Selling to Big Companies by Jill Konrath — Cliff Notes Summary
Direct Answer
Selling to Big Companies by Jill Konrath (2005) is the enterprise prospecting playbook that taught two generations of SDRs how to get past the fortress gate of Fortune 1000 corporations. The book's core argument: enterprise buyers are not impressed by your product, your company, or your demo.
They are time-starved, risk-averse, and pattern-blind to the avalanche of vendor outreach flooding their inbox daily — and the seller who breaks through must adopt a completely different mental model than the one taught for SMB or transactional selling.
Konrath argues the seller must become a crazy-busy executive's trusted resource — someone who delivers value in 30 seconds, respects the buyer's time religiously, and enters the conversation with a specific business issue the buyer is already wrestling with. The traditional "hi, I'd like to introduce my company" opener is dead on arrival.
The replacement is the Value Proposition Pivot — a 15-second statement that names a specific business outcome the seller has delivered to similar named companies, followed by an immediate calendar-anchored ask.
The book introduces the Enterprise Selling Triangle (Business Drivers + Decision Process + Stakeholder Map), the Pinpoint Targeting framework for account selection, and the 20-Second Voicemail template that consistently produces 8-12% callback rates even in 2027.
Below: chapter-by-chapter notes, the two diagrams (the Enterprise Buyer's Mindset and the Account Entry Playbook), what holds up in 2027, and what has aged.
Chapter 1 — Welcome to a Whole New Sales World
Konrath opens with a wake-up call for sellers raised on SMB-style "always be closing" tactics: enterprise corporate buyers operate by completely different rules.
The 5 realities of enterprise buyers Konrath identifies:
- Crazy busy. A typical VP at Procter & Gamble, Citibank, or Johnson & Johnson is double-booked from 7 AM to 7 PM with back-to-back meetings. Cold sellers compete with the CEO for time.
- Risk-averse. Enterprise careers are made by not blowing up. Buying an unproven vendor is career-threatening. The seller must reduce perceived risk before pitching upside.
- Pattern-blind to vendor outreach. Enterprise buyers receive 150-200 vendor pitches per week (per Konrath's 2005 data; 300-500+ in 2027 with AI-generated outbound). Most are deleted unread in under 2 seconds.
- Consensus-driven. Major purchases require buy-in from 5-10 stakeholders across finance, legal, IT, procurement, and the business unit. The seller who only pitches the user is invisible to the people who actually approve the contract.
- Outcome-focused. Enterprise buyers don't care about features. They care about measurable business outcomes — revenue, cost, risk reduction, compliance. Every conversation must connect to a C-suite-approved business priority.
The seller's mental model shift: stop being a vendor pitcher. Become a trusted resource on a specific business problem the buyer is already wrestling with.
Chapter 2 — Pinpoint Your Markets
Konrath's Pinpoint Targeting framework — the book's most enduring contribution — argues that enterprise sellers should work fewer accounts more deeply rather than spray-and-pray across thousands of logos.
The Tier 1 / Tier 2 / Tier 3 framework:
Tier 1 (Strategic): 20-30 named accounts the seller researches deeply — quarterly earnings transcripts, 10-K filings, executive moves, technology investments, announced strategic initiatives. Multi-month, multi-stakeholder pursuit campaigns. Each Tier 1 account gets a written account plan.
Tier 2 (Target): 100-200 accounts that fit the ICP and receive moderate research and personalized outreach. Quarterly review to promote or demote.
Tier 3 (Reactive): inbound leads and opportunistic outreach — handled with lighter-touch sequences and AI-augmented personalization.
The 80/20 rule of enterprise selling: 80% of revenue comes from Tier 1 strategic accounts. 80% of seller time must therefore go to Tier 1, not Tier 2 or Tier 3.
The trigger-event multipliers: Konrath emphasizes trigger events — new CEO, earnings miss, M&A announcement, layoffs, regulatory changes — as massive boosts to seller relevance. Accounts in transition are 5-10X more responsive than accounts in steady state.
Chapter 3 — Become an Invaluable Resource
The chapter that redefined what enterprise sellers should be — not pitchers, but trusted business advisors.
The Invaluable Resource positioning:
- Know the buyer's industry better than they know it. Read Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg, industry analyst reports, Gartner, and Forrester research weekly.
- Know the buyer's company specifically. Read all earnings transcripts from the last 4 quarters. Quote the CEO's strategic priorities verbatim in your outreach.
- Know the buyer's role and KPIs. Understand what their bonus is tied to and what their boss yells at them about.
- Deliver specific, relevant value in every interaction — an article they haven't seen, a peer benchmark, an introduction to another executive.
The "Show Me You Know Me" test: before sending any enterprise outreach, ask: "Could I send this exact email to 100 other prospects with no changes?" If yes, don't send it. Personalization isn't "Hi Joe" — it's "Joe, I noticed your Q3 earnings call mentioned X..."
