143: The 10 Golden Rules for Getting Referrals Without Even Asking by Jay Berkowitz & Stacey Brown Randall
Referrals don’t happen by accident. With these strategies you can get referrals without even asking. Jay Berkowitz and Stacey Brown Randall, author of Generating Business Referrals Without Asking: A Simple Five-Step Plan to a Referral Explosion, breaks down the science and systems behind creating consistent, high-quality referrals without uncomfortable asks or gimmicky tactics. Drawing from years of research and coaching, Stacey and Jay explore the 10 Golden Rules of Getting Referrals Without Asking, showing how lawyers can build relationships that naturally lead to more business—all while honoring the trust of those who refer.
Key Topics
05:05 – Golden Rule #1: Define Referrals Correctly
A referral isn’t a testimonial, a repeat client, or word-of-mouth. It must include:• A personal connection (the referrer connects the prospect directly to you), and• An identified need (the prospect knows they need help and is open to working with you).Stacey emphasized the importance of recognizing that if someone gives out your name without a connection or context, it’s not a referral—it’s just buzz. Jay added that in personal injury law, real referrals often start with something as simple as “My friend Karen said you helped her after her accident, and I need the same help.” Without both elements, you’re not in control of the opportunity—and may never hear from them.
10:41 – Golden Rule #2: Know Where They Fit
Referrals aren’t marketing or prospecting—they’re a third leg. Most businesses view sales as a two-legged stool:• Prospecting (e.g., networking, cold calls, BNI), and• Marketing (ads, content, websites).Referrals deserve their own strategy. Stacey warns that pushing referrals into one of the other two categories leads to “ask, pay, or annoy” tactics that damage relationships. Jay shared how, once he separated his referral plan from his general marketing, he was able to focus on key sources like coaches, software vendors, and consultants with attorney networks—treating them differently than prospects.
13:39 – Golden Rule #3: Make Referral Tracking A Priority
If you don’t track, you can’t improve. Stacey recommends five columns to track referrals:• Date, Prospect Name, Source, Outcome, and Revenue.Tracking lets you identify patterns—who’s referring most, which types of referrals convert, and what’s working. Jay noted that by reviewing his spreadsheet quarterly, he saw one client who referred five firms—each worth thousands monthly. That insight led to doubling down on personalized outreach for that contact and seeking more like them.
17:01 – Golden Rule #4: Know the Players
There are three referral players: the source, the prospect, and you (the solution provider). And they matter—in that order.Stacey emphasizes that you’re not the hero—the referral source is. They’re helping someone they care about solve a problem, and you’re just the solution. Jay echoed this with his strategy of focusing on relationships with key introducers—like software companies who serve hundreds of attorneys. These aren’t cold prospects; they’re high-trust connectors who deserve thoughtful attention.
22:58 – Golden Rule #5: The Happiness Trifecta
When someone gives a referral, their brain gets a feel-good reward. Referring makes them feel helpful, generous, and important—it’s not about you.This insight changes your strategy. Stacey says every referral deserves a thank-you note, not because it “earns” the next one, but because it validates the referrer’s action. Jay shared that he now treats every referral like a VIP event, sending handwritten notes or thoughtful gifts (not swag!)—reinforcing the dopamine feedback loop that makes people want to do it again.
24:40 – Golden Rule #6: The Psychology of Trust
Referrals are based on liking and trusting—but not blind trust in your skillset. They trust you enough to solve a problem and make them look good.It’s not about reciting your resume. Stacey teaches that trust comes from maintaining a real relationship. Jay applies this by regularly checking in with his top connectors—not to pitch, but to help them, promote their projects, and stay in their world. Building a consistent presence—not just once-a-year coffee meetings—is what builds trust over time.
27:02 – Golden Rule #7: Behavioral Economics
You can’t force a referral—but you can control desire through thoughtful, varied interactions.Stacey warns against gimmicks or monotony (like monthly emails or repetitive coffee invites). Instead, apply variety and relevance. Jay began rotating gestures—local restaurant gift cards, helpful intros, book recommendations—customized to each contact. That variety, Stacey says, keeps your presence fresh and boosts the desire to refer you when the opportunity arises.
34:27 – Golden Rule #8: The Referral Ecosystem
Referrals don’t live in one place—they’re an ecosystem across your business.Referrals can come from:• People (clients, COIs, influencers),• Your client experience (how referable are you?),• Buyer’s journey moments (when they’re deciding to work with you), and• Networking, events, and social.Jay uses this ecosystem lens to look for “hidden referral opportunities” like flipping introductions into referrals (using Stacey’s Flip Scripts), and embedding referral seeds in webinars, email sequences, and post-sale thank-yous.
37:15 – Golden Rule #9: Identify Existing Sources of Magic
Your best referral sources are gold—mine the list.Stacey recommends reviewing 3–4 years of client and prospect data, listing where each came from, then sorting by referral source. That gives you your “List of Gold.” Jay admitted he hadn’t done this in years and was surprised to find trade shows were still his top source—but he hadn’t been actively cultivating them for referrals. Reengaging these hidden MVPs can unlock exponential growth.
39:48 – Golden Rule #10: The Plan
Create a “touchpoint plan” for your referral sources—5–7 meaningful interactions per year.These aren’t promo blasts. They’re intentional, personal, and about the referrer. Stacey calls it “mass personalization”—thoughtful gestures like cards, articles, books, or support. Jay now builds quarterly touchpoints for key contacts, often just checking in with a note or small gift. He avoids promo swag (per Stacey’s “no logos” rule), and focuses on the message: You’re appreciated. I’m here. Let’s keep helping each other.
