The Referral Engine Build: Running a 60-Minute Team Working Session Where Every Rep Identifies Their Happiest Accounts and Builds a Specific, Named Plan to Ask for Introductions That Actually Convert — a 60-Minute Sales Training
The Referral Engine Build: Running a 60-Minute Team Working Session Where Every Rep Identifies Their Happiest Accounts and Builds a Specific, Named Plan to Ask for Introductions That Actually Convert — a 60-Minute Sales Training
Format: 60-minute live team working session. Manager-led. Every rep leaves with a written, named referral plan for at least three of their own accounts.
Who runs it: Sales manager or team lead. Who attends: The full sales team (account executives, account managers, and senior reps). 4–12 people is ideal. What reps bring: A laptop with CRM access and a list of their current and recent closed-won customers.
Why This Session Exists
Almost every rep agrees that referrals are the best leads they get — warmer, faster to close, higher win rate, lower cost — and almost every rep does nothing systematic to generate them. They wait. They hope a happy customer mentions them to a peer. Occasionally it happens, and the rep treats it as luck rather than as a process.
That is the gap this session closes. Referrals are not luck. They are a sales motion, and like every sales motion they can be planned, scripted, scheduled, and inspected.
The problem is never that customers are unwilling — research and lived experience both show satisfied customers are happy to refer when asked well. The problem is that reps either never ask, ask vaguely ("if you know anyone, send them my way"), or ask at the wrong moment.
In the next 60 minutes the team will fix all three. Every rep will identify their genuinely happy accounts, pick the specific people inside those accounts who can make an introduction, name the specific person or type of person they want to be introduced to, script the ask, and put it on the calendar.
Reps walk out with a real plan, not a good intention.
The one rule for today: every referral plan must be *specific and named*. "I'll ask some customers for referrals" is not a plan. "I will ask Maria Chen at Northwind on Thursday's check-in call to introduce me to her counterpart at their sister division" is a plan. Specific and named, or it does not count.
The Agenda (60 Minutes, 0:00 → 1:00)
The agenda below sums to exactly 60 minutes. Keep time strictly — the working blocks are where the value is, so protect them.
| Time | Block | Minutes | Format |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0:00 – 0:05 | 1. Frame the session | 5 | Manager-led |
| 0:05 – 0:13 | 2. The referral math | 8 | Manager-led + discussion |
| 0:13 – 0:25 | 3. Working block: rank your accounts | 12 | Individual work |
| 0:25 – 0:38 | 4. Working block: name the ask | 13 | Individual work + pairs |
| 0:38 – 0:50 | 5. Live ask rehearsal | 12 | Pairs, role-play |
| 0:50 – 0:57 | 6. Commit and schedule | 7 | Individual + share-out |
| 0:57 – 1:00 | 7. Close and accountability | 3 | Manager-led |
Total: 60 minutes.
Block 1 — Frame the Session (0:00 – 0:05, 5 minutes)
Manager opens. Keep it short and direct. Say something close to this:
"Referrals are the highest-converting, lowest-cost pipeline any of us will ever touch. We all know that. And almost none of us work them on purpose.
Today we fix that. By the end of this hour every one of you will have a written plan to ask three specific people for three specific introductions, and those asks will be on your calendar. This is a working session — you will be building your own plan, not watching slides."
State the one rule: specific and named, or it does not count. Write it on the whiteboard. Leave it up for the whole hour.
Tell the team how the hour is structured — two working blocks, a rehearsal, and a commitment block — so they know the slides end in five minutes and the work begins.
Block 2 — The Referral Math (0:05 – 0:13, 8 minutes)
This block exists to make the team *want* to do the work, using their own numbers.
Walk the team through the comparison out loud. Pull real figures from your CRM if you have them; use the structure below if you do not:
- Win rate. A referred lead typically closes at roughly two to four times the rate of a cold or marketing-sourced lead. Ask the team for their own gut estimate, then compare.
- Sales cycle. Referred deals usually move materially faster — the trust step is already done. Ask: "How much shorter is a referred deal for you?"
- Deal size and retention. Referred customers often land at higher deal sizes and churn less, because they came in through a peer who already vouched for the fit.
- Cost. A referral costs a rep one well-timed conversation. A marketing lead costs real money. A cold lead costs hours.
Then ask the uncomfortable question: "How many referrals did you personally ask for, by name, in the last 90 days?" Let the silence land. For most reps the honest answer is zero or one.
Close the block: "So we have agreed referrals are our best pipeline, and we have agreed we barely ask for them. That is the whole problem. The next 50 minutes are the fix."
Block 3 — Working Block: Rank Your Accounts (0:13 – 0:25, 12 minutes)
Reps now work individually in their CRM. This is silent working time — the manager circulates and helps, but does not lecture.
Each rep builds a list of every current customer and recent closed-won account, then scores each one on two simple dimensions:
- Happiness. Is this customer genuinely getting value and likely to say good things? Score High / Medium / Low. Be honest — a renewal does not mean they are happy.
- Connectedness. Is this customer well-networked in a way that matters to us — peers in similar roles, sister divisions, an active industry community, a known move-around-the-industry pattern? Score High / Medium / Low.
The reps' referral targets are the accounts that score High / High — happy *and* connected. A happy but isolated customer is a great reference but a weak referral source. A connected but unhappy customer is a risk, not an opportunity.
Each rep finishes the block with their top three referral-source accounts clearly identified. The manager should physically check that every rep has three before time is up. If a rep cannot find three High/High accounts, that itself is a finding — surface it and have them pick their three best available.