The Generosity Loop: give before you ask. Send a valuable article, peer intro, or benchmark report with no pitch attached as the first touch. Buyers remember the generosity and respond when the ask eventually comes.
Chapter 4 — Develop Your Value Proposition
Konrath's Value Proposition Pivot — the 15-second statement that interrupts the buyer's pattern-blindness.
The 4-part value prop formula:
- Specific business outcome — measurable, dollarized, time-bound. ("We helped reduce customer churn by 23% in 90 days.")
- For a similar named company — credible peer reference. ("...at Procter & Gamble.")
- In a specific business context — resonates with the buyer's situation. ("...during their post-merger integration.")
- Tied to a recognizable business driver — C-suite-approved priority. ("...which directly supported their stated $200M annual cost reduction target.")
The composite value prop:
"We helped Procter & Gamble cut customer churn by 23% in 90 days during their post-merger integration — directly supporting their $200M annual cost reduction target. The reason I'm reaching out is to learn if you're facing similar retention pressure given your recent earnings call mention of customer churn headwinds."
The principle: specificity is credibility. Generic value props ("we help companies grow revenue") are noise; specific value props ("we helped P&G cut churn 23% in 90 days") are signal.
Chapter 5 — Cracking Into Big Companies
The book's most-cited chapter — the tactical outreach playbook.
The Phone Strategy — Konrath's defense of cold calling, written 20 years before AI killed inbox response rates:
The 20-Second Voicemail Template:
- State your name and company clearly. (2 sec)
- State a specific business outcome with a named peer reference. (8 sec)
- Connect to a specific business issue the buyer likely faces. (5 sec)
- Ask for a 20-minute call with a calendar-anchored alternative close. (5 sec)
- Repeat your name and direct phone number twice. (2 sec)
The composite voicemail:
**"Hi Sarah, this is Jill Konrath at Konrath Sales Inc. We helped P&G cut customer churn 23% in 90 days during their post-merger integration. Your recent earnings call mentioned retention headwinds, and I'd like to share what worked at P&G.
Could we do 20 minutes Tuesday at 10 or Wednesday at 2? Again, Jill Konrath at 651-555-1234 — 651-555-1234. Thank you."**
The Email Strategy:
- Subject line: 3-5 words, no all-caps, no exclamation points. References a trigger event when possible. ("Q3 churn comments")
- Opening line: never about you. Always about the buyer's company, industry, or situation.
- Body: 3 short paragraphs maximum. No PDFs attached. No calendar links (looks salesy). One clear ask.
- Closing: calendar-anchored alternative close — "Tuesday 10 AM or Wednesday 2 PM?" — not "let me know when you're free."
The LinkedIn Strategy:
- Optimize your profile as a business outcome credibility document, not a resume.
- Comment thoughtfully on prospects' posts for 2-3 weeks before connecting.
- Connection request includes a specific reason — never the default LinkedIn template.
- InMail is dead in 2027 — use second-degree referral introductions instead.
Chapter 6 — Setting Up Meetings
Konrath's First Meeting Playbook — what to do after the buyer agrees to talk.
The 4 disciplines of the first enterprise meeting:
1. Set a specific Advance goal before the meeting. Not "have a great conversation" — "earn a follow-up meeting with the VP Finance within 14 days." Every meeting must produce a concrete next step on both calendars.
2. Send a 3-bullet agenda 24 hours before. Buyers are 3X more likely to attend if they know what's coming. Bullets: (1) Your business context as I understand it, (2) 2-3 specific questions about your priorities, (3) Whether/how we should engage further.
3. Spend 80% of the meeting listening. Konrath references the SPIN Selling research showing top performers ask questions and listen while average performers talk and pitch. Use Problem and Implication questions liberally.
4. Send a recap within 2 hours. Restate the buyer's stated pain in their own words, document the agreed next step, propose the calendar hold. Recap emails are proof of listening and commitment artifacts the buyer can forward internally.
Chapter 7 — Working Effectively With Big Companies
The book's most-overlooked chapter — the post-meeting, ongoing relationship discipline.
The Account Plan template Konrath recommends for every Tier 1 account:
- Account Profile — revenue, employee count, key business units, fiscal year, public vs. Private, recent M&A.
- Business Drivers — top 3-5 C-suite priorities lifted directly from earnings calls and 10-K filings.
- Stakeholder Map — named decision-makers, influencers, champions, blockers — with org-chart positions and reporting lines.
- Current State — what tools, vendors, processes exist today; competitive incumbents; renewal dates.
- Entry Strategy — specific contact, specific Trigger Event, specific value hypothesis, specific outreach plan.
- 30/60/90 Day Plan — measurable activities and outcomes for each phase.
- Pursuit Team — internal stakeholders involved (AE, SDR, SE, CSM, executive sponsor).
The principle: enterprise selling is project management with relationships. Sellers who operate without account plans lose to sellers who run accounts like consulting engagements.