43:46 – Conclusion: Referrals Without Even Asking Isn’t Magic. It’s a System.Follow these ten rules, and you’ll build a referral strategy that’s authentic, consistent, and effective. Track it. Thank your people. Show up differently. And remember—it’s about them, not you.
Co-authored by Jay Berkowitz (Ten Golden Rules) and Stacey Brown Randall (Roadmap to Referrals).
Resources Mentioned
Books
Generating Business Referrals Without Asking by Stacey Brown Randall – https://a.co/d/2bo01wt
Podcasts
Roadmap to Referrals – Stacey Brown Randall – https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/roadmap-to-referrals/id1405302350
About our Guest:
A proud Southern native and lifelong Red Sox fan, Stacey Brown Randall now calls Charlotte, NC home with her husband, their two biological children, and a nephew they’ve welcomed into their family. With a background in broadcast journalism and a family full of entrepreneurial spirit—especially in the restaurant industry—her journey into business ownership was a natural one, shaped in part by her own experiences, including navigating business failure. Passionate about helping service-based business owners who genuinely care about their clients, she specializes in teaching them how to effectively generate referrals by knowing what to do, how to do it, and what to say.
Website: https://staceybrownrandall.com/
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/staceybrandall/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/staceybrownrandall/
About Jay Berkowitz:
Jay Berkowitz is a digital marketing strategist with decades of experience in the industry. As the CEO of Ten Golden Rules, he has helped countless law firms and businesses harness the power of the internet to achieve remarkable growth and visibility. Jay is also a renowned keynote speaker and author, sharing his expertise at various industry events and publications worldwide.
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Transcript
Stacey Brown Randall: This is like, the number one people always ask. They're like, what do I need to do? And what do I need to say? I'm like, the first thing you actually have to do is stop worrying if I'm going to refer you right. Because when you come in wanting that, I can tell your language is that way. There is a forceness to this relationship building. The number one thing you should do is focus on how you can help me. And this is not rocket science. I think we've been hearing this for forever. Why don't you focus on the other person before you worry about what it happens to you, right? But the way I teach, the strategy for cultivating a brand new person to start referring you is really paying attention to Okay, let's establish a relationship, yes, but let's also focus on them, because here's the thing, you need to impact how I feel about you, and when you can impact how you feel about me. And the fastest way to do that is to make me the center of your attention, right? And make it about how you can help me. That doesn't mean you can refer to me, that doesn't mean you'll be able to refer to me, but it means how you can help me. It's getting to know me and understanding things about me and listening for ways that you can help me right once you impacted how I feel about you, then you've earned the right to direct how I think about you, and then you can start planning referral seeds. And that is, like, that's always what I tell my clients. I was like, my language piece is my secret sauce. It's the bulk of my intellectual property. Of what I teach people is how we say the things so that it sounds normal to you, and it also does its job and starts to plan itself in your subconsciousness.
Jay Berkowitz:Good morning, good afternoon, good evening, whatever time this podcast finds you. Thanks for finding us at the 10 Golden Rules Internet Marketing for Law Firms. Podcast, we have one of our most fantastical guests today, Stacey Brown Randall is the author of generating business referrals without asking, and we'll get into a little bit more details about her in a minute. You're going to want to listen to this one, because not only is she going to share some of her secrets, but we've crafted them in true 10 Golden Rule style into the 10 golden rules of referrals without asking for attorneys. So bear with me for a sec, and take one minute. If you're watching on YouTube or listening on iTunes, please subscribe to the show, because we have lots more great content like this every week, amazing guests and amazing content, and we're doing more of these 10 golden rules style formats. So if you like these, you definitely want to hit the subscribe button and throw in a five star review. We wouldn't mind that either. Without further. ADO, Stacey, welcome to the 10 golden rules podcast.
Jay Berkowitz:Stacey Brown Randall: Thank you, Jay for having me. I'm glad to be here. So
Jay Berkowitz:you're known for as the creator of referrals without asking. Methodology, you're the host of the roadmap to referrals podcast, the books generating business referrals without asking. Tell us a little bit about your journey and how you became the referrals without asking. Expert, you
Jay Berkowitz:Stacey Brown Randall: know, it'd be a really cool story if I could tell you that one day I just woke up and God was like, Okay, now you're going to be brilliant when it comes to referrals, and you're going to be a contrarian, and you're going to talk to people about how to do it without asking. That is not how it worked. It came from the school of hard knocks, as most things that are good in life do. I actually had a business that failed after four years. It didn't quite make it to the five year mark, and I knew it was meant to be an entrepreneur. So when I was like licking my wounds and overcoming the ego blow that having a business failure causes, I decided I had to go back to corporate America, which is even worse, having to go back to get a job. But while I was there, I was like, other people are successful with running businesses. I should be able to be too. Let me figure out maybe what I did wrong. So I did a lot of soul searching and sort of figuring out what I did wrong. And one of the things I noticed is that business development, right? You have to have a way to generate new clients all the time. This is not this is like business 101, most people know this, but you have to figure out a way to do it, let's be honest, in a way that works for you, so that you will be consistent with it and you will keep doing it. And it has to work too. I can't just feel good and not work. So for me, I realized, Wait, referrals are amazing. I never got one with my first business. And I was like, Okay, if I become an entrepreneur again, I'm going to figure out referrals, and then, of course, you can go search referrals, and then you're inundated with a ton of advice that never felt right or good for me? And I was like, okay, so I want to do it differently than those folks. So when I started my second business as a productivity and business coach, I had gotten certified while I was back in corporate America, I was like, let me figure this referrals thing out, and let me see if I can do it without having to ask for them. And I threw a bunch of spaghetti on the wall. I was like, let's see what sticks. Eventually, lots of things stuck, and the right thing stuck, and I generated 112 referrals my first year in business without asking for them. My clients wanted to know more, so I started teaching it to them, which really forces you to reverse engineer, what's working, why it's working, what's the framework, what are the strategies, what's the language points? So I started refining that, and here I am, 12. Of years later.
