Breaking Ground: How to Build a Thriving Practice Without Feeling “Salesy” written by John Jantsch read more at Duct Tape Marketing
Episode Overview In this episode of the Duct Tape Marketing Podcast, John Jantsch interviews Deborah Farone, founder of Farone Advisors and author of Breaking Ground: How Successful Women Lawyers Build Thriving Practices. The conversation explores why traditional approaches to business development often fail—especially in professional services—and how authenticity, relationships, and strategic positioning can lead to […]
Breaking Ground: How to Build a Thriving Practice Without Feeling “Salesy” written by John Jantsch read more at Duct Tape Marketing
Episode Overview
In this episode of the Duct Tape Marketing Podcast, John Jantsch interviews Deborah Farone, founder of Farone Advisors and author of Breaking Ground: How Successful Women Lawyers Build Thriving Practices.
The conversation explores why traditional approaches to business development often fail—especially in professional services—and how authenticity, relationships, and strategic positioning can lead to sustainable success.
Deborah Farone shares insights from her work with top-performing professionals and highlights how business development is less about selling and more about building trust, creating meaningful connections, and developing a niche. While her research focuses on women in law, the lessons apply broadly to consultants, agency owners, and service-based professionals.
Guest Bio
Deborah Farone is the founder of Farone Advisors and a leading expert in legal business development and marketing. She has held senior business development roles at major law firms and has spent her career helping professionals grow their practices through strategic relationship-building.
Her book, Breaking Ground, draws on interviews with successful women lawyers around the world to uncover practical strategies for building a thriving, authentic practice.
Key Takeaways
1. Business Development Isn’t About “Selling”
Most professionals resist sales because it feels inauthentic. The most successful practitioners focus on helping, supporting, and providing value rather than asking for business directly.
2. Relationships Are the Foundation of Growth
Strong networks—not just direct prospects—drive opportunities. Often, the people who refer or connect you matter more than immediate buyers.
3. Authenticity Outperforms Scripts
There is no one-size-fits-all approach. The best strategy is one aligned with your personality and interests, making it sustainable and repeatable.
4. Trust Is Built on Three Core Elements
- Expertise
- Authenticity
- Empathy
These elements consistently show up in successful business development strategies.
5. You Don’t Have to Be Outgoing to Succeed
Introverts can excel by choosing methods that feel natural—like small meetings, coffee chats, or shared-interest activities.
6. Start Small and Build Confidence
Business development is a skill that improves over time. Begin with low-pressure conversations and gradually expand your comfort zone.
7. Your Network Is Bigger Than You Think
Connections from school, early jobs, and indirect relationships often become valuable sources of opportunity later in your career.
8. Develop a Clear Niche
Success comes from identifying the intersection of:
- What you enjoy
- What you’re good at
- What the market values
Then going deep to become known for that expertise.
9. Strategy Before Tactics
Many professionals jump into tactics (events, speaking, outreach) before defining their positioning. Clear strategy must come first.
10. Firms Must Train Early
Waiting until professionals reach senior levels to develop business skills is too late. Early training builds habits and networks that compound over time.
Great Moments (Timestamps)
00:02 – The Real Barrier to Growth
Why outdated rules—not lack of talent—hold professionals back.
01:08 – Why Deborah Farone Wrote This Book
The gap in role models and business development training.
02:15 – Why Professionals Resist Sales
Reframing sales as helping rather than pitching.
03:36 – The Power of Relationships and Networks
Why your broader network is more valuable than you think.
05:28 – Authenticity as a Competitive Advantage
Why personalized approaches outperform standardized methods.
06:02 – Creative Ways to Build Client Relationships
Examples of professionals using personal interests to connect with clients.
08:13 – How Introverts Can Succeed in Business Development
Practical ways to start small and build confidence.
10:00 – The Leadership Gap in Law Firms
Why lack of representation impacts growth and mentorship.
11:53 – The Three Elements of Trust
Expertise, authenticity, and empathy as core drivers.
13:15 – Why Niche Matters
The importance of strategic positioning before tactics.
13:56 – Where Firms Get It Wrong
The cost of delaying business development training.
17:04 – Internal Networking Matters First
Building relationships inside your organization as a foundation.
Memorable Quotes
“The most successful professionals don’t ask for business—they show how they can help.”
“There is no one-size-fits-all approach to business development. You have to find what works for you.”
