Exclusive to McKinney Chamber members who need more referrals
Most businesses don’t actually need more referrals.
Exclusive to McKinney Chamber members who need more referrals
They need better ones.
Especially if you have a small client base and sell high-trust, high-ticket services.
The mistake I see over and over?
👉 Generic “know anyone who needs us?” asks.
That’s not a referral strategy. That’s wishful thinking.
What actually works:
• Segment past clients
Not every client should be asked. Identify true advocates and protect the rest of the relationships.
• Re-engage before you ask
Start with a check-in, not a favor request. Get them talking about outcomes, not invoices.
• Use a short, thoughtful survey
5 questions max. Low effort. High signal. Ask for permission before asking for referrals.
• Make testimonials effortless
Draft them for the client based on their feedback. Approval beats blank pages every time.
• Be specific in referral asks
Tie the ask to situations they recognize—expansion, relocation, refresh, growth inflection points.
Vague asks create awkward silence.
• Offer a “quiet referral” option
Some people hate selling—but will happily forward a one-pager when asked.
Bottom line:
With trust-based services, one strong referral beats 100 cold leads.
Right now is a good time to engage me if referrals should be working—but aren’t.Images