What Holds Up in 2027 — and What Has Aged
What still works (and is more important than ever):
- Pinpoint Targeting — every elite enterprise team in 2027 runs Tier 1 named-account motion via 6sense, Demandbase, Salesforce Account 360, and Clay.
- Trigger-event-based outreach — operationalized by Common Room, Crystal, 6sense intent data, and Sales Navigator in modern stacks. Konrath was 15 years early on this.
- The 20-Second Voicemail — still produces 8-12% callback rates because buyers' phones still work and AI hasn't replaced voicemail listening the way it has email reading.
- Specific value props with named peer references — universal in 2027 enterprise outreach.
- The Crazy Busy Buyer mindset — more true than ever; executive calendars have become more fragmented, not less.
What has aged:
- Email templates Konrath provides feel dated in 2027 — modern sellers must hyper-personalize beyond the trigger event to include AI-generated relevance based on the buyer's recent LinkedIn posts, podcast appearances, and product launches.
- LinkedIn InMail as a primary channel has collapsed in effectiveness — replaced by second-degree referral introductions and Common Room community signals.
- The 2005 stakeholder map size (5-10 buyers) has grown to 6-12 per Gartner 2027 data — modern enterprise deals require deeper multi-threading.
- Manual account research has been replaced by AI-generated account briefs (Apollo, Clay, 6sense, Cognism) — Konrath's 3-hour research process is now a 15-minute AI workflow.
- Voicemail-as-primary-channel doesn't work for Gen Z buyers who don't check voicemail — text messaging has become the fastest-growing B2B outreach channel (per Salesloft 2027 benchmarks).
FAQ
Q: Is Selling to Big Companies still relevant in 2027, or has it been replaced by newer books? Still highly relevant. Konrath's Pinpoint Targeting, Trigger Event focus, and Specific Value Proposition discipline are the structural foundation of modern enterprise selling.
The tactical execution (specific email templates, channel mix) needs updating for AI-saturated 2027 outreach, but the strategic frameworks are timeless.
Q: How does Konrath's approach differ from Predictable Revenue (Aaron Ross)? Predictable Revenue is outbound-as-machine focused — how to build an SDR team with specialized roles and referral emails. Selling to Big Companies is enterprise-account-strategy focused — how an individual AE breaks into specific Fortune 1000 logos.
Read both — they answer different questions (org design vs. Account pursuit).
Q: What's the single biggest change I should make if I'm an enterprise AE reading this for the first time? Stop spreading your time across 500 accounts. Pick 20-30 Tier 1 accounts, write deep account plans for each, and invest 70%+ of your time there. Most enterprise AEs work too many accounts shallowly and lose to AEs who work fewer accounts deeply.
Q: Does this apply to PLG / self-serve motions? Selectively. Konrath's frameworks apply when sales-assist kicks in to expand a PLG account into an enterprise contract. The Account Plan template, Stakeholder Map, and Trigger Event focus are directly transferable.
The cold-outreach chapters are less relevant for PLG where product-usage signals replace cold dials.
Q: How do I find Trigger Events efficiently in 2027? Use modern intent platforms: 6sense and Demandbase for research intent; Common Room for community engagement signals; Crystal and Apollo for executive moves; Sales Navigator for LinkedIn signals; Owler and Crayon for competitive and market triggers.
Aggregate signals weekly in your CRM as account scoring inputs.
Bottom Line
Selling to Big Companies is the enterprise-prospecting bible that professionalized account-based selling a decade before ABM tooling existed. Work fewer accounts more deeply, ride trigger events relentlessly, deliver value before asking for anything, and never send an enterprise outreach that could be sent to anyone else. Combine with modern intent data, AI-generated account briefs, and multi-channel outbound orchestration to make it sing in 2027 enterprise B2B reality.
Sources
- Konrath, Jill. *Selling to Big Companies.* Kaplan Publishing, 2005. ISBN-13: 978-1419515620.
- Konrath, Jill. Founder of Jill Konrath Sales Strategies and Sales Shebang — speaker, sales strategist, and author of four sales books including *SNAP Selling*, *Agile Selling*, and *More Sales, Less Time*.
- Konrath, Jill. Companion materials: Selling to Big Companies Action Guide (downloadable workbook with templates and account-planning worksheets).
- Konrath, Jill. *More Sales, Less Time: Surprisingly Simple Strategies for Today's Crazy-Busy Sellers.* Portfolio, 2016. Follow-up extending the crazy-busy buyer thesis to the crazy-busy seller.
- The Bridge Group, Inc. Annual Enterprise SDR Metrics Report — independent benchmarks for enterprise prospecting, multi-channel cadence, and trigger-event-driven outreach.
- Pavilion and GTM Partners — modern CRO communities where Konrath's frameworks are updated, debated, and combined with AI-driven prospecting tooling for 2025-2027 enterprise teams.