Jay Berkowitz:All right, well, let's get right into the magic. Because I think everyone's like me, like, oh, I want more referrals without asking. So the first golden rule of referrals without asking for attorneys is defining referrals correctly.
Jay Berkowitz:Stacey Brown Randall: It's amazing to me how many people think they know what a referral is, and then we'll start talking about it. And I'm like, that's not a referral. And they're like, Oh, right. People will assume, like, repeat clients that come back to work with you again are a referral. Well, they're assume that, like, word of mouth buzz, someone telling someone else about you, but never connecting you to that person is a referral. And none of those are referrals. Like people who think testimonials are referrals, like, no, those aren't referrals. They're all individual things that you need. But they are not referrals. A referral is defined in two ways. Number one, there's a personal connection. You'll always be connected by the referral source, which is just what I call the person who refers to you. You'll always be connected by the referral source to the prospect. So there's always that personal connection for attorneys. This usually happens over email. It may happen over a text thread. Very rarely will it happen in person, because all three parties are at the same event. And then, of course, the second piece of that definition after personal connection is that the needs been identified, that the prospect knows the other prospect. They know they need an attorney, which is why they're willing to be connected to you, to be referred to you, to have a conversation about maybe hiring you. So the need has to be identified, and there has to be a personal connection. When there's no personal connection, but a needs been identified. It's word of mouth buzz when you've been connected, but there's no need identified. We don't know who the prospect is while we're being connected to someone else. That's just an introduction. And those are three different things, introduction, word of mouth, Buzz and referrals. They're not the same, and we need to be clear on that.
Jay Berkowitz:So in B to B, we're always taught in like the networking groups, BNI and providers and stuff like that, that a great referral is an email where, and obviously, like you said, needs identified. So my friend Karen was in an accident. She's looking for a personal injury attorney. I'd love you to meet these guys. Or my friend Dave is going through a divorce, and he needs an attorney, and I recommended your law firm. So that's a personal referral, and needs identified, but for personal injury too. A ton of referrals amongst consumers. A lot of times you just get a call and then you ask the person, Where'd you hear about us? Oh, my friend Karen was a previous client, so those are okay too, in that more consumer facing way, right? Yeah,
Jay Berkowitz:Stacey Brown Randall: definitely. I mean, whether it's B to B or B to C. The reality of it is, as long as you know what the connection was, then it is actually a referral. What I want people to avoid is when somebody comes up to them and they say, Jay, I know an attorney really needs help with what you do. I gave them your name and number, so she's going to reach out, right? That's not a referral to you. It's so close to one, we call them almost referrals, but it's really word of mouth buzz, and in that moment, it's about you knowing, okay, wait, that's not a referral. That's word of mouth buzz. I'm missing the connection. I need to see if we can make the connection happen, because if not, you're not in the driver's seat. So the reason why I kind of like beat the drum, and I wanted this to be the first golden rule is, because when we don't know what's arriving, we don't know how to respond correctly, and so identifying it is really important. So you can be like, Wait, Stacey's the head. That's not a referral, that's just an introduction, or that's not a referral, that word of mouth buzz, so you can fill in the gap,
Jay Berkowitz:yeah. And for clarity, you know what we're saying here is it's not really good enough to say, Hey, Jay, I met this law firm, and they're looking for a new digital agency. They want new SEO guys, and I gave them your name, because nine times out of 10, I never hear from those people that personal introduction is great, and then the personal connection. I just wanted to comment on that, because I've joined provisors in the last year. And if folks out there don't know provisors, it's like a BNI, but it's really mostly attorneys, professionals, accountants, and it's national and it's pretty I call it like grown up networking. It's not your local networking with the plumbers and the air conditioned guys, which is great too, but provisors has a much bigger scope in my experience. And there's a term that I hadn't heard before, which is no like, trust, refer, and no like and trust, for years, has been talked about as people aren't going to send a referral until they know you. They like you, they know what you do, and they trust you, but no like trust refer is the provisors added that. And so I think that's my interpretation of what you mean by personal connection. Then they that people really get to know you. They know what you do, they like you, they trust you. They maybe heard you do good things, and then they're going to refer you. Is that a safe assumption?
Jay Berkowitz:Stacey Brown Randall: Yeah. I mean, I think at like, a high level it is when we get into a few more. Golden Rules. I'm going to unpack that a little bit more about what it actually what the trust factor actually means when it comes to referrals. It's not actually what people think. And so we'll, when we talk about the science piece, we'll unpack that a little bit more. But, yeah, I mean, no one's going to refer you if they don't first know you, like you and trust you, obviously, and no one's going to hire you either. So it could be, you know, no light, trust, hire, right? I mean, you need it for all things, whether it's referring or hiring.
Jay Berkowitz:I love it, alright? The second golden rule of referrals without asking for attorneys, is know where they fit.
