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The Paid Up Club

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4 contributions to The Paid Up Club
🎯 The Sales Opening Formula (Share Yours)
You might be losing sales in the first 60 seconds. The problem: After rapport building, people either: 1. Talk about themselves 2. Ask about the client Both wrong. The principle: Ted Nicholas: "The headline is 75% of the buying decision." Your opening IS your headline. The formula: "As I understand it, the purpose of our meeting is to: 1. Understand where you are now 2. Understand where you want to get to 3. See how we can get there faster together Have I got that about right?" Why it works: ✅ Positions you as professional ✅ Shows you listen ✅ Not too certain, too soon ✅ Elegant and disarming Your turn: Share YOUR opening below (or draft one using this formula). I'll comment on everyone who shares.
1 like • 4d
Whilst both of these ideas are worthwhile. They are the gathering stage. A request for information. Which I believe strongly - comes after the opening. Open gather present adjuster conclude and follow. Hope this helps. NB: it’s what you say before you say what you mean to say that makes the difference. The opening sets the scene for the gathering. No opening = no scene setting. Peter
1 like • 2d
@Julie Stevens Thank you Julie. My original comment was about an initial client call rather than a delivery conversation. I agree with your comment when it is delivery. Peter
Persuasion techniques?
Hi - I wondered on your thoughts on this - I went to unsubscribe from an email list just now - I am just overwhelmed with emails and have a cull each Friday morning for 5 or so minutes to manage my inbox. Can you guess what I just did when I was offered this when I hit the unsubscribe button? Any one else come across this - using this?
Persuasion techniques?
1 like • 2d
Not sure what I’d do. Especially if I was one of the customers who’d bought the product at $1997! I like the idea of an incentive to stay. But the incentive would need to be ‘realistically priced’. Thoughts? Peter
A quick win you can use TODAY (the wealthy taxi driver secret)
Here's something that could change how you handle every client conversation from now on. I often ask people in my training sessions this question: "What is it that wealthy taxi drivers do that less wealthy taxi drivers forget to do?" I get all sorts of answers. Charge higher fares. Build rapport. Get bigger tips. All reasonable guesses. But none of them are right. The answer is so simple it's almost annoying: Wealthy taxi drivers always book the return journey. Think about it. When a taxi driver drops you at a restaurant, the wealthy ones don't just drive off and hope you'll remember to call them later. They say: "What time do you think you'll finish your meal? I'll come and pick you up. If you're running early, give me a call. If you're a bit late, let me know and I can fit in another fare. But I WILL be here for you at the agreed time." And when they turn up exactly as promised? You use them again. And again. And you tell your friends about them. Now here's the thing... How many of us are doing this in our own businesses? Be honest. How often do you finish a call with a prospect, agree to send a proposal, and then... just send it? No follow-up booked. No next step scheduled. Just hoping they'll get back to you. And then you wait. And chase. And wait some more. Every time you chase a client, you damage your positioning. You go from being an authority they want to work with to someone who needs their business. Here's the fix: Never end a client interaction without having the next one scheduled. It's that simple. - After a discovery call → Book the proposal review BEFORE you hang up - Sending a proposal? → The follow-up meeting should already be in both diaries - Finished delivering work? → Book the review call - Project complete? → Schedule the check-in - When you do this, there's no ambiguity. No awkward chasing. No wondering what happens next. You're providing certainty. And certainty is worth paying for. Here's your challenge: Think about your last 3 client interactions. Did you book the return journey?
1 like • 20d
@Paul Ribbons oops!! It’s usually the simple stuff that produces great results as you know Paul. Peter
The quickest way to increase your income (without finding more clients)
Do you offer just ONE version of your service? If you do, you're almost certainly leaving money on the table. And here's the thing, your clients are WANTING to give you that money. You're just not giving them the option. Here's what I mean... The Deluxe Principle Think of your current service as your "Premier" offering. Now ask yourself: What could I ADD to create a higher-level "Deluxe" version? Could it be: → More time with you? → Additional templates or resources? → Follow-up support? → A "done with you" element instead of just information? → An online portal with extra content? → Priority access? Not filler material. Quality extras that genuinely enhance the client's experience and outcomes. Why this works Many of my clients who've implemented this report something surprising: The MAJORITY of their clients now opt for one of the deluxe versions rather than the standard offering. Most clients, when given the choice, will choose to invest MORE — if the extra value is clear. The Step-Up Model Here's a simple way to think about your tiers: Level 1: Information — You share your knowledge. Client implements on their own. Level 2: Information + Advice — You add templates, extra videos, some guidance on implementation. Level 3: Information + Advice + "Done With You" — You're actively involved. Coaching calls, accountability, hands-on support. Level 4: Information + Advice + "Done For You" — You become part of their team. You handle the implementation. Each level up = more value for them, higher fees for you. The Numbers I've consistently found that Deluxe versions can be priced at 5x to 10x the standard fee. Here's an example from when I launched my mentoring groups many years ago: - Monthly Mentoring Group: £500/month - "Take Me to Market" (my deluxe offering): £2,500/month - If you attracted just TWO deluxe clients per month at £2,500 each — that's an extra £60,000 per year. Same expertise. Same you. Just packaged differently. One more thing...
2 likes • 20d
@Paul Ribbons wonderful to hear you’re still using these ideas Paul. We should have a rematch at St Pancras this year
1-4 of 4
Peter Thomson
2
14points to level up
@peter-thomson-9434
Author and marketer. Started business in 1972 . Built & sold business in 1989. Help consultants etc to be rewarded for value. 15 books + 100 courses

Active 2d ago
Joined Jan 27, 2026
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