Resources & Links
- Deborah Farone website: DeborahFarone.com
- Book: Breaking Ground: How Successful Women Lawyers Build Thriving Practices
- LinkedIn: Deborah Breitman-Farone
John Jantsch (00:02.104)
What if the real barrier to building a thriving practice is not just talent or expertise, but the outdated rules we’ve accepted about how business development is supposed to work. Hello and welcome to another episode of the Duct Tape Marketing Podcast. This is John Jantsch. My guest today is Deborah Farone. She’s a founder of Farone Advisors and a longtime leader in legal business development and marketing. She previously held senior business development roles at major law firms and her new book.
Deborah Farone (00:13.368)
Thank you.
Deborah Farone (00:30.586)
you
John Jantsch (00:30.84)
breaking ground how successful women lawyers build thriving practices. That’s what we’re going to talk about today. Welcome, Debra.
Deborah Farone (00:36.858)
Thank you for having me, John.
John Jantsch (00:40.398)
So for listeners, we’re not going to talk about legal stuff. We’re not going to necessarily. I think a lot of the things that I was going to share today will apply to anybody, particularly in professional services, because really the business development is very, very similar. So you’ve spent many years, I suspect, helping firms think about business development. This book focuses specifically on women. Is there a gap that you saw that you think made this book necessary?
Deborah Farone (00:44.852)
Thank
Deborah Farone (01:08.794)
There was, you know, I think that most lawyers and most professionals develop business in very similar ways, but I felt that there were some women out there who either didn’t have the role models because there are fewer women at the top of the organizations and law firms, or they didn’t know how to have the skills to develop business. So that’s why I really wanted to help them. But in doing the book, I realized that so much of what I was learning was applicable.
John Jantsch (01:15.746)
Right.
Deborah Farone (01:37.7)
to anyone who wanted to develop business. It’s just my sample set happened to be women.
John Jantsch (01:43.214)
Yeah. So I think many people suffer from this, regardless of the industry, but certainly in professional services, I think it is more so. that people, don’t even like the term sales, right? I mean, it feels salesy. It’s all the bad things they associate with what they see it. But you certainly talk about, and I know that this is a thread running through the book, that it doesn’t have to feel salesy. Why do you think so many…
Business professionals, sales professionals really resist this.
Deborah Farone (02:15.674)
think most of them went to school to learn a profession, whether it was to learn to be an accountant or a consultant. No one ever said you were going to have to go into sales. So it sounds like all of a sudden they have to have this new way of thinking. I really don’t think that’s the case. In fact, most of the successful people that I’ve worked with, whether they’re consultants or lawyers, don’t find themselves asking for the business. They never really say, can I have that business from you? They very often
John Jantsch (02:19.608)
Yeah, you’re right.
Deborah Farone (02:44.492)
let people know what they’ve done. They offer to help. They use words like, I support you? But they’re not in sales mode. I think they really do want to help these potential clients. And so that comes through. And I believe you need to be more authentic than you do a salesperson when you’re trying to build a practice.
John Jantsch (03:08.238)
Well, think there’s a lot of things that certainly I’ve learned in selling professional services. That idea of give value, provide value, provide support, and eventually that business will come around. But when you tell that person that is just getting started out there and they’re like, that’s great. I’m all for the long game and for investing, but I need to eat. So how do you kind of thread that?
Deborah Farone (03:36.206)
think it’s important to have relationships and I really try to get young professionals to concentrate on that. And even if they don’t have a big budget in a firm, get your senior people to come and train the younger ones. Give them the war stories of how you’ve won clients or how you’ve met people that have developed business. think that that’s very important. And I think even for people that are still in school to start thinking about your network and your network isn’t just
John Jantsch (03:50.21)
Yeah.
Deborah Farone (04:05.486)
the people that you go to class with. It’s who you met at your summer jobs, right? It’s the people in your first job who work in ancillary positions. They might not be a consultant if you’re a consultant or an accountant if you’re an accountant, but they’re the people that you’ve met. And those folks become part of your network. And I think we’re seeing with sales what we often see with job hunting that those contacts that end up hiring us are not necessarily that
first degree circle of people we know, but very often it’s the people that they know. So it’s important to have a large diverse network of contacts out there.
