Sales Strategy Plan – B2B Accounting & Tax Advisory Firm

Business Profile (Sample Case)

B2B Accounting & Tax Advisory Firm for SMEs
Location-agnostic, serving businesses with annual turnover of USD 100k–2M

Current Situation

  • Strong technical expertise
  • Leads come mainly from referrals and WhatsApp inquiries
  • No structured follow-up
  • Long sales cycle (2–8 weeks)
  • Many prospects go silent after initial contact

This sales strategy is designed to increase conversion without hiring sales staff, reduce lost leads, and introduce a predictable follow-up system that feels professional but human.


1. Sales Problem Definition

The core challenge is not lead generation — it is lead leakage.

Prospects typically:

  • Inquire about services
  • Receive an initial response or proposal
  • Delay decision-making
  • Go silent due to price sensitivity, internal approvals, or poor timing

Currently, once a prospect goes quiet, there is no consistent follow-up. This results in:

  • Lost revenue
  • Over-reliance on referrals
  • Inconsistent monthly cash flow

The firm does not need aggressive selling. It needs structured persistence.


2. Ideal Customer Profile (ICP)

The target customer is a business owner or finance manager who:

  • Runs a growing SME
  • Feels overwhelmed by compliance and tax obligations
  • Values reliability and professionalism over the cheapest option
  • Is risk-averse and prefers trusted advisors

Buying decisions are slow and trust-based. This means sales must feel consultative, not transactional.


3. Sales Objective

The sales strategy aims to:

  • Increase lead-to-client conversion rates
  • Shorten response delays
  • Recover “lost” prospects through intelligent follow-up
  • Reduce manual chasing by staff
  • Maintain a premium, professional brand image

Success is measured by:

  • Conversion rate per inquiry
  • Time from first contact to engagement
  • Revenue recovered from follow-ups

4. Sales Model: Consultative Follow-Up System

This business does not benefit from hard selling or discount-driven tactics. Instead, the recommended model is:

Consultative sales supported by automated, personalized follow-up

The goal is to remain present in the prospect’s mind without pressure.


5. Lead Handling Strategy

Initial Inquiry Response (Day 0)

Every inquiry should receive a structured response that:

  • Acknowledges the prospect’s situation
  • Clarifies next steps
  • Sets expectations

Example positioning:

  • “We help SMEs stay compliant while freeing up management time.”
  • “We typically start with a short review call or document assessment.”

This positions the firm as methodical and professional.


Follow-Up Strategy (Core Differentiator)

Instead of one reminder, the strategy uses a multi-touch follow-up sequence spread over time.

Recommended structure:

  • Follow-up 1 (Day 3–5): Gentle check-in
  • Follow-up 2 (Day 10–14): Value-based reminder (e.g. compliance risks, deadlines)
  • Follow-up 3 (Day 21–30): Re-engagement or soft close

Each follow-up references:

  • The prospect’s original concern
  • Relevant deadlines or risks
  • A clear but non-pushy call to action

This dramatically increases responses without damaging trust.


6. Objection Handling Strategy

Common objections in this business include:

  • “We’re still considering options”
  • “We need to discuss internally”
  • “Your fees are higher than others”

Instead of reacting defensively, the sales strategy embeds objection handling into follow-up messaging.

Examples:

  • Educating prospects on the cost of non-compliance
  • Emphasizing long-term savings over short-term fees
  • Highlighting experience, responsiveness, and risk mitigation

This reframes price from a cost into an insurance-like investment.


7. Proposal Strategy

Proposals should:

  • Be simple and clearly structured
  • Focus on outcomes, not just tasks
  • Avoid excessive technical jargon

Each proposal should clearly answer:

  • What problem is being solved
  • What is included
  • What happens next

A follow-up email referencing the proposal should always be scheduled, rather than relying on the prospect to respond.


8. Sales Automation & AI Support

AI is used behind the scenes, not visibly.

Applications include:

  • Generating personalized follow-up emails
  • Adapting tone based on prospect responses
  • Scheduling reminders automatically
  • Tracking follow-up progress per lead

This ensures no lead is forgotten while preserving a human, professional tone.


9. Internal Sales Discipline

To ensure consistency:

  • Every inquiry is logged
  • Every proposal has a follow-up schedule
  • Every lead has a clear status (new, active, dormant, converted)

This simple discipline alone can increase revenue without additional marketing spend.


10. 60-Day Implementation Plan

Weeks 1–2

  • Define standard inquiry response
  • Create follow-up templates
  • Set up lead tracking

Weeks 3–4

  • Implement automated follow-ups
  • Train staff on consultative responses

Weeks 5–8

  • Monitor response rates
  • Refine messaging
  • Identify high-converting patterns

11. Expected Outcomes

If implemented consistently, this strategy should:

  • Recover dormant leads
  • Improve cash flow predictability
  • Reduce staff workload
  • Increase perceived professionalism
  • Strengthen long-term client relationships

12. Conclusion

This sales strategy is designed for businesses where trust matters more than speed. By combining human expertise with structured follow-up and intelligent automation, the firm can close more deals without becoming sales-heavy or aggressive.