SF

Signal Foundry

Revenue Partner Intro Close Pack Board
Command Center Partner Intro Pack Partner Intro Messages Partner Intro Follow-Up Partner Intro Owner Partner Intro Close Partner Intro Proof Partner Intro Objections Partner Intro Conversion Partner Intro Scope Partner Intro Approval Pack Partner Intro Approval To Payment Partner Intro Payment Follow-Up Partner Close Pack Payment

Warm intro fuller context page

When a warm buyer needs more than a short intro, send one fuller pack instead of rebuilding the explanation in chat.

This page is for the stage after a warm intro lands and the buyer wants a slightly heavier context layer before deciding on the first paid step. The goal is not to dump a giant deck. The goal is to compress the warm case into one forwardable page: who the fit is, what the first paid move should be, one proof layer, one clear owner path, and the route into approval or payment once they are ready.

  • 1 forwardable warm-buyer pack
  • 1 smallest paid step highlighted
  • 1 clear route to approval or pay

Intro Close Pack Map

Use one sequence from warm interest to a buyer-ready first step.

6. Escalate Only If The Buyer Still Needs More

If the buyer still feels under-informed after this pack, the follow-up should stay warm and focused, not restart the whole deal from scratch.

Open Partner Intro Follow-Up

What The Pack Should Carry

These are the pieces that usually matter most to a warm buyer.

Fit

Show why this buyer is a real fit for the first step rather than making them decode relevance themselves.

Main Bottleneck

Name the one visible leak the first paid step is meant to fix first.

Smallest Paid Step

Keep the offer narrow enough that the buyer can say yes without feeling trapped in a hidden larger engagement.

One Proof Layer

Add just enough trust for motion. More proof is not always more persuasive.

Owner Path

Make it obvious who the buyer should reply to and who owns the next step.

Next Action

End with one motion only: reply, forward internally, or move toward payment.

Short Lines

Use direct language when the buyer needs a fuller but still compact pack.

Fit Line

The reason I am sending this is that the first paid step is already clear enough to be useful without becoming a huge project.

Scope Line

The clean move is a narrow first step around the main bottleneck, not a wider undefined program.

Proof Line

I only want to attach enough proof to make the move feel credible, not bury this in a long case library.

Forward Line

If someone else needs to see this internally, this pack is meant to be the forwardable version rather than a pile of links.

Move Line

If this looks directionally right, the next move is either the smallest paid step or one compact internal forward.

Do Not Do This

Most warm-intro close packs fail because they are either too thin or too scattered.

Do Not Forward A Link Dump

One main pack usually closes better than five tabs with no narrative.

Do Not Jump To A Huge Offer

If the buyer is warm but still early, a giant offer creates new resistance.

Do Not Add Too Much Proof

The strongest proof is the proof that resolves the current objection.

Do Not Hide The Next Step

A close pack should end in one obvious motion, not an abstract “let me know.”

Do Not Rebuild The Sale From Scratch

This is a warm-intro pack. It should inherit trust from the intro, not ignore it.

Best Next Routes

Route the buyer to the next page that reduces friction fastest.

Need A Lighter First Touch

If the full close pack feels too heavy for the first send, use the intro pack instead.

Open Partner Intro Pack

Need Scope First

If the buyer is interested but the first paid step still feels too broad, go to scope.

Open Partner Intro Scope

Need Objection Handling

If the buyer is interested but the real blocker is still unnamed, use the objection page next.

Open Partner Intro Objections

Need Stronger Warm Follow-Up

If the pack was already sent but the buyer went quiet, use the intro follow-up path.

Open Partner Intro Follow-Up