The Art & Science Of BD | with Stacy Dreher
In this episode of I Hope This Email Finds You Well, Neil Barrow sits down with Stacey Dreher, the Chief Growth Officer at James Moore & Co., to unpack why having a "great personality" alone is no longer enough to win high-level corporate deals.
Stacey breaks down her proprietary "B.A.T." Framework (Behavior, Attitude, Technique), explaining why business developers must stop acting like vendors, detach their emotions from the outcome, and start treating themselves as equal peers to the C-Suite.
She also reveals the counter-intuitive playbook she used to hire her firm's first dedicated BD professional - starting them purely on inbound opportunities to guarantee early wins and build trust with skeptical partners.
If your firm relies purely on charisma rather than process, this episode provides the exact roadmap to build a rigorous two-year growth training culture, ruthlessly disqualify bad leads, and capitalize on the low-hanging fruit of your existing client base.
Chapters:
00:00:00 – Intro: Why "Having a Great Personality" Doesn't Close Deals
00:01:36 – The "Combo Meal": Treating BD as a Science
00:03:05 – The Disqualification Playbook & Time Management
00:05:01 – The B.A.T. Framework (Behavior, Attitude, Technique)
00:06:53 – Stop Acting Like a Vendor: The Peer-to-Peer Mindset
00:08:18 – Driving 98% of New Business in the Legal Industry
00:14:36 – Transitioning to the CPA Space (Where Are the BDs?)
00:21:14 – The "Inbound-First" Strategy: How to Make Your First BD Hire Succeed
00:25:51 – Defining Your ICP (Ideal Client Profile) by Industry
00:28:10 – From "Four-Letter Word" to a 2-Year Growth Training Program
00:30:29 – Back to Basics: Cross-Pollination and the Client Ranking System
About the Guest:
Stacey Dreher is the Chief Growth Officer at James Moore & Co., a CPA-led advisory firm based in Florida. With over 20 years of experience driving revenue in both the legal and accounting industries, she specializes in building elite business development teams, aligning marketing with aggressive origination quotas, and driving long-term cultural transformation within professional service firms.