Why CEO-Level Deals Are 54% Larger and Close 50% Faster
Parinello's research across 2.5 million salespeople: deals initiated at CEO level are bigger, faster, and generate 120% more add-on business. Stop selling to gatekeepers. The VITO methodology adapted for service businesses.
There's a number that should stop every service business owner in their tracks. It comes from Anthony Parinello's research across 2.5 million salespeople, and it reveals a brutal asymmetry in how professional services are sold.
Deals initiated at the CEO level are 54% larger, close 50% faster, and generate 120% more add-on business than deals initiated at lower levels in the organization.
Read those numbers again. Not marginally better. Categorically different outcomes from the same service, the same team, the same methodology — the only variable is who you start the conversation with.
Yet most service professionals spend the overwhelming majority of their sales effort talking to people who can't sign a six-figure engagement. They sell to directors and managers. They prepare elaborate capability decks for people whose job is to filter and recommend, not to decide. They invest weeks nurturing a relationship with someone who, at the end of the process, will say: "Let me run this up the chain."
The problem isn't your sales technique. The problem is who you're selling to.
01 — The Seemore Problem
Why Most Service Professionals Sell to the Wrong Person
Parinello coined a term for the people most salespeople default to selling to: "Seemores." As in, "Let me see more information." "Let me see more case studies." "Let me see more pricing options." These are the managers and directors who will take your call, attend your presentation, and request your proposal — but who can't actually approve a strategic engagement.
Every hour spent selling to a Seemore is an hour wasted. Not because they are unimportant — they often play a role in implementation — but because they evaluate through a fundamentally different lens than the actual decision-maker. A Seemore filters on price, features, and risk avoidance. A CEO filters on strategic outcomes, competitive advantage, and speed to impact.
When you sell to a Seemore, your $200,000 engagement gets compared against the cheapest alternative that checks the most boxes. When you sell to a CEO, your engagement gets evaluated against the cost of not solving the problem. Those are entirely different conversations, and they produce entirely different results.
The data confirms what intuition already suggests: access determines outcome. If your pipeline is full of mid-level contacts, no amount of sales training will compensate. You have an access problem, not a closing problem.
"Track every deal by the highest level of contact engaged. Color-code your pipeline: Green for C-suite, Yellow for VP/Director, Orange for Manager, Red for Individual Contributor. If your pipeline is predominantly orange and red, no amount of sales technique will compensate — you have an access problem, not a closing problem."
Most service professionals avoid executive-level outreach because it feels uncomfortable. They fear rejection. They worry about being "too junior" or "too small." They convince themselves that building relationships at lower levels will eventually lead to an introduction upward. In practice, it almost never does. The Seemore has no incentive to introduce you to their CEO — it makes them look like they can't handle the decision themselves.
The path to larger, faster deals doesn't go through the gatekeeper. It goes around them.
02 — The VITO Methodology
Reaching the Very Important Top Officer
Parinello's framework for reaching the CEO — or the Very Important Top Officer, as he calls them — is built on three principles that challenge how most service professionals approach outreach.
Principle 1: Research before outreach.
Before any communication, understand the executive's publicly stated priorities. Annual reports, earnings calls, conference presentations, LinkedIn posts — these are not casual reading material. They are intelligence. You're looking for the specific business outcomes the executive has committed to delivering. When you reference those outcomes in your outreach, you immediately differentiate yourself from every vendor who leads with their own capabilities.
Principle 2: The VITO letter.
A one-page communication — email, letter, or LinkedIn message — that passes what Parinello calls the "30-Second Rule." It must be readable and compelling in half a minute. The structure is precise: a headline that references the executive's priority, one paragraph connecting your methodology to their outcome, and a specific next step. No brochures. No capability decks. No "I would love the opportunity to present our services."
Compare the language of vendors versus the language of peers:
- Vendor language: "I would love the opportunity to present our services and discuss how we might be able to help your organization."
