Small Business Big Visibility

How to Build an Offer That's Easy to Refer

7 min · 2. heinä 2026
jakson How to Build an Offer That's Easy to Refer kansikuva

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Your offer can be perfectly clear and still be impossible to refer. Clear and referable are two different things, and most small business owners only build for one of them. You can fully understand what someone does and still never send them a single client. In this episode, I'll walk through the three properties that make an offer easy to hand off: a trigger (the specific situation that makes your partner think of you, not your whole industry), a low-risk entry point (the front door that's almost impossible to say no to), and a clean handoff (the copy-pasteable link or simple mechanism that removes all the friction). I'll also show you how a free website teardown can generate more referrals than your highest-value service, and how to assemble all three properties into a single offer your partners can hand out all day long. This is the eighth episode in the referral engine series. Last episode covered why a clear offer matters. This episode is about the next step: making that clear offer genuinely referable, so your partners refer you without you having to ask. After 15+ years helping small businesses get more visible, I've watched plenty of owners with clear, well-understood services still get almost no referrals. The fix usually isn't a better pitch. It's an offer engineered to travel from one person to the next without losing anything along the way. CHAPTERS: 0:00 Clear and referable are not the same thing 0:34 The three properties of a referable offer 0:44 Property #1: A trigger that fires in real conversation 2:29 Property #2: A low-risk entry point 3:40 The three traits of a good entry point 4:07 Property #3: A clean handoff 5:45 Putting all three together: the website teardown example 6:57 Why this gets referred without you asking 7:13 What's coming next in the series MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE: 🎧 Earlier in the referral engine series: Every Referral Happens in a Conversation You're Not In. 🎧 Earlier in the referral engine series: How to Answer "What Do You Do?" in One Sentence. ABOUT SMALL BUSINESS BIG VISIBILITY: A podcast for small business owners who want practical, real-world strategies to grow without burnout. Hosted by Jason McKenzie, founder of Boise Web and a 15+ year veteran helping small businesses become more visible, more profitable, and more sustainable. Episode 409 🔗 https://smallbusinessbigvisibility.com/ #SmallBusinessOwner #ReferralMarketing #SmallBusinessNetworking

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jakson How to Build an Offer That's Easy to Refer kansikuva

How to Build an Offer That's Easy to Refer

Your offer can be perfectly clear and still be impossible to refer. Clear and referable are two different things, and most small business owners only build for one of them. You can fully understand what someone does and still never send them a single client. In this episode, I'll walk through the three properties that make an offer easy to hand off: a trigger (the specific situation that makes your partner think of you, not your whole industry), a low-risk entry point (the front door that's almost impossible to say no to), and a clean handoff (the copy-pasteable link or simple mechanism that removes all the friction). I'll also show you how a free website teardown can generate more referrals than your highest-value service, and how to assemble all three properties into a single offer your partners can hand out all day long. This is the eighth episode in the referral engine series. Last episode covered why a clear offer matters. This episode is about the next step: making that clear offer genuinely referable, so your partners refer you without you having to ask. After 15+ years helping small businesses get more visible, I've watched plenty of owners with clear, well-understood services still get almost no referrals. The fix usually isn't a better pitch. It's an offer engineered to travel from one person to the next without losing anything along the way. CHAPTERS: 0:00 Clear and referable are not the same thing 0:34 The three properties of a referable offer 0:44 Property #1: A trigger that fires in real conversation 2:29 Property #2: A low-risk entry point 3:40 The three traits of a good entry point 4:07 Property #3: A clean handoff 5:45 Putting all three together: the website teardown example 6:57 Why this gets referred without you asking 7:13 What's coming next in the series MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE: 🎧 Earlier in the referral engine series: Every Referral Happens in a Conversation You're Not In. 🎧 Earlier in the referral engine series: How to Answer "What Do You Do?" in One Sentence. ABOUT SMALL BUSINESS BIG VISIBILITY: A podcast for small business owners who want practical, real-world strategies to grow without burnout. Hosted by Jason McKenzie, founder of Boise Web and a 15+ year veteran helping small businesses become more visible, more profitable, and more sustainable. Episode 409 🔗 https://smallbusinessbigvisibility.com/ #SmallBusinessOwner #ReferralMarketing #SmallBusinessNetworking

2. heinä 20267 min
jakson Every Referral Happens in a Conversation You're Not In kansikuva