Jay Berkowitz:Stacey Brown Randall: Yes, this is so very important. And most people believe when you're taught business development, you are taught that business development is like a two legged stool, or you have two parts to your plan. You're taught that your first leg of your stool is prospecting, and then you're taught the second leg of your stool is marketing. And so the idea there is, is prospecting, is going to provisors or going to BNI, or doing 7 million cups of coffee when you're doing your one on ones, or maybe you're cold calling or cold emailing or cold direct messaging on LinkedIn. There's a number of different things. That's obviously not an exhaustive list of things that are considered prospecting in nature, trying to get you as quickly and as close to the prospect as possible, right? And so it's lots of things, but then there's the marketing side. So maybe that is online marketing that you're doing. Maybe it's sponsorships that you do. Maybe you're trying to get some earned publicity and you're trying to get some PR obviously, it's having a website that's really important social media. So there's lots of things that you can do that are marketing in nature. For forever, we have been taught that those are the two legs of your business development or sales strategy. And when you think like that, and you think that there are only two legs, you then you assume that referrals has to fit into one of the two legs, which means, if you assume that referrals fit into prospecting, the type of advice that you will then teach or believe is that you gotta ask for them, or you have to compensate for them, or you have to make sure that you are always networking, to always be seen so no one can ever forget about you, so they remember to refer you. If you believe that referrals, though fit in the marketing side of that leg, then you believe, in some cases that it's referrals, from a marketing perspective, they become very gimmicky and very promotional. And those are the strategies that have been taught for decades and decades and decades, ask pay, be gimmicky and promotional or network all the time. And the idea there is those ways actually violate the science of referrals, which I know we're going to get into and a little bit little bit, but it's really important for people to understand, prospecting is good, marketing is good, but you have a third leg to your stool for your business development strategy, and that is a separate leg, and it's the referral leg, which means everything you do, who you do, it for what you say, what you do, what you don't do, The cadence that you follow, everything in that referral leg of your stool is different. The mentality is different. The end user is different. The receiver of your message is different than prospecting and marketing. So you've got to separate out referrals from prospecting and marketing, give it its own leg of the stool in your business development strategy, and make sure you have the right plans and strategies in place to be able to generate those referrals.
Jay Berkowitz:Okay, great, and we're going to get into them as we go. Right? This is the tease. Well, there's obviously a tease in the next one, because the next one is make referral tracking sexy,
Jay Berkowitz:Stacey Brown Randall: not only because most people say tracking is boring and not sexy. The number one thing that I find that people are lacking when they want to talk to me about referrals, and I asked some questions. So whether I'm doing a hot seat on a workshop that I'm doing, or people are scheduling time in my calendar, there's a couple of questions I ask them, and I know instantly if you're tracking or not, and that one of the questions I always ask is, how many referrals do you get in a year? Like, what's your average number of referrals that you receive in a year, not that you're closing into clients, but that you're receiving? And then the other question I ask is, how many people do you have referring to you? How many referral sources do you have referring to you? And when I get the ranges like, oh, I don't know. Maybe I get five to six referrals a year, but I have 30 referral sources. I'm like, clearly you're not tracking. You don't know, because those numbers don't align. Or I'll get things like, I don't know or unsure, or I'll get these massive ranges. Tracking is really important because it tells you what's working. And if you're going to invest the time and energy and resources and to having a referral strategy within your law firm, you don't, well, need to know if it's working. It's no different from what you teach Jay or what anybody else teaches. Like we need to know that it's working, and tracking is the only way to do that. When I tell folks that I want them to track, it's like, think of a spreadsheet. It's five columns, right? And those five columns are the date. Prospect arrived, the prospect's name, where that prospect came from, which I call the source. And if that source is they were referred to you, then I want you capturing the referral sources name, that's really important. Then the fourth column is outcome, right? Like, did they become a client? Did they say yes? Do they say no? Did they say not now follow with me in the fall, right? What's the outcome? And that has to be updated, because outcomes change. And then what was the revenue that you made from that prospect that said yes to being a client? Those are the five columns I want you tracking, date, prospect, name, source, and if it was referred to you the referral sources, name, the outcome, and then the revenue. When you're tracking those, and I can see that on a spreadsheet, I instantly know what your problems are and what's going well, and I don't know any of that. And I don't know, like, hey, you need this strategy or this strategy, or you need to work on quality and actually closing right, or you're not getting enough referrals. I don't know where to send you to get started to get more referrals without asking. And so you have the data to show me, and that all comes from tracking. And
Jay Berkowitz:then you can look at it, probably monthly or quarterly, where there's enough data. And then you can really start to see, hey, this person sent me three or four and a quarter, I want to go down on either that person or more people like that person, right?
Jay Berkowitz:Stacey Brown Randall: And it just everything. It's like, you can start seeing who are the types of folks that are referring to you. Like some people will tell me, Oh, I get most of my referrals from clients, and then they'll do what we're going to talk about in one of our upcoming golden rules, but then we'll do the step, and they're like, Oh, just kidding, I don't get them from clients. I get them from centers of influence. I'm like, Yeah, because you have like, a recency bias, right? You remember the last two or three referrals you got and where they came from, and then you apply that knowledge to, like, the entire part of referrals in your business. And that's not always the case.
Jay Berkowitz:I love it. Well, I know what I'm doing very quickly after this meeting is setting up a tracking spreadsheet. Good. I'm glad to hear it. Golden Rule number four, know the players? Yes.
Jay Berkowitz:Stacey Brown Randall: So the players, and when a referral is happening, there are three of them, and you have to know them, and you have to know your place. So the three players are the referral source, the prospect, and then you, but you just serve as the solution provider. And that's an order of importance, the referral source, the person referring you, the prospect, the person who is being referred to you that hopefully will hire you, and then you as the solution provider. You're just getting that referral because you're helping the referral source look like a hero or be a hero when they refer someone to you, they're not most of the time, people aren't referring to you because they're trying to help your business grow. That's an added benefit. It's a secondary piece, though. What they're doing is they're referring to you because they are helping someone they know that has a problem, and how they're helping them is by referring them to you. So you're just the solution provider. Now you're important, but you're the third most important person in the cast of characters. Are these list of players.
