You don't need to be a salesperson. You don't need to memorize cybersecurity jargon. You just need to recognize when someone needs us, open the conversation in a way that doesn't feel pitchy, and hand off cleanly. This walkthrough shows you exactly how — with real scripts, real objection handlers, and real templates.
The biggest mistake new partners make is acting like a salesperson. Don't. You're not commission-hunting — you're solving a problem for someone you already trust, by introducing them to people you already trust.
Think about how you'd recommend a great accountant, a contractor, or a doctor. You don't pitch. You just say "you should talk to my guy." That's the job. The relationship is your asset. Spending it on a sales pitch is wasteful. Spending it on a thoughtful introduction is investing it.
Bad framing: "I'm trying to get you to buy something."
Good framing: "I noticed you have a problem I know how to solve. Want me to introduce you to who I trust on this?"
Not every business is a fit. Don't waste your introductions on companies that aren't ready, aren't the right size, or aren't actually exposed. Here's what to look for.
Our sweet spot. Big enough to have real exposure, small enough that we can give them attention.
Wires, payments, patient records, member data, client files, payroll. If a breach hurts, they need us.
Renewal coming up, premium just hiked, or got asked technical questions they can't answer. Hot referrals.
A peer got hit, an employee fell for phishing, a wire got close to going out. Urgency makes intros easy.
HIPAA, PCI, NCUA, CMMC, DOD contracts. Anyone with regulators looking over their shoulder.
"We have Norton" or "we use Defender" — they think they're protected. They're not.
The opener depends on how you know them. A client conversation is different from a peer conversation is different from a casual one. Here are the patterns that work.
You already have permission to bring up business topics. Use it. Tie the intro to something you actually saw in their operation.
"Hey [name] — I noticed you mentioned [the wire fraud thing / your insurance renewal / that close call last quarter]. I've been using a cybersecurity company called Complyn for [my business / our other clients] and they've been incredible. I think you'd be a great fit. Want me to introduce you? Takes 30 minutes of their time, no pressure."
Lead with shared experience. You both run businesses, you both deal with the same threats. Position it as "what's been working for me."
"Quick question — how are you handling cybersecurity these days? I ask because I switched to a company called Complyn about [time period] ago and it's been one of the better operational decisions I've made. Real humans watching, fixed monthly cost, no IT-vendor BS. Happy to introduce you if it sounds useful."
Don't push. Plant the seed and let them come to you. The follow-up is the actual conversation.
"Funny story — we had a phishing email almost cost us $30K last month. The folks we use, Complyn, caught it. I've been telling everyone with a small business about them ever since. Anyway, how are the kids?"
(Then, two weeks later, follow up with a "still thinking about that cybersecurity thing — want me to connect you with my contact there?")
This is the easiest opener of all. Listen. Then offer the solution.
"That sounds like exactly what Complyn handles. Want me to make an intro? They'll be straight with you about whether they can help — they're not a fit for everyone, but it sounds like they would be for you."
If they ask "what is Complyn?", you need a clean answer. Not a sales pitch — just a clear explanation. Here's the framework: problem, solution, proof, next step.
Antivirus only catches known viruses. Most modern attacks aren't viruses.
Real humans watching 24/7 — catching everything antivirus misses.
15-minute intro call. Zero pressure. They'll tell you straight if they can help.
"Most small businesses think their antivirus protects them. It doesn't — antivirus only catches viruses, and most modern attacks don't use viruses. They use stolen passwords, fake login pages, and the tools already on your computer. Antivirus misses all of it."
"Complyn fixes that. They take antivirus and add a real human team watching your computers around the clock — so when an attacker tries to log in with a stolen password at 2 AM Saturday, a real person catches it, contains it, and calls you. They handle software updates, hunt for weak spots, and you can call them like a friend with security questions. Fixed monthly price per computer. Month-to-month, no lock-in."
"Want to do a 15-minute call with them? They're not a fit for everyone, but they'll tell you straight."
Most pushback isn't real disagreement — it's reflex. Here are the seven you'll hear most often, and the responses that move the conversation forward without making you feel pushy.