Every Referral Happens in a Conversation You're Not In

A confused referral partner sends you nothing. Not because they don't like you, but because they don't actually understand what your business does, and they can't explain you to someone else. Here's the thing most small business owners miss: every referral happens in a conversation you're not in. Your partner is at a barbecue or a job site, someone mentions a problem, and your partner has about 10 seconds to explain what you do to a stranger, with you nowhere in the room.In this episode, I'll walk through why clarity beats cleverness every time a referral changes hands, the three moments where an unclear offer quietly kills referrals (the recall moment, the explanation moment, and the confidence moment), and the spouse test for figuring out whether your offer is actually clear enough to travel from person to person. I'll also clear up a common misunderstanding: getting clear on your offer doesn't mean dropping all your other services. It means making one offer easy enough to hand off.This is the seventh episode in the referral engine series. Last episode covered crafting your one-sentence introduction. This episode is about the offer underneath it, the thing that has to be clear before any introduction can work.After 15+ years helping small businesses get more visible, I've watched plenty of owners with great reputations get almost no referrals, simply because nobody could explain what they did. Clever marketing belongs in your advertising, where you control the delivery. Clarity is what you need when someone else is doing the talking for you. CHAPTERS:0:00 A confused referral partner sends you nothing0:40 Every referral happens in a conversation you're not in1:47 Why clever pitches don't survive the handoff2:54 The recall moment: will your name even come up?3:40 The explanation moment: can they describe you accurately?5:09 The confidence moment: people won't refer what they can't explain5:53 The spouse test for a clear offer6:43 Clarity doesn't mean dropping your other services7:14 Where cleverness actually belongs8:06 What's coming next in the seriesMENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE:🎧 Earlier in the referral engine series: How to Answer "What Do You Do?" in One Sentence.🎧 Earlier in the referral engine series: The 3 Tests for Spotting a Real Referral Partner.ABOUT SMALL BUSINESS BIG VISIBILITY:A podcast for small business owners who want practical, real-world strategies to grow without burnout. Hosted by Jason McKenzie, founder of Boise Web and a 15+ year veteran helping small businesses become more visible, more profitable, and more sustainable. Episode 408 🔗 https://smallbusinessbigvisibility.com/ #SmallBusinessOwner #ReferralMarketing #SmallBusinessNetworking

23. kesä 20267 min
jakson How to Answer 'What Do You Do?' in One Sentence kansikuva

How to Answer 'What Do You Do?' in One Sentence

The most important 30 seconds in networking is the moment someone asks what you do. Most small business owners blow it. They launch into a wandering explanation of their title, their company history, and every service they offer, and by the time they finish, the person who asked has completely forgotten what they actually do. In this episode, I'll walk through why your answer should be one sentence instead of a one-minute dissertation, and the simple two-part formula that makes that sentence land: who you help, and the specific problem you solve for them. I'll compare weak introductions (technically accurate, functionally useless) against strong ones for a plumber, a financial advisor, and a web designer, so you can hear the difference. Then I'll cover three delivery rules that separate a confident intro from an insecure one. This is the sixth episode in the referral engine series. The goal of introducing yourself isn't to explain your whole business. It's to earn the next question. After 15+ years helping small businesses get more visible, I've sat through more rambling networking introductions than I can count (including one memorable four-minute monologue about the paper shredding business). The owners who win the room aren't the ones who say the most. They're the ones who say one clear thing and let it land. CHAPTERS: 0:00 The most important 30 seconds in networking 0:35 A cautionary tale: the paper shredding monologue 2:27 The softer version happening at events every day 3:20 Why one sentence is the right length 4:48 The two-part formula: who you help and the problem you solve 5:33 Weak vs. strong: plumber, financial advisor, web designer 7:10 The one question to answer before writing your own 7:57 Three delivery rules: don't rush, don't apologize, let it land 8:43 What's coming next in the series MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE: 🎧 Earlier in the referral engine series: How to Turn Your Referral List Into a Referral Team. 🎧 Earlier in the referral engine series: Stop Networking for Clients. Network for Partners. ABOUT SMALL BUSINESS BIG VISIBILITY: A podcast for small business owners who want practical, real-world strategies to grow without burnout. Hosted by Jason McKenzie, founder of Boise Web and a 15+ year veteran helping small businesses become more visible, more profitable, and more sustainable. Episode 407 🔗 https://smallbusinessbigvisibility.com/ #SmallBusinessOwner #ReferralMarketing #SmallBusinessNetworking

