hire someone without a CPA qualification. Similarly, we wouldn't hire an attorney or doctor who wasn't licensed to practice their work.

      In other professions, it's not so easy. Management consulting, IT services, and marketing/advertising, don't have the same standards. Anyone can claim to be a marketing expert or web designer or strategy guru. What clients need are credibility markers. “Credibility markers” is the term that academics have given to things that demonstrate our capability.

      Often a prospective client discovers us through things we've done in the past. It could be a recent article you wrote in a trade journal, or a speech you gave at a conference. Perhaps you were highlighted in the news about a recent project, such as a prominent new building on the city's skyline. Or maybe someone discovered you via your website because of a white paper or blog post.

      Client work sometimes comes from people reaching out to us as of result of these credibility markers. In the absence of a repeat client, referral, or an inquiry from someone we know, this client pathway is the next leading source of business. The importance of credibility markers leads us to a better understanding of the second rainmaker skill, demonstrating your professional expertise.

      Pathway 5: Warm Prospecting (with Someone You Know)

      The last three pathways are with people or organizations who haven't sought our help. Therefore, we don't know their level of interest, ability to hire us, or readiness relative to their other priorities.

      Prospecting is always going to be harder than repeat business, referrals, or an inquiry from someone actively seeking help. There are a host of headwinds we face when we are the one proposing the idea. These headwinds include:

       Caveat emptor: Buyer beware; our defenses are up when someone wants to sell us something.

       Status quo: Human nature being what it is, staying the current course is often perceived as the safer route.

       Buy‐in: Others in the organization aren't on board with us or the idea.

       Budget: No funding is available at this time.

       Timing: Too many conflicting priorities exist.

      Pitching an idea to someone we have a relationship with is going to be easier than pitching an idea to a stranger. When an relationship exists based upon mutual respect and trust, we have already achieved three of the milestones in the client's buying decision journey: awareness, respect, and trust. This is why building your professional ecosystem and developing trust‐based relationships are two of the key rainmaker skills.

      Prospecting can lead to new client business. It takes time, and you'll have plenty of swings and misses. Prospecting is not for everyone. But for those who learn the skill, it can be a highly effective pathway to new business.

      Pathway 6: Warm Prospecting (with an Introduction from a Mutual Friend)

      Pathway 6 is when you're prospecting with someone to whom you've been introduced, and represents 10% of new clients according to our survey data. The prospective client hasn't asked for help, and she may not be actively in the market for your service. But based upon your research, you feel you can help her.

      You have a friend or colleague who knows the prospective client, and you've been kindly offered an introduction. Warm introductions are a form of currency shared among friends and colleagues in the business world. And they grease the skids of commerce in a karmic, pay‐it‐forward kind of way.

      Mark lives in San Diego and is a senior director for a company that provides services to law, accounting, and financial firms. Mark and I worked together about 20 years ago and have kept in touch over the years as we progressed through our careers.

      Mark and his team have been researching Bank of America for several months, and feel they are a good fit. His firm does similar work for several large banks in New York. Over beers

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