Jay Berkowitz:Fantastic, something that I've been spending a lot of time on the last year, which is referring referrals, or, I don't know exactly what you call it, but you probably have a better name for it. I'm probably usurping one of the future golden rules that you're about to get to. But this has been great for us, which is understanding that for me, if I spend my time networking with an attorney, I can get one sale or maybe two or three. If he hires us, likes us and refers a couple of his buddies, but if I spend time with folks like yourself, people who are software providers to attorneys, coaches for attorneys, people who have 50 100 attorneys, or 500 attorneys that they deal with and they get to know, like and trust and believe in 10 golden rules, and they recommend us as a solution to someone's problem. And typically that's they're not happy with their number of leads, their number of cases coming from the internet, or they're not happy with their provider, their web guys, they call it. So if I build relationships with 50 people like that, it's great for my business. So is that what you refer to, like as referring referrals, or
Jay Berkowitz:Stacey Brown Randall: referral source? Yeah. So yeah, the truth is, we're not talking about this in the tingle and rule. So let me just sneak it in right now, because I think it's beneficial. Is there's actually four types of referral sources. The first one is your clients. Now, not everybody I work with personal injury attorneys is sometimes one of them. There's not a concerted effort to generate referrals from their clients. They know, if their client knows someone who has something happen to them, they're probably going to be the one that gets referred. So the focus there, when I've worked with personal injury attorneys, isn't actually on clients, but for a majority of other attorneys and other business owners, clients is a good source of referrals. The second type are your centers of influence. Those are the people who know what you do, don't do what you do. So there's no competitive overlap, and it's this statement that's most. Important come across your ideal client with some level of regularity. So for you, it being a software provider that provides software to attorneys, right? That is a COI for you, because they know what you do, they don't do what you do, and they're sitting on a bunch of ideal clients for you, right? So clients and Cois are the top two. That's who I focus all of my strategies on that's who we spend our time and energy on, developing into referral sources. The last two are what I call below the line, and not everybody will get referrals from these last two, but the third group is friends and family. So people who know you that may come across somebody who needs you, but it's that's tough, and like my mom loves me and would love to support me. Still, 12 years in, not a clue of what I do. I mean, she can tell you I have a podcast and I have a book, and she can also say she's listened to a read, none of it, right? So, like
Jay Berkowitz:the reality drops a lot of business people who need referrals without asking, she's
Jay Berkowitz:Stacey Brown Randall: just not. She's working in my brother's restaurant in South Carolina, and she's not coming across people who need me, but my husband does right? But he's my husband. As long as we're married, I don't need a strategy to cultivate more referrals from him. So that's why we call friends and family below the line. And then the fourth group were actually strangers, which, of course, kind of contradicts what I'm saying about referrals come from relationships. But the truth is, sometimes you've been in business long enough you have a reputation that has grown. There are people who knew somebody who knew somebody who knew somebody who had a great experience, and for whatever reason, you stuck into their brain and randomly, when an opportunity presented itself, they're like, you gotta call Jay. I don't really know him personally. I've never worked with him, right? That person's a stranger to you. You're not a stranger to them. Some people will never have strangers refer to them. Some people do. It kind of depends on the geographical makeup, the larger you are. So like, I'm national and international, I can have more strangers refer me. I also have a book out there, a podcast makes it a little bit easier from a name recognition perspective. Some people will never have strangers refer them, and some people will. But those are the four types of referral sources, clients, Cois, family and friends, strangers. So that's important to kind of recognize when you're looking at understanding these cast of characters, the knowing the players, that's
Jay Berkowitz:great, and thanks for that little side shuffle. And I assume you did answer a question I was going to ask, which is podcast listeners, people who read your book. Those are strangers, but they feel like they know you, but you've never been Yes, and
Jay Berkowitz:Stacey Brown Randall: they know one about you, particularly the longer they listen. I actually had somebody come up to me in an event. Once, I was speaking at an event, and she came up to me, and I was talking to somebody else, and she came up to me. She's like, you're Stacey. I know what I can tell by your voice without even seeing your face. She was like, I listen to your podcast every week. She was like, you sound the same? I'm like, I hope so, because it's me on that podcast every week. That's awesome.
Jay Berkowitz:Alright, we're going to go quick to keep the pace on the next ones, the number five, the happiness trifecta, yeah.
Jay Berkowitz:Stacey Brown Randall: So five, six and seven of these golden rules break down the science you need to understand of referrals. So I'm going to do the high level, not the adjunct professor view, but we'll do the high level perspective of this. So there are three things that are happening from a science perspective, the first one being our fifth Golden Rule of referrals without asking, is understanding what's happening in the brain, which is the happiness trifecta. It's the chemicals, like dopamine, and it's two cousins that are released or triggered when you do something that feels good. The happiness trifecta is in the what that we're concerned with is in the brain of your referral source, the person who knows the prospect and decides to help them by referring them to you to fix their problem. So the happiness trifecta, I always tell folks, you gotta understand that when a referral source is referring someone to you, it's not about you, it's about them, feeling good, happiness, trifecta, being released in the brain, because they get to be the hero and they get to help someone. And you really need to know your place in this. It's not about you, it's about them and so nurturing that relationship with your referral source, because they are the hero every time they refer. And coming from that place, I don't mean being gimmicky or anything like that with a hero thing, just understanding that they aren't doing it for you. They're doing it to help someone else, and you need to honor and respect that. And so understanding the brain science, the happiness trifecta, is really important. That's the first piece of the science.
