The play, running right now

Land small on a signal. Earn the right to expand.

This is the ScaleUp motion, taught the honest way: through one real engagement that is in flight this week. You will see how we found the client, what we led with, how the work grew, and how the next product surfaced from her own words. Read it as a play you would be running, not a highlight reel.

Land and expand, stage by stage.
Read this first

This is a play in flight, not a case study.

She has given a verbal agreement and is expected to sign any day now. Her kickoff date is already set and locked in. Nothing has been built, launched, or delivered yet, so there is no result, no ROI, no revenue figure, no lead count, and no testimonial anywhere on this page. What you are reading is the method, captured in real time.

That is on purpose. You learn more watching the moves as they happen than reading a polished story written after the fact. The client is anonymized: a solo licensed therapist running a virtual practice. No name, no results, no revenue claims, because none exist yet. Just the play.

The ladder you are climbing

Where a single small offer is designed to lead.

The whole motion is one ladder. You do not sell the top rung on day one. You open the cheapest door, and each rung earns the next.

1

The low-friction hook

A done-for-you website build plus a small monthly fee. Priced to be easy to say yes to.

2

Reframe to online strategy

The website is not the product. It is level one of an online strategy that keeps going.

3

Strategy and brand on top

Go-to-market strategy and brand work stack on the foundation the first rung sets.

4

A full platform, committed for a year

The pieces become one engagement the client chooses to run over a full year.

5

New service lines, from her own pain

The next product is not invented. The client names it, and you park it for later.

The play, stage by stage

Seven moves, one engagement, in real time.

Stage 0 · Target, on a signal

We did not wait to be found. We found her on a signal.

She came out of a LinkedIn outbound sweep, not an inbound lead. An enrichment record scored her a high fit and said exactly why: a small telehealth counseling practice with only a client login and no clear standalone website. The record was created the same day. The no-website signal is observable, so it is scoreable.

The move

Target on an observable signal (a real practice with no real website), not because a name sat on a list.

Stage 1 · Hook

We opened with the cheapest thing we sell, on purpose.

The first offer is a fully done-for-you website build at $750 plus $100 a month for unlimited changes. It is deliberately small. It is priced to be easy to say yes to on a first call.

The move

The cheap offer is the door, not the business. The client is buying a start, and you are buying the right to a second conversation.

Stage 2 · Discovery, and the reframe

We let her talk, and she handed us the sale.

On a 31 minute discovery call she spent the opening stretch describing her own problem. She said the website was the thing she hated more than anything in the world, and that she wanted to do her part once, then have someone else make it happen while she moved on with her life. Then came the reframe that changed the size of the deal.

"If we can shift the frame from website focus to more like online strategy, and the website is just the foundation of that strategy, that's the first level."

She heard the number and asked a feature question. There was no price friction.

The move

Sell the outcome she wants (hand it off and move on), not the deliverable (a website). Reframing a website into an online strategy where the website is level one makes every later rung a natural next step instead of an upsell.

Stage 3 · Expand

The reframe earned the right to level two.

A combined growth plan added a go-to-market strategy at $2,000 one time, plus brand and logo work, on top of the website she had just committed to. The engagement grew because committing to the first rung made the next one obvious, not because anyone leaned on her.

The move

Expansion is earned, not pushed. You widen the engagement after the first level gives the client a reason to want more.

Stage 4 · Commit

Zero objections. She chose a plan.

On the decision call she raised no objections, said her questions were answered, and gave a verbal yes to a plan she intends to run for a full year. The agreement is going out for signature now and nothing is signed or paid yet. This is the quiet moment right before a close, captured as it happens.

The committed engagement is $5,315.75.

The move

When discovery is done right, the close is quiet. If you built the value on the way in, there is nothing left to overcome at the end.

Paying is made easy on purpose: she can pay by PayPal, or finance the plan over up to 24 months.

The payment move

Engineer the money conversation to be easy before it becomes an objection. Offering PayPal and financing up to 24 months removes the cash flow reason to say not now, so the commit is never blocked on how she pays, only on whether she wants to.

Stage 5 · The next line surfaces, and we do not sell it

She told us the next product. We did not pitch it.

Unprompted, she named scheduling and calendar chaos as the one thing that drives her completely insane. It maps directly onto a scheduling automation ScaleUp has already built. We parked it as a future roadmap item. We did not scope it and did not put a price on it during the call. She had already described a past assistant who over promised and under delivered, so pushing a second thing in that moment would have cost the trust that closes the deal in front of us.

The most important move on this page

The client tells you the next product. You do not pitch it the moment it surfaces. Parking it protects the trust that closes the current deal, and it becomes how a one-time engagement turns into recurring monthly revenue.

Stage 6 · Kickoff

The engagement begins.

Her kickoff date is locked in: she will meet the creative lead for her logo. Current status: the agreement is going out for signature. The play does not end at yes. Kickoff is where you start earning the right to the next rung.

The move

Delivery is where the next expansion is earned. Every rung you climb well is the reason the client says yes to the one above it.

The mechanics, plainly

Three things to understand before you run this.

You are being recruited to run this motion, so here is the commercial logic without the polish.

1

Lead with the cheapest offer.

A low first price is not leaving money on the table. It lowers the cost of a yes, gets you inside the business, and buys the discovery where the real engagement is built.

2

Let the value grow itself.

You do not upsell. You reframe the first purchase as level one of something larger, then let each rung you complete create the reason for the next. Growth that the client asks for does not feel like a pitch.

3

Do not sell the next line on sight.

When a new need surfaces mid-deal, name it, park it, and keep closing the deal in front of you. Restraint protects trust, and the parked need becomes the next product you get to sell later.

Recurring monthly revenue

The scheduling agent, discovered in a sentence.

Land and expand exists to move the client into regular monthly recurring services. The scheduling agent, and whatever comes after it, is how a one-time engagement becomes recurring monthly revenue: not invented in a brainstorm, but found in a client naming her own pain out loud while we listened.

Land the client small on a signal. Earn the right to expand. Let the next product surface from the work itself, then hold it until the moment is right. That is land and expand, and it is the play you would be running.