John Jantsch (04:46.424)
Yeah, I tell, I wrote a book on referrals actually. And I always tell people, you know, not everybody’s your prospect, but everybody knows your prospect. You know, at least one of them, right? Yeah. So you did a lot of conversations, had a lot of interviews, focused on a lot of successful women rainmakers. Did you see that there are patterns that show up that are maybe different in how men and women build trust, visibility, and opportunity?
Deborah Farone (04:49.338)
Thanks.
Deborah Farone (04:55.29)
It’s true.
John Jantsch (05:16.684)
A follow-up question you can answer, is one better at it? Are those different approaches serve one? So let’s go back to the first question, since I butchered that. What patterns did you see showing up in particularly how women build trust, visibility, and opportunity?
Deborah Farone (05:24.346)
You
Deborah Farone (05:28.058)
Thank you.
Well, I wasn’t so much studying men versus women as I was just looking at this group of women, but I do find that they like relationship building, that that’s something that comes naturally to them. And what I did find that is maybe true with men as well is that you need to be authentic in your marketing approach and how you develop business, that there is not a one size fits all. Not everyone fits into one of four categories.
John Jantsch (05:36.238)
Right, right.
Deborah Farone (06:02.52)
I think we all find our own way of doing it based on our personality, what works for us. And so people like Susan, I and D Baker McKenzie, who I spoke to for the book, loves exercise. She loves being outdoors. And so she invites her clients and her colleagues and contacts whenever they’re in town to go with her on a hike. That’s not going to work for everyone. But she doesn’t like this idea of having the formal cocktail party and inviting people she knows. So.
John Jantsch (06:17.998)
Mm-hmm.
Deborah Farone (06:31.393)
I think it’s a matter of finding what works for you because that’s going to be what you want to repeat. And also that’s what your clients are going to see that you enjoy. And clients can tell if you’re taking them golfing, but you really don’t like golf.
John Jantsch (06:45.506)
Yeah. So I think that you just hit on really the secret is finding what works for you and being yourself rather than looking at like, this is how everybody in our industry does it, or this is how everybody in our firm does it. You really will be more successful doing something that works for you, which is probably going to be something that you also enjoy. Would that be, yeah.
Deborah Farone (07:06.903)
Yes, and I try with the people that I know and I’m sure you do too. You know, want to really get to know them and figure out what are their proclivities? You what are they like? I worked with someone who was a classical musician and she loves the opera. And so she lives in Milan and what she does is she takes her clients and their spouses and families to see a short opera and then for a wonderful dinner.
because she enjoys it and they can tell they know that when she’s taking them that they’re having a good time and so is she. And so I think that that’s really important is figuring out what it is that you enjoy. What’s the best way for you to develop business and it might not be the same way as the person next door.
John Jantsch (07:35.927)
Yeah, right.
John Jantsch (07:53.358)
So what do you say to that client maybe that you’re working with that, you know, I think a lot of people think in terms of to be successful business development, you have to be that outgoing, charismatic, you know, networking, you know, kind of person. What do you tell that person who’s like, that’s just not me? You know, I don’t feel comfortable doing that. You know, how am I going to succeed?
Deborah Farone (08:09.688)
Yeah.
Deborah Farone (08:13.923)
Right, think, know, well, first of all, I tell people don’t take giant leaps, take baby steps. And that’s the best thing to do so that if you’re not used to talking about yourself and your practice, do it with a family member, you know, then do it with a colleague, then do it with an associate at your firm, and then eventually you can do it with the client. So I think, you know, Jeff Klein, who’s a well-known lawyer in New York said marketing is muscle. And I think it’s true, you get better and better at it.
John Jantsch (08:19.362)
Nice.
John Jantsch (08:25.368)
me.
John Jantsch (08:40.952)
Yes.
Deborah Farone (08:42.393)
But I also don’t think that you need to be out having lunch every day with people if that’s not your thing. You know, I love coffee. I mean, I love any kind of coffee, right? So I love meeting people for coffee. It’s perfect. I don’t have to think about what I’m eating. I don’t have to think about any variables. I’m happy at a Starbucks or a fancy hotel for coffee. And that’s what I love. You know, so I do coffee meetings.
John Jantsch (08:53.016)
Thank
Deborah Farone (09:09.677)
But other people find their ways. And I think you have to do what feels authentic to you.
John Jantsch (09:16.91)
So what, and maybe you don’t keep track of this kind of thing, circling back a little bit to the gender aspect of your work, what’s the percentage of women in leadership in the legal industry, you think?