Jay Berkowitz:But once you understand that, how do you do it? Like just say, Hey, if you refer me, you're going to feel great, because I'm going to provide a solution.
Jay Berkowitz:Stacey Brown Randall: Well, now you're jumping ahead. We haven't gotten to that one yet. That is
Jay Berkowitz:another one. Okay, I'm going to let it go. So let's go to number six, the psychology of trust. And I
Jay Berkowitz:Stacey Brown Randall: will say the first thing you should do when someone refers you to nurture that feel good happiness. Trifecta is you should send a handwritten thank you note. You cannot unleash a referral explosion by just sending thank you notes, but it is a fundamental piece of what you need to be doing, that you need to be focused on. I always tell folks, why should I send you another referral if you can't thank me for the one I just sent you? Right? So that's. One thing you can do is send that handwritten thank you note. Alright, so the second piece of the science that comes into place with referrals, you have to understand, and this is the one most people have a good grasp on, but that's the psychology of trust and understanding the trust factor in referrals. But here's what people think. People think that you have to know how amazing I am and all the things I do to trust me, that's actually not true. I don't actually have to know everything that you do. I do have to believe that you do a good job and that you know what you do, and I do, on some level, have to understand what you do so I know who to refer right? But at the end of the day, what actually cultivates that trust that I have in you is actually how you nurture our relationship. It's more of the like factor than it actually is the trust factor, and that's what people get wrong. People think I've got to train my referral sources on who to refer to me and how great I am. I'm like, your referral sources aren't dogs. They don't need to be trained, right? They probably need some guidance. They probably need some understanding, but you have to figure out how to do that in a way that doesn't feel like you're lecturing them. And so many times, when we ask people to refer us, or we try to tell them who's our ideal client, we're lecturing at them, and they didn't ask for that. So you have to have the right language and the right conversation points and the right messaging for this to land with somebody else, so it feels like it's part of conversation. So that trust factor that comes into place that is so very important, well, yes, I have to trust you, but to trust you, you need to maintain a relationship with me. And maintaining a relationship with me means that I continue to know you and like you. So the trust naturally grows, because, of course, you can easily lose my trust, right? But the reality of it is, I don't have to know how perfect you are to trust you, but I do have to like you to get to the place of trusting you, and that's where referrals are going to hang
Jay Berkowitz:out, right? And number three of the three scientific factors is behavioral economics, yes,
Jay Berkowitz:Stacey Brown Randall: so okay, this being our seventh point, right? The idea here is behavioral economics comes into place because it's how I build within the framework that I teach my clients. Kind of like part of my secret sauce is we leverage what I call the positive side of behavioral economics. So I don't like it when people use behavioral economics for evil taking advantage of reciprocity. I can't stand that one, but we look at some of the positive parts of behavioral economics, and it's how we build the frameworks and the outreach that we do for our referral sources, for the people who refer to us or the people that we want to refer us. And so this is that third piece of the science as understanding how behavioral economics comes into play at a high level. It's all about really nurturing and cultivating the relationship with the person who will and can't or already does refer to you. So behavioral economics is about it's this is not take you to coffee every month, right? Nobody has time for that, first of all, and second of all, it's the same thing over and over again. One thing about behavioral economics is variety. You gotta show up differently from time to time. You gotta say different things. You gotta be a part of their world in a different way. And you don't have to expend This isn't like, I gotta take people to coffee every month. If I told someone that was the strategy, nobody would hire me, because nobody has time for that. Imagine you have 30 people referring you, and then I'm like, now, take them to coffee every month. No, that's not how this works. No one's going to do that, but that's also what the science says you shouldn't do. It's also when people are like, my newsletter is what I use to nurture my referral sources. I'm like, well, then you're failing because your newsletter is not nurturing your referral sources. Is it needed? Yes, I have one. You should have one. Newsletters are great, right? And your referral sources can receive them as well as your prospects and your clients and everybody else in your database. But that's not the nurturing that we need to do for people who will actually see referring you in opportunities as they present themselves. And I think that's the thing that people don't ever pay attention to with behavioral economics, is knowing that for a referral to happen, I need desire and opportunity. And guess what? I only control desire. I don't control when you'll come across opportunity to refer to me, but I do control the relationship that we have, how I work to nurture that relationship so that you have the desire to pick me and only me. So when someone says, Hey, Jay, I need more referrals, you're like, Stacey. That's the only name that would come to mind, right? So I control the desire that you would pick me to refer to, but not your opportunity. And you have to understand that, and that all works into playing with behavioral economics.
