Before any call. Before any pitch. Before any proposal.
They looked you up.
What they found told a story. You probably don't know what that story is.
Most people prepare for the conversation. Sharpen the pitch, rehearse the answers, plan the objections.
Nobody thinks about the five minutes before the call. When someone's at their desk typing your name into Google.
Three minutes. That's what you get.
It's not a structured evaluation. It's a quick scan.
Website first. LinkedIn if they're thorough. Maybe a search to see what else comes up.
The whole thing takes under three minutes.
In those three minutes they're answering two questions. Does this person know what they're doing. And is this for someone like me.
If either answer is unclear. You start the call already behind.
What your website is actually saying
Your website isn't a portfolio. It's a positioning statement.
The headline tells someone in a sentence whether this is for them.
If your headline is your name and job title. That's not a positioning statement. That's a business card.
"Creative Director" names a role. It doesn't tell anyone why they should call you versus the six other creative directors they've already looked at.
What your LinkedIn is saying
Most people describe what they are.
The market reads it to figure out whether you understand their specific problem.
"Brand Strategist" is a role. "I help independent consultants win the deals they should already be winning" is a promise.
One of those stops the scroll.
First impressions don't fully reset
You can recover a bad first impression in a pitch. Sometimes.
But you're spending energy fixing something that should never have been broken.
The people who win deals without working that hard. They've usually solved this part already. Their brand does the credibility work before they arrive. Every conversation starts from a higher baseline.
Do this today
Search for yourself the way a prospective client would.
First three results. Read your website header like you know nothing about yourself. Read your LinkedIn headline cold.
If what you find doesn't immediately tell the right person this is for them. It needs rewriting.
Not redesigning. Rewriting.
Most of this is a copy problem. Not a design problem.
Go look yourself up. Cal