Deborah Farone (09:31.129)
It’s very low. mean, we have less than I think 30 % or maybe around 30 % that are actually partners. And if you look at the American Lawyer 100, the top firms, fewer than 25 % are being led by women. And so you have a real issue with diversity on all levels, and even fewer are women or people of color. And so it’s a real issue when you talk about looking for role models.
John Jantsch (09:32.547)
Yeah.
John Jantsch (10:00.588)
Yeah.
Deborah Farone (10:00.91)
I think professionals, particularly lawyers, like to look at role models because they’re interested in precedent. They want to know what has the other person done that’s been successful. And if they don’t see people who look like them in those roles, it’s a lot harder to figure out how they’re going to get there.
John Jantsch (10:09.614)
Yeah.
John Jantsch (10:18.734)
Do you feel like that system, if you will, still quietly works against women then? When it comes to business development, mean, particularly.
Deborah Farone (10:26.033)
I do. Yeah, I think women and minorities have a tougher time because there are not those role models. I think there are other issues at play like unconscious bias. But, you know, my focus really is on business development. And I feel that, you know, if we can teach people how to develop business, whether they’re in the professions or even if they’re in something like advertising.
If you have the ability to sell yourself and to develop business, it gives you so much more ability to write your own script and to do what you want because you’re going to have more advantages as far as rising within an organization if you’re a business developer that we’ve seen. And you can also kind of develop the clients that you want to develop and develop the practice that appeals to you. And that’s great. That gives you a sense of independence that you wouldn’t have otherwise.
John Jantsch (11:08.491)
Yes, yes.
Deborah Farone (11:21.483)
So that’s really what I want to encourage people to do.
John Jantsch (11:24.846)
You can probably take that on the road to another firm as well as within your own firm.
Deborah Farone (11:27.449)
You can. Absolutely. It allows you freedom. It’s a type of currency, isn’t it? You know, that you have that capability.
John Jantsch (11:34.892)
Yeah. Yeah.
So we’ve been talking about applying this to law, but for consultants, agency owners, other experts, what do you think your book could teach them about building practice around relationships rather than self-promotion?
Deborah Farone (11:53.405)
well, I think the authenticity issue is very big. Also trust, I cover how you build trust. And it seems to be three elements. It’s expertise, it’s the authenticity piece, and it’s empathy. And I go into a lot of detail about that because I think being yourself amongst your clients is not something we’re trained to do necessarily. But I try to show people examples of folks who have done that.
and why they’ve been successful. And clients want to work with people who are believable, who come across as humans. I told you when we got on the call that I might have a coughing attack. I don’t pretend to be perfect. And I think people like people more when they are themselves and they admit that they’re fallible. And so there are lots of different things for other professionals, I think, to learn from these lessons.
And the other really is to develop a niche. think developing a niche is so vital regardless of what you’re doing in the world because figuring out what you really enjoy and then figuring out if you think of it as a Venn diagram, what makes economic sense or sense for the firm that you’re with. Finding where those overlap is just a vital part of being able to market yourself.
John Jantsch (12:54.679)
Hmm.
John Jantsch (13:15.662)
And then going very good and deep and becoming an expert at that thing, right?
Deborah Farone (13:20.632)
Right, absolutely. But I think we all have a tendency to jump into the tactics before we do the strategy. And I really would recommend that people think about the strategy and how they want to be known and what they want to do before they take an immediate jump into giving lots of speaking engagements or marketing themselves.
John Jantsch (13:27.779)
Yes.
John Jantsch (13:40.15)
Yeah. So most professional service firms expect partners to grow the practice. So where do you see the firms themselves getting it wrong in terms of not really equipping those, you know, just saying, go out there and do it.
Deborah Farone (13:56.131)
Yeah, I think they need to train people. I think training has to start when someone is very young in business. I think you can train an older person. You can teach them new tricks. But what happens is, and we see this in so many professions, if you’re not training them when they’re associates or when they just start, not only are they losing whatever seven or eight years of building good habits about business development and marketing and relationship building,
But they’re losing those contacts that they could have made. So they’ve not been trained, they don’t have the contacts. All of sudden you make them partner and you say, okay, it’s time, go develop business. And it’s much harder at that point.
John Jantsch (14:37.998)
All right.
Yeah. Yeah. Makes sense. So is there anything in the interviews that you did, particularly with the women, that kind of challenged some of your own assumptions about business development, even about leadership?