Jay Berkowitz:So you said, show up differently. So let's use an example. Stacey talks to a lot of attorneys. I want to be top of mind when someone tells her their internet marketing is down. Their leads are down. How do I show up differently? Because you said likes more important than the know and trust
Jay Berkowitz:Stacey Brown Randall: at the beginning. Yes. So here's the thing that means that if I'm not referring to you, I fall into a category that we would call potential referral source. So I'm not an existing referral source. What you would. Do to nurture more referrals from me if I was an existing referral source, that's a different strategy. That's a different what we call touch point plan, which we're going to get to. But on the potential side, if I've never referred to you, right, this is like, the number one people always ask. They're like, what do I need to do? And what do I need to say? I'm like, the first thing you actually have to do is stop worrying if I'm going to refer you, right? Because when you come in wanting that, I can tell your language is that way. There is a forceness to this relationship building. The number one thing you should do is focus on how you can help me. And this is not rocket science. I think we've been hearing this for forever. Why don't you focus on the other person before you worry about what it happens to you, right? But the way I teach the strategy for cultivating a brand new person to start referring you is really paying attention to? Okay, let's establish a relationship, yes, but let's also focus on them, because here's the thing, you need to impact how I feel about you, and when you can impact how you feel about me, and the fastest way to do that is to make me the center of your attention, right? And make it about how you can help me. That doesn't mean you can refer to me, that doesn't mean you'll be able to refer to me, but it means how you can help me. It's getting to know me and understanding things about me and listening for ways that you can help me, right? Once you impacted how I feel about you, then you've earned the right to direct how I think about you, and then you can start planting referral seeds. And that is like, that's always what I tell my clients. I was, like, my language piece is my secret sauce. It's the bulk of my intellectual property. Of what I teach people is how we say the things so that it sounds normal to you, and it also does its job and starts to plan itself in your subconsciousness. And so that's an important piece. Like, if you're trying to get me to refer to you, stop worrying if I'll refer to you. Focus on me. Focus on helping me. Focus on listening for the ways that would work, building in that relationship, building that friendship, planting referral seeds throughout the process, because you still don't control if I'm ever going to come across the opportunity to refer to you. There are lots of people who work with law firms right like business coaches, CPAs, rights folks like you, internet companies like yours. Obviously, there is the database companies too, and software companies as well. There's a ton of them. They don't all ever have conversations with their clients about referrals, though, but some of them do, and it's knowing that is way more important and targeted than anything else for me. So I know the CPA, working for attorneys, is going to have conversations about lead flow. It's going to happen. And so if that person's like, wow, you're not getting any referrals, I need to refer you to Stacey, right? I know that works well, but somebody else may not necessarily refer to me in the same way. And it's the same thing for you.
Jay Berkowitz:I love it. One of the questions I ask in my networking meetings, one on ones, and also on this podcast, and it's coming up, by the way, is what's a great introduction for you. Who would you like to meet? Who can I send your way? Who can other people on this podcast refer to you? Is that a good way to ask that question?
Jay Berkowitz:Stacey Brown Randall: The idea behind that question is, if I ask it of you, you're going to ask it of me, right? And there's an exchange of who we should actually refer to each other. It's not a bad question. You do need to know the answer to it so that you can refer to them, and hopefully they need to know your answer so they can refer correctly to you. It's where you put that in the conversation. Most people are going to ask that question, and you're doing it on a podcast episode, because it's how you wrap up each episode that's different. But in a coffee meeting, some people are going to be like, I've got to ask you this question in our very first coffee meeting, so that I can see what's there and I can understand. And then you'll ask me the question so I can tell you. And then nothing like part of the strategy to cultivate somebody to refer to you is to identify the right people cultivate that beginning of that relationship. We usually call it the first conversation, and then there's a whole keeping warm process that you have to maintain, to maintain connection to that person. And so from that perspective, it's the question, is fine, it's just when and where you ask it. Most people force it way too early in the conversation.
Jay Berkowitz:So is it better if I can determine that from the conversation and then come up with something like, oh, a great introduction for you would be someone who's looking for an accountant who specializes working with law firms. I was just talking to my, one of my clients, and their accounting is all messed up. I'm going to send him your way. Is that a good fit so that I do it proactively, without asking the question, yeah,
Jay Berkowitz:Stacey Brown Randall: so you can, I think a better way to say that is, I found in my business, one of the best ways for me to grow is by generating referrals. But I'm curious if it's the same for you. Do you get a lot of clients by referrals? Does that work for you? And then let the conversation unfold naturally. You're getting at the heart of what you want to talk about, but you're creating it like business owner to business owner dialog. I get a lot of referrals, or I'm getting some referrals. I'm working on getting more just whatever to say, whatever's real, don't lie, and then say, is that how you generate most of your business do you get a lot of referrals? What does that look like for you? And then you can naturally flow into who usually refers to you or what's. The best type of person to refer to you, but it has to be a conversation that the person you're talking to wants to go into with you, and usually another business owner will be happy to have that conversation. It's just a different opener, so it lowers their defenses.
Jay Berkowitz:Okay, great. Number eight, the referral ecosystem, yes,
Jay Berkowitz:Stacey Brown Randall: okay, most people teach that every referral is a nail, and so the only tool you need is a hammer, meaning you need one tool how to ask or how to compensate. The truth is, a referral is not just a nail, and the tools that you need in your toolbox are plentiful. You don't need a time like you're doing 15 different things, but you need different tools for the situation. So when I teach referrals, I teach how referrals live in an ecosystem within your business. There are referrals that come from people, from specific people, either existing referral sources or potential referral sources. There are referrals that come within your client experience. So you want to have a referral client experience, there are referrals that can live and operate within your buyer's journey, when people are deciding to work with you. And then also, if you think about it from the perspective of other thing, I kind of miscellaneous others, but it's like maybe your events, that you're doing, your networking, that you're doing, social media, right, other things that you're doing, where you can weave in when appropriate referrals. It's like an ecosystem, and it kind of feeds itself. That's the reason why I teach my referral strategies, and we do it based on order of importance, but also what needs to happen when a situation happens. So for instance, we were talking earlier about you get word of mouth buzz, you need to know how to turn that into a referral. A situational strategy that I teach is called the flip scripts. It's how we flip word of mouth buzz or an introduction into a referral. It's situational. It's like, once you've memorized the script, you don't think about it again, you just use it right? But then there's other things that we have that are, this is a plan, and it should run throughout the year in your business, and that's what I mean by ecosystem. It's not just you want referrals go ask for them. It's no they're like, hiding in a lot of different places in your business. You just need to know the right strategies to uncover them and then nurture to get more of them. Sounds
Jay Berkowitz:like a good lead into the next one identify existing sources of magic.
