Kristin Andree, a high-performance coach and the chief strategist at MyFA Coach, shares her signature velvet rope framework for attracting prospects. She discusses the exhaustion of traditional sales methods and how elite salespeople create genuine interest instead of pushing for a sale. Kristin emphasizes the power of authentic client engagement, personalized gestures, and leveraging social media to foster meaningful connections. Her insights aim to transform the sales experience, encouraging sales professionals to connect deeply with the right audience.
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volunteer_activism ADVICE
Attract Clients With Excitement
Put yourself out there excited about helping your ideal clients to attract them naturally.
Use two or three prospecting strategies that fit your style and market to find your people.
insights INSIGHT
Narrow Focus Energizes Sales
Trying to be all things to all people drains energy and productivity.
Focusing on who you are for and understanding that audience fuels excitement and success.
volunteer_activism ADVICE
Choose Clients Who Excite You
Identify which clients excite you by reviewing your calendar appointments.
Focus your efforts on "heck yes" clients and reduce time spent on those who drain you.
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You know the feeling. You're mid-pitch, and you watch your prospect's eyes glaze over—their mind somewhere else entirely. It's exhausting, demoralizing, and it's killing your close rate.
But what if you didn’t have to push so hard? What if you could create the kind of pull where prospects actually leaned in and said, “How do I get started?”
In this episode of the Sales Gravy podcast, high-performance coach Kristin Andree shared her perspective: "If we put ourselves out there and let people know who we're looking for and be excited about it and excited about helping them, we attract them."
The difference between top performers and everyone else isn't talent—it's their prospecting approach. Elite salespeople don't convince prospects to buy. They make prospects want to buy.
The Exhaustion of the Old Way
If you feel like you’re always running uphill, you’re not imagining it. Most salespeople are stuck in a reactive mindset—constantly pursuing leads who haven’t shown real interest.
This is where the exhaustion creeps in. You follow up relentlessly, only to get ignored. You worry about being too aggressive. Your outreach starts to feel desperate instead of helpful.
Prospects can feel that energy shift. When you’re trying to close anyone, instead of helping the right ones, you come across as transactional. You sound like a pitch, not a person. You become just another vendor fighting for attention and pricing leverage.
4 Ways to Make Prospects Come to You
Attraction in sales is about relevance and resonance. You stop pushing your solution on people who don’t care and start showing up in a way that makes the right people take notice.
That’s the core of value-based selling. It's not about feature dumps, aggressive closes, or chasing "maybe" prospects. It’s about clearly communicating how your solution solves urgent problems, accelerates outcomes, and makes your buyer’s life easier or better.
When done right, it flips the dynamic entirely. You move from interrupting to inviting. From being just another sales rep to someone your prospect actually wants to hear from.
Here’s how to put that into action:
1. Lead With Curiosity, Not Pitch Decks
Before you ever think about pitching, dedicate time to genuinely understanding your prospect's world. Research their industry, their company, and their specific role.
Ask insightful, open-ended questions that uncover their true challenges, not just surface-level issues. Listen for the underlying pain, unspoken frustrations, and desired outcomes. When you truly listen, you gather the knowledge to position yourself not as a salesperson, but as an informed resource.
Imagine a software sales rep for a project management tool. Instead of immediately launching into features, they might start by asking, "What are the biggest bottlenecks your team faces in project delivery right now?" As the prospect describes disorganized communication or missed deadlines, the rep then offers to share a related article. This positions the rep as knowledgeable and helpful, building rapport and trust before ever mentioning their product.
2. Use Content as a Sales Magnet
You don’t need to be an influencer to build credibility. Every rep can become a curator of insight—and that’s often more valuable than always trying to create original content.
Share relevant articles: Find industry news, research, or thought leadership pieces that address your ideal client's pain points and share them on LinkedIn with your own insightful commentary.
LinkedIn Posts & Videos: Craft short, valuable posts offering tips, insights, or asking thought-provoking questions related to your niche. Short video tips addressing common challenges can be very impactful.
Intelligent Commentary: Engage thoughtfully in industry discussions online. Your informed perspective demonstrates expertise and attracts like-minded professionals.
Every time you share something helpful, you reinforce your value.