- Peer language: "Our data shows companies in your industry at your stage face a specific challenge with operational maturity. I would like to share what we are seeing across 200 similar organizations."
The first gets deleted. The second gets a reply. The difference isn't marketing — it's positioning. The vendor asks for permission. The peer offers intelligence.
Principle 3: Equal Business Stature.
This is the hardest principle for most service professionals to internalize. You must approach the executive as a peer advisor with proprietary intelligence, not as a supplicant requesting a meeting. This doesn't mean arrogance. It means confidence rooted in genuine expertise. You have data. You have benchmarks. You have insights the executive can't get anywhere else. That makes you a peer, not a vendor.
Equal Business Stature isn't something you claim — it's something you earn through the quality of your diagnostic methodology and the specificity of your insights. If your outreach sounds like everyone else's, you haven't done enough work to deserve the meeting.
03 — Surviving the Delegation
What to Do When the CEO Says "Talk to My Director"
Even when you reach the CEO, the most common initial response is delegation: "That sounds interesting — talk to my IT director" or "Connect with Sarah in operations." This is the moment where most service professionals lose everything they gained. They accept the delegation, go to the director, and never see the CEO again.
Parinello calls this destination "Linoleumville" — the land of middle managers who will absorb your time, request your proposals, and ultimately make no decision. The CEO has moved on. The director doesn't have the authority. Your deal stalls indefinitely.
The scripted response that prevents this outcome is remarkably simple:
"I would be glad to connect with [Name] on the operational details. Since our assessment benchmarks your competitive position at the board level, would it make sense for the three of us to review the findings together?"
This single sentence accomplishes three things simultaneously. It respects the CEO's delegation. It positions the director as an operational collaborator rather than a replacement decision-maker. And it creates a future touchpoint where the CEO will see the results directly.
The key insight is that you are not refusing to work with the director — you are structuring the engagement so that the CEO remains in the loop at the strategic level. The director handles the details. The CEO sees the findings. The decision gets made at the right level.
Without this structured response, the delegation becomes permanent. With it, you maintain the executive relationship while building the operational relationship simultaneously. The difference in close rates between these two scenarios isn't marginal — it's the difference between a 54% larger deal and a deal that never closes at all.
04 — The Diagnostic as Your Access Key
Why Assessments Open Doors That Pitches Cannot
There's a reason the VITO methodology works even better when paired with a diagnostic tool. A CEO won't take a meeting to hear a sales pitch. But they will take a meeting to review a competitive benchmark that reveals where their organization stands relative to their industry peers.
Blair Enns articulated the underlying principle: "Professionals diagnose before they prescribe. Prescription without diagnosis is malpractice." Your diagnostic tool — whether it is a maturity assessment, a readiness scorecard, or a strategic audit — transforms the sales conversation from "let me tell you what we do" into "let me show you what we found."
The diagnostic accomplishes five things simultaneously:
- It wins the polite battle for control. "Before we can recommend anything, we need to conduct an assessment." The professional leads. The client follows.
- It gathers situation and problem data. Rackham's SPIN research showed that structured questions surface information that would take hours of unstructured conversation to uncover.
- It quantifies the gap. Jim Keenan's Gap Selling framework reduces every sale to a single equation: Current State minus Future State equals the value of the sale. A scored assessment converts vague dissatisfaction into a specific, measurable gap.
- It provides teaching insights. Dixon and Adamson's Challenger research found that 53% of B2B customer loyalty is driven by the sales experience itself. The assessment gives you data-backed insights the buyer can't get elsewhere.
- It builds trust proportionally. The client experiences your thinking before committing to a large engagement.
When you approach a CEO with "Our assessment benchmarks your competitive position across seven operational dimensions — would you like to see where you stand?", you're not pitching. You're offering intelligence. That is a fundamentally different conversation, and it gets fundamentally different results.
The diagnostic is the bridge between access and engagement. Without it, you're asking for a meeting. With it, you're offering a strategic advantage.