Jay Berkowitz:nts that you've had so far in:Jay Berkowitz:got a handwritten thank you card the other day, and it included a very nice restaurant gift certificate, and she mentioned that she did a little bit of research locally, and she did find one of the greatest local restaurants, and it was a decent enough for a really nice meal with my wife, and that really stood out in my mind. And I was just thinking, Well, the next time, maybe I could send, you know, a really nice golf shirt with our company logo very subtly on the shoulder or something. But okay, wait
Jay Berkowitz:Stacey Brown Randall: so I have to interrupt you when you're doing touch points to your referral sources, you're not allowed to use your logo. No promo swag, because
Jay Berkowitz:10, like, instead of 10 golden rules, I just have a 10 on the 10.
Jay Berkowitz:Stacey Brown Randall: I mean, again, it's your business. You get to make that choice. Let me just tell you why. I tell folks, don't put your logo on things you're doing for your referral sources. I teach a concept called platinum principles. And number one, Platinum principles, it's gotta be all about them. And all about them is not your logo. So you send me a shirt or a Yeti or a candle or something, and it has your logo on it. That is a gift for you. That is not a gift for me, right? And so you want to put my logo on it. Great. Now it's all about me, right? I mean, that gets a little complicated if you're doing individual gifts like that, and that's why I don't recommend it. We do this thing called mass personalization within my program so that people can manage sending out personalized gifts, but doing it in mass. So the what you do matters, right? But I do say no promo swag. Have it for your clients. Have it for your prospects, right? But don't make it part of this plan that's there specifically to nurture more referrals from your referral sources. It's got to be about them and your logo never is awesome. Sorry if I persecuted let
Jay Berkowitz:me quickly try and refresh, because these are awesome. Stacey, this was Thank you hire, and I'm sure this is going to be one of our top podcasts and video. So thank you. Number one is defining referrals correctly, and there's two parts that the personal connection and needs identification. Number two is know where they fit. And you talked about the three legs there, and everybody's focused on the first two legs, the prospecting and the marketing, and they need to know the referrals as the third leg. Number three is how important tracking is, or make tracking sexy with the name of the golden rule. And I'm going to create my spreadsheet with five parts to it very, very quickly. And then number four is, know the players. There's three players, the source, the prospect, and you number five, six and seven are the three areas of science you need to understand the happiness trifecta, the psychology of trust in behavioral economics. And I'm not going to try to summarize those. I'm going to listen back to this podcast. And by the way, I listen to every podcast. This is funny. People say, Why do you listen to your own podcast? Because when I'm interviewing you, I'm thinking about the next question. I'm taking notes. And when I listen back, I love to and I learn I think this one's going to be on. Replay. Number eight, the referral ecosystem. The referrals are not a nail and not a hammer, but you've gotta learn the referral ecosystem. Number nine is identify the existing sources of magic. I've actually done that exercise, but I haven't done it in a long time where I looked at, I do track all my sources. I make sure I send a gift, but I haven't done the sort in a while, and it was interesting. Trade shows were actually our number one source of leads, so I need to do better on referrals without action, and that's why we're here today. And number 10 is the plan. Stacey, this was fantastic. And I know everybody's thinking what I'm thinking, what's a great introduction for you? Who should they be sending your way?
Jay Berkowitz:Stacey Brown Randall: I'm allowed to ask that, right? Yes, you're allowed to ask the podcast, yeah, okay, because
Jay Berkowitz:I honestly mean it, and I want people to send you a ton of business
Jay Berkowitz:Stacey Brown Randall: Well, I appreciate that, yeah. And I do work with professional services and creative industries, so attorneys, CPAs consultants, financial planners, coaches, interior designers and real estate agents. So those are always great for my programs. My programs don't work for everyone, but those are the programs it does work for. But having you ask me that question, the specific thing I would say is I have a book coming out this fall, and so the the great introductions for me are actually be on other podcast, particularly when I can get on this podcast in October, around the time of my second book launching. And so that would be the best for me is because I want to spread the message about the book and, of course, move more pre orders and book sales. Great.
Jay Berkowitz:Well, if you'd love to do this again, I'd be very happy to do it again. Closer to the book launch,
Jay Berkowitz:Stacey Brown Randall: we'll do the 10 golden rules of a referable client experience, which is what the book is on.
Jay Berkowitz:As a matter of fact, if you want to do a webinar, we can actually do the video and do the webinar. So yeah, for that coming September, October, near you. And last question is, where can people get in touch with you?
Jay Berkowitz:Stacey Brown Randall: So the website is the best home base. Stacey Brown, randall.com Stacey does have an E but of course, my two top favorite social media platforms are LinkedIn and Instagram. So you can find me under Stacey Brown Randall at both of those spots too. That's a great way to connect.
Jay Berkowitz:And obviously the folks listening today are podcast listeners, so say the name of the podcast
Jay Berkowitz:Stacey Brown Randall: one more time. Please. Road map to referrals. And if
Jay Berkowitz:you're kind of a rookie podcast person, what I always do, I just iTunes is my go to podcast platform, or YouTube's actually just as good these days, and so you just have to put in roadmap to referrals, and it'll come up. Or Stacey Brown, Randall, Stacey, this was really fantastic. I'm definitely re listening and taking notes. So thank you so much for your time and your expertise today. Thank you,
Jay Berkowitz:Stacey Brown Randall: Jay for having me. It was so fun. You.