The meta-rule for objections: Don't argue. Acknowledge → reframe → propose a small next step (the 15-minute call). If they say no twice, drop it for now. The seed is planted. They'll come back when reality changes.
A clean handoff is the difference between a referral that closes and one that goes cold. Here's exactly what to send Complyn so we can take it from there.
Option A — Warm email intro (preferred). Send a single email with you, the prospect, and your Complyn contact all on it. Include the checklist info above. We respond within 1 business day. This is the gold standard.
Option B — Send us their info and we reach out. If a warm intro isn't appropriate (sometimes it's not), email your Complyn contact with the checklist info and tell them to expect our call. We'll handle the cold-ish outreach. Less ideal but still works.
"Hey, I told my friend about you, his name is Mike, he runs a dental practice somewhere, here's his number." → 50% chance this closes. We have no context, no permission, no trigger. Mike doesn't know we're calling. The intro feels cold.
Use the template instead. See module 08.
When you make an introduction, the prospect will ask "okay — what happens now?" Here's what to tell them, and what's actually happening behind the scenes on our end.
A real human from Complyn — not a chatbot, not a sales rep with a script — emails or calls to set up an intro conversation. We honor whatever contact preference you noted in the handoff.
This isn't a pitch. We ask about their business, their current security setup, what's prompting the conversation. If we're not a fit, we say so and recommend an alternative. If we are a fit, we explain how we'd help and roughly what it costs.
If they want to move forward, we send a clean one-page proposal — scope, timing, pricing, no surprises. If they need time, that's fine. We don't chase.
Yes, no, or "not yet" — all are fine. We don't sell against objections. If they pass, we ask if it's okay to follow up in 6 months and we close the loop with you.
We onboard them within 1–2 weeks. The moment they pay their first invoice, your commission tier locks in based on deal size, and your first payout is on the customer's billing cycle.
You get a monthly summary of your active referrals, commission status, and any new opportunities to follow up on. You're not their support contact — we are. Just collect.
The actual emails and texts we've seen work. Lift these directly — change the names, soften or sharpen the tone to match your style, and send.
Hi both,
[Prospect first name], meet [Complyn contact]. They run a cybersecurity company called Complyn that I've been [using for my business / referring to my clients] for a while now. They focus on small and mid-sized businesses — fixed monthly per-computer pricing, real humans watching 24/7, no enterprise BS.
The reason I think you two should talk: [specific trigger — "your insurance renewal is coming up and you mentioned the questions felt overwhelming" / "after the wire fraud scare last quarter" / "you're at the size where it makes sense to formalize this"].
[Complyn contact] — [Prospect] runs [type of business] with about [size]. Best to reach them at [email] or [phone]. They prefer [morning calls / email first / etc.].
I'll get out of your way. Both of you let me know how it goes.
[Your name]
"Hey — was thinking about that thing you mentioned with [insurance / phishing scare / the audit]. The cybersecurity company I use, Complyn, handles exactly that stuff. Want me to make a quick intro? They're easy to talk to, no pressure."
Hey,
New referral for you:
Name: [Prospect first + last]
Business: [Business name]
Role: [Owner / CFO / IT lead]
Industry: [Healthcare / Legal / Manufacturing / etc.]
Size: ~[X] employees / [Y] computers
Email: [their email]
Phone: [their phone]
Best time: [Mornings / Tuesdays / etc.]
Why now: [The trigger — what made me think of them, what they're dealing with]
Heads up: [Anything they pushed back on, mentioned, or you think is relevant]
They're expecting your call. CC'd on this email.
[Your name]
Hey [name] —
No pressure, just curious whether you and [Complyn contact] connected. If it didn't go anywhere, totally fine — happens for all kinds of reasons. If you want me to re-introduce or it just fell off your radar, happy to help.
[Your name]
Save this page. Reference it before your next conversation. The first three referrals will feel awkward. The fourth one will feel natural. By the tenth, you'll wonder why you didn't start sooner.