16. kesä 20269 min
jakson How to Turn Your Referral List Into a Referral Team kansikuva

How to Turn Your Referral List Into a Referral Team

A list of 50 potential referral partners isn't a referral team. It's a list. And most small business owners stop there, then wonder six months later why no referrals ever came in. The conversion from list to team is a four-step process, and most people skip the middle two steps entirely. In this episode, I'll walk through the actual sequence: the warm introduction or cold ask (and how to make the ask specific enough to get a yes), the first meeting (where most people blow it by pitching when they should be asking), the giving phase that builds the relationship before any business is exchanged, and the second meeting that turns a connection into a formal referral partnership. I'll also cover what to do if your target partner already has a full referral network (don't walk away, ask to be the backup), and the calendar trick that keeps the follow-up from falling through the cracks.This is the fifth episode in the referral engine series. Previous episodes covered the bigger reframe of networking for partners instead of clients, the giver mindset that makes referrals flow, identifying who your real referral partners are, and the different types of referral relationships (upstream, downstream, cross). After 15+ years helping small businesses get more visible, I've watched plenty of owners build great lists and then sit on them. The owners who actually generate referrals aren't the ones with the longest contact lists. They're the ones who turn five or ten of those contacts into a working team. CHAPTERS:0:00 A list isn't a referral team0:32 Why most business owners leapfrog the middle steps1:04 Step 1: The warm introduction or cold ask2:13 What to say in a cold ask (and what not to)3:00 Step 2: The first meeting (ask, don't pitch)4:50 Spending 80% of the first meeting listening5:35 Step 3: Give before they've earned it6:38 The follow-up window that matters7:14 Step 4: The second meeting and formalizing the partnership8:14 What to do if they already have a full referral network9:32 What's coming next in the series MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE:🎧 Earlier in the referral engine series: Stop Networking for Clients. Network for Partners.🎧 Earlier in the referral engine series: The 3 Tests for Spotting a Real Referral Partner. ABOUT SMALL BUSINESS BIG VISIBILITY:A podcast for small business owners who want practical, real-world strategies to grow without burnout. Hosted by Jason McKenzie, founder of Boise Web and a 15+ year veteran helping small businesses become more visible, more profitable, and more sustainable.Episode 406

9. kesä 202610 min
jakson The 3 Tests for Spotting a Real Referral Partner kansikuva

The 3 Tests for Spotting a Real Referral Partner

Most small business owners can't name five people who could realistically send them a referral every month. And that's exactly why their networking isn't working. They're showing up at events being polite to everyone, hoping the right relationships will just emerge from the chaos. They almost never do. In this episode, I'll walk through the three tests that separate a real referral partner from a polite acquaintance: whether they serve the same clients at a different stage of the customer journey, whether you'd actually refer business back to them (the reciprocity test), and whether they're at a similar stage of business growth to you. I'll cover real examples (wedding photographer + wedding planner, residential plumber + real estate agent, small business accountant + banker), and walk through the journey-mapping exercise that turns these tests into an actual list of 5-20 specific people you should be building relationships with. This is the third episode in the referral engine series. Episode one covered the bigger reframe of networking for partners instead of clients. Episode two covered the giver mindset that makes those partnerships work. This episode is about identifying exactly who those partners should be. After 15+ years helping small businesses get more visible, I've watched plenty of owners network themselves to exhaustion because they were meeting everyone instead of meeting the right people. Random networking produces random results. Targeted networking produces a referral engine. CHAPTERS: 0:00 Can you name five people who could refer you every month? 0:41 Why most small business owners can't answer that question 1:26 Random networking produces random results 1:53 Test #1: Do they serve the same clients at a different stage? 2:49 Real examples: photographer, plumber, accountant 4:10 Test #2: Would you refer business back to them? 5:07 Why referrals are reputation 5:46 Test #3: Are they at a similar stage of business to you? 6:25 The journey-mapping exercise to build your target list 7:10 What's coming next in the series ABOUT SMALL BUSINESS BIG VISIBILITY: A podcast for small business owners who want practical, real-world strategies to grow without burnout. Hosted by Jason McKenzie, founder of Boise Web and a 15+ year veteran helping small businesses become more visible, more profitable, and more sustainable. Episode 405 #SmallBusinessOwner #ReferralMarketing #SmallBusinessNetworking

2. kesä 20267 min