Block 4 — Working Block: Name the Ask (0:25 – 0:38, 13 minutes)
This is the heart of the session. For each of their three accounts, every rep writes down four things. Vague answers fail the one rule.
- The person. Who exactly will I ask? Name and title. Not "someone at Acme" — "Devon Park, VP of Operations."
- The target. Who do I want to be introduced to? The more specific, the better. Best: a named individual ("her counterpart at the Phoenix office"). Good: a precise type ("another operations VP at a mid-market logistics firm"). Failing: "anyone who might need us."
- The moment. When and how will I ask? Tie it to a real upcoming touchpoint — a QBR, a renewal check-in, a success milestone, a support win. Referrals land best right after the customer has felt value.
- The words. The actual ask, written out. Not memorized — written, so it is concrete.
Give the team a script skeleton to adapt — never read robotically:
"[Name], working with you this past [period] has been genuinely great, and the results you have seen with [specific outcome] are exactly what we do best. I have a favor to ask. We grow mostly through introductions from customers like you.
Is there one person — maybe [specific role or named person] — who you think is wrestling with the same problem you were before we started? I would love a quick introduction. And if it is easier, I am happy to draft a short note you can simply forward."
Point out the three things that make this ask work: it anchors on a specific result, it asks for one specific person (not a vague net), and it removes the effort by offering to draft the forward-able note.
In the last 3 minutes of this block, reps pair up and read one of their three asks to a partner. The partner has one job: ask "Is the target specific enough?" If not, fix it now.
Block 5 — Live Ask Rehearsal (0:38 – 0:50, 12 minutes)
The team stays in pairs. They will role-play the ask out loud, because an ask that has only been written has never actually been said.
- Rounds. Two rounds of 6 minutes — each rep plays the asking rep once and the customer once.
- The customer's job. Play it realistically. Be warm but a little busy. Do not hand over a referral instantly — make the rep earn it, handle the "let me think about who" response, and use the offer to draft the note.
- The rep's job. Deliver the ask conversationally, anchor on the real result, ask for the specific target, and close by either getting a name or scheduling the follow-up where the name will come.
After each round, the listening partner gives 60 seconds of feedback on two questions only: *Did the ask feel natural or scripted?* and *Was the target specific enough to act on?*
Manager circulates and listens for the two most common failure modes: the rep softening the ask into nothing ("no pressure, only if you happen to think of someone"), and the rep accepting a vague "sure, I'll keep you in mind" instead of pinning a name or a next step. Call both out on the spot.
Block 6 — Commit and Schedule (0:50 – 0:57, 7 minutes)
Plans that are not scheduled do not happen. In this block, reps make the plan real.
Each rep, individually in their calendar and CRM (first 4 minutes):
- Puts all three referral asks on the calendar with a real date inside the next 14 days, attached to a real touchpoint where possible.
- Logs a task or next-step in the CRM on each of the three accounts so the ask is visible and inspectable.
- For any account where the customer needs a forward-able note, drafts that note now while the ask is fresh.
Then a fast share-out (last 3 minutes). Go around the room — each rep states one sentence: *"I will ask [name] at [account] on [date] to introduce me to [target]."* This is public commitment; it is short on purpose. Everyone hears everyone commit.
Block 7 — Close and Accountability (0:57 – 1:00, 3 minutes)
Manager closes. Make the follow-up explicit and unavoidable:
- Inspection. "Every one of you scheduled three asks. I will check the CRM next week and I will ask each of you, by name, what happened on each one. Referrals that were asked for, referrals that were promised, referrals that came in."
- Standing cadence. "This is not a one-time session. Asking for a named introduction becomes part of every QBR, every renewal call, and every success milestone from now on. We will review referral activity in our weekly pipeline meeting."
- Reframe the goal. "We are not trying to get lucky with referrals anymore. We are running a referral engine. You just built your part of it."
End on the rule one more time: specific and named, or it does not count.
Manager Prep Checklist (Before the Session)
- Pull the team's referral-sourced win rate, cycle length, and average deal size if your CRM tracks lead source — real numbers make Block 2 land.
- Confirm every rep has CRM access on the laptop they bring.
- Have the whiteboard ready with the one rule written before anyone walks in.
- Decide your inspection date and put it on your own calendar now, so Block 7 is a real commitment and not a threat you forget.
- Prepare one strong example from your own career — a deal that closed because of a referral — to tell briefly if energy dips.
What Good Looks Like After This Session
- Every rep has three named, scheduled referral asks logged in the CRM within 14 days.
- The weekly pipeline meeting now includes a referral-activity line: asks made, introductions received, referral deals created.
- "If you know anyone, send them my way" disappears from the team's vocabulary and is replaced by specific, named asks tied to real moments of customer value.
- Referral-sourced pipeline becomes a tracked, growing number instead of an occasional happy accident.
Common Failure Modes to Watch For
- The vague ask creeps back. Within a month, reps drift back to "keep us in mind." Re-anchor on the one rule in pipeline meetings.
- Asking unhappy or neutral customers. A renewal is not happiness. If reps ask Medium/Low accounts, the asks fail and reps conclude "referrals don't work." Hold the High/High bar.
- Bad timing. Asking during a support escalation or a tense renegotiation. The ask belongs right after a felt win — coach reps to wait for the moment.
- No follow-through on the introduction. A referral that is received but not worked fast is wasted. Treat an inbound introduction as the hottest lead in the pipeline and respond same day.