Deborah Farone (14:57.728)
think finding that there were cultural differences, there were more cultural differences than I thought there would be around the world. So I spoke with women in Botswana. I spoke with women in Milan and Paris and Asia. And there are differences that I think I just see generally as a difference with culture, whether it’s men or women. But in parts of Asia, you would never be direct and say, I want to do
Business with you I want to work with you unless if you really do know someone very well and the same is true with even portions of Italy and Europe. You know London is more like America as far as you can be a little bit more direct. But Latin America is also different and that they want to take time and get to know you and so I think the cultural differences were were really interesting I was aware that there might be some but.
John Jantsch (15:49.006)
Mm-hmm.
Deborah Farone (15:55.657)
the ones that I heard about just reinforced how important it is, especially if you’re going to another country, that there are to be cultural differences. And even if you’re going to another firm, another company that you’re trying to sell, you have to just be very empathetic and really understand the culture of that company. So that was reinforced.
John Jantsch (16:19.864)
So if, and I’m sure you’ve been brought in from time to time to work with somebody who’s really good at what they do, sort of hesitant to put themselves out there. Do you always, I mean, is there a first step that you say, well, just do this, it won’t kill you, this’ll get you started?
Deborah Farone (16:35.352)
I think so much of it is getting to know someone because everyone’s going to have their quirks. And so while I do work for large companies and large firms, I will take on about eight coaching clients a year. And I really need to start with getting to know what they do, what they love, what they hate about work, all of those things. And then we can figure out where they want to go. But I really do believe that that’s strategic.
John Jantsch (16:39.726)
Yeah.
Deborah Farone (17:04.344)
part has to come before they start selling themselves. And very often the selling themselves part starts with how they sell themselves internally at their company. Are they making the right contacts? And are they helping other people? And are they creating a good reputation for themselves? Those things matter so much and they’re so easy to overlook.
John Jantsch (17:15.278)
That’s a point,
John Jantsch (17:30.722)
Yeah, that’s interesting point. I’m sure that when people, especially young associates inside of professional service firm, especially a larger firm, part of the job is start your networking here, right? mean, go meet these partners or go ask somebody how they got to where they got and find a mentor maybe even. that’s all part of that’s business development, frankly, isn’t it?
Deborah Farone (17:54.648)
It is and you know I spoke I guess maybe two or three weeks ago at Columbia Law School and I said to the law students it’s really important that you know everyone in this room because one of you is going to be the next Sam Altman or one of you might be the head of an architecture firm or a law firm you just don’t know and so it really needs to start at that level it needs to kind of
John Jantsch (18:00.92)
Thanks.
John Jantsch (18:07.276)
Yeah.
Deborah Farone (18:21.451)
reach people who are still trying to figure out what they want to do. Develop a network, think about who is in your network, and make sure that you’re empathetic to what they’re going through.
John Jantsch (18:28.781)
Yes.
John Jantsch (18:33.294)
It’s funny, when I started my business some 30 years ago, all my first clients were people I went to high school and college with. So, all right, you wrote Breaking Ground. What do you hope firms and individuals, professionals will do differently as a result of reading?
Deborah Farone (18:40.573)
I’m not surprised. That’s great.
Deborah Farone (18:51.029)
I think one, start training people early. Don’t wait until they become a partner at their firm. And also realize that everyone develops business in a different way and can develop business in a different way. So have room for people to do it authentically. Give them a budget, give them some guardrails of what they can and can’t do if you need to, but allow them to find a way to develop business that’s right for them.
So I think those are two things that I would start with.
John Jantsch (19:24.014)
Well, Deborah, I appreciate you saying that by the DuckTait marketing podcast. Is there somewhere you’d invite people to find out more about breaking ground and certainly to connect with you?
Deborah Farone (19:25.833)
It’s particularly.
Deborah Farone (19:32.865)
Absolutely. Well, breaking ground, they can easily order through Amazon or through my website. There’s some links for discount codes and things like that. And my website is deborahferrone.com. And most of the time I live on LinkedIn. I guess if you can say, where do you live as far as social media, I’m on LinkedIn at Deborah Breitman-Ferrone.
John Jantsch (19:50.19)
Great.
John Jantsch (19:55.694)
Again, I appreciate you stop by and maybe we’ll run into you one of these days out there on the road.
Deborah Farone (20:01.053)
John, thank you so much. It was fun speaking with you.
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