05 — The 120% Expansion Effect
Why CEO-Level Deals Compound
The 54% larger and 50% faster metrics are striking enough. But the most consequential number in Parinello's research is the 120% more add-on business generated by CEO-level deals. This is where the compounding effect transforms a single engagement into a long-term revenue stream.
When a CEO sponsors your engagement, three things happen that don't happen with lower-level sponsorship:
- Cross-functional access. The CEO opens doors to other departments. Your initial assessment in operations leads to a conversation about talent development. Your work with the sales team leads to an engagement with the marketing function. With mid-level sponsorship, you stay siloed. With CEO sponsorship, you expand horizontally.
- Strategic framing. When the CEO sees your results as connected to their board-level priorities, every subsequent engagement is evaluated against strategic outcomes rather than departmental budgets. The budget conversation shifts from "Can our department afford this?" to "Can we afford not to do this?"
- Executive referrals. Parinello's data shows a single CEO referral is worth more than 100 cold calls. CEOs know other CEOs. When your engagement produces measurable results that the CEO can reference in their peer conversations, the referral is natural. They're not doing you a favor — they're sharing intelligence with their network.
The expansion playbook follows a predictable sequence. Months one through three: deliver the initial engagement with a focus on measurable, visible results that can be presented to the decision-maker. Month three: present results directly to the CEO, framed against their stated priorities. Month four: make the structured referral request — "Which executives in your peer network would benefit from this kind of assessment?" — with a specific template the executive can forward.
"Track your referral yield — the number of qualified introductions generated per completed engagement. If it is below 0.5, you're not asking effectively. If it is above 2.0, you have built a referral engine that will sustain your growth indefinitely."
The 120% add-on effect isn't luck. It's the structural result of starting at the right level. When you start with the CEO, expansion is a natural consequence of success. When you start with a director, expansion requires permission from someone you have never met.
06 — The Pipeline Color Test
A Practical Framework for Diagnosing Your Access Problem
Here is an exercise that will take you ten minutes and may change how you allocate your sales effort entirely.
Open your current pipeline — every active opportunity, every prospect in conversation, every proposal outstanding. For each one, identify the highest level of contact you have directly engaged. Not the person who will eventually approve the deal. The person you have actually spoken to. Then color-code them:
- Green: CEO or C-suite executive
- Yellow: VP or Senior Director
- Orange: Manager or Director
- Red: Individual Contributor or Coordinator
Now look at the distribution. If your pipeline is predominantly orange and red, you have your diagnosis. The issue isn't your proposal template, your pricing model, or your follow-up cadence. The issue is that you're investing your most valuable asset — your time — in conversations that structurally can't produce the outcomes you want.
Dixon and Adamson's research across 6,000 sales representatives reinforces the point from a different angle: 53% of B2B customer loyalty is driven by the sales experience itself — not by brand, product, service, or price. The seller's ability to teach the buyer something new about their own business is the single biggest driver of deal success. And teaching is only effective when you are in the room with someone who has the authority to act on what they learn.
A brilliant teaching insight delivered to a manager who can't approve a strategic initiative is a wasted insight. The same insight delivered to a CEO becomes the foundation of a six-figure engagement.
The shift doesn't require a new sales methodology. It requires a new discipline: refuse to invest significant sales effort in any opportunity where you haven't engaged — or have a concrete plan to engage — the actual decision-maker. Every proposal you send to a Seemore is a proposal that will be evaluated on price. Every proposal you present to a CEO is a proposal that will be evaluated on outcomes.
The deals aren't 54% larger because CEOs have bigger budgets. They're 54% larger because CEOs make decisions based on value, not cost. Start there, and everything downstream changes.
Luis Goncalves
Three-time founder. Built and exited Evolution4All before this. Now building FIKR Space — the operating infrastructure underneath every innovation ecosystem (startups, accelerators, governments, investors). Lisbon-based, works global.