iPlanRx Apollo Sequence Library

Batch 3 of 4 Β· Multiplier Tracks Β· Partnership conversations, not direct sales

🎯 Silver Bullit πŸ”€ Multiplier Tracks 4-Touch Cadence
Sending As β†’
βœ“ Emails signed as Ben Madden
Sequence Library: Batch 1 β€” Superintendent Β· Owner/CEO Batch 2 β€” HR Director Β· Biz Manager/CFO Batch 3 β€” CESA Β· Chamber of Commerce Batch 4 β€” Associations Β· Re-Engagement
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Multiplier Tracks β€” Different Strategy Than Batches 1 & 2

These are partnership conversations, not direct sales pitches. Ben is not selling iCHRA or a Scorecard to CESAs or Chambers β€” he's opening a discussion about how iPlanRx could become a resource they offer their districts or members. The ask is a 30-minute exploratory call. One CESA relationship = potential access to 20–40 districts. One Chamber relationship = potential access to hundreds of member businesses. Tom should consider leading or co-leading the discovery call for these contacts β€” the founder-to-executive dynamic carries more weight at this level.

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CESA β†’ Executive Director

12 CESAs in Wisconsin Β· Each serves 20–40+ school districts Β· Partnership conversation

πŸ”€ Multiplier Track πŸ“… 21-Day Cadence 4 Touches
CESA 1Milwaukee Β· Waukesha Β· Ozaukee Β· Washington Β· Racine Β· Kenosha
CESA 2Dane Β· Rock Β· Green Β· Jefferson Β· Walworth
CESA 3Grant Β· Iowa Β· Lafayette Β· Richland Β· Crawford Β· Vernon
CESA 4La Crosse Β· Monroe Β· Trempealeau Β· Buffalo Β· Pepin Β· Pierce
CESA 5Adams Β· Waushara Β· Marquette Β· Columbia Β· Sauk Β· Juneau Β· Wood
CESA 6Fond du Lac Β· Dodge Β· Washington Β· Winnebago Β· Calumet Β· Outagamie
CESA 7Brown Β· Kewaunee Β· Door Β· Manitowoc Β· Sheboygan Β· Calumet
CESA 8Oconto Β· Marinette Β· Florence Β· Forest Β· Langlade Β· Menominee Β· Shawano
CESA 9Lincoln Β· Marathon Β· Portage Β· Waupaca Β· Wood Β· Oneida Β· Vilas
CESA 10Chippewa Β· Clark Β· Eau Claire Β· Taylor Β· Jackson
CESA 11Barron Β· Burnett Β· Polk Β· St. Croix Β· Dunn Β· Pierce Β· Washburn
CESA 12Ashland Β· Bayfield Β· Douglas Β· Iron Β· Price Β· Rusk Β· Sawyer Β· Washburn

The Ask β€” 30-Minute Exploratory Conversation

"We'd like to have a 30-minute conversation about your role serving Wisconsin school districts and whether there's a fit for iPlanRx to become a resource you offer your districts β€” something that gives their superintendents and business managers health benefits benchmark data they currently don't have access to, at no cost to the CESA."

Touch 1 β€” EmailDay 1
Touch 2 β€” PhoneDay 4
Touch 3 β€” EmailDay 10
Touch 4 β€” BreakupDay 21
Subject Lines
A
A resource for your districts β€” worth a 30-minute conversation
B
iPlanRx + [CESA #] β€” exploring a fit
Email Body
CTA30-minute exploratory call β€” no commitment implied
Strategic Notes
  • This is NOT a sales pitch β€” it's an invitation to explore a partnership. Every word should reflect that
  • "Your role serving districts" shows you understand what a CESA does β€” it's not a generic cold email
  • "At no cost to the CESA" removes the obvious objection before it forms β€” they're not being asked to pay for anything
  • "That data exists and we've built tools around it" β€” subtle credibility signal without overselling. Let the conversation do the rest
  • Subject line A is warmer and more collaborative. Subject line B is more direct β€” use when you've done homework on that specific CESA
  • Tom or Jason should be the sender for CESA outreach β€” founder/senior title carries more weight with Executive Directors than a prospecting rep
  • Send Tuesday–Thursday, 7:30–8:30 AM
Phone Script β€” Live Answer
"Hi [First Name], this is Ben Madden with iPlanRx β€” do you have just a minute? I sent you a note a few days ago. We work with Wisconsin school districts on health benefits strategy and I wanted to reach out to you specifically because of the role [CESA #] plays with your districts. The short version: most districts in your region are renewing their health plan without a benchmark comparison β€” we've built that benchmark, and I'd like to explore whether it's something [CESA #] would find useful to offer your districts. No cost to the CESA β€” just a 30-minute conversation to see if there's a fit. Would that be worth your time?" [If yes β€” book it. Offer to include Tom on the call: "Would it make sense to include our founder Tom Madden on that call? He leads our district strategy work."] [If "send me more information" β€” "Happy to. I'll send a brief overview β€” would it be okay if I followed up with a call after you've had a chance to look at it?"] [If "we already have something like this" β€” "That's great to hear. I'd be curious to learn more about what you're using β€” would 20 minutes still make sense just to compare notes?"]
Voicemail Script
"Hi [First Name], Ben Madden with iPlanRx. I emailed a few days ago about a potential resource for your districts around health benefits benchmarking β€” something we offer at no cost to the CESA. I'd love 30 minutes to explore whether there's a fit. Sending the link now. Talk soon." [Send immediately:] "Just left you a voicemail β€” happy to find 30 minutes at your convenience. [Calendly link]"
Strategic Notes
  • Offer to include Tom on the discovery call β€” Executive Directors respond better to founder-level conversations on partnership discussions
  • "Compare notes" is a powerful reframe if they claim to have something similar β€” it keeps the door open without being confrontational
  • "Send me more information" is a soft yes β€” follow up with a one-page overview and a specific ask to reconnect after they've read it
  • Best call times for CESA Executive Directors: 8:00–9:00 AM or 1:00–2:00 PM
  • CESA Executive Directors serve on various WI education boards β€” a relationship here can open doors far beyond just their districts
Subject Lines
A
What Wisconsin districts are paying β€” [CESA #] region data
B
Re: iPlanRx + [CESA #] β€” one more thought
Email Body
CTARegional data angle β€” positions CESA as the conduit
Strategic Notes
  • "We've scored all 413 Wisconsin school districts" β€” this is real and credible. It signals iPlanRx has built something substantive, not just a generic pitch
  • "Whether there's a role for [CESA #] in helping surface that data" β€” positions the CESA as a champion for their districts, not a passive referral source
  • Executive Directors are motivated by serving their districts well β€” framing this as a district benefit rather than a vendor relationship is the right angle
  • Subject line A with regional data specificity is strong β€” it implies you've already done the work for their region
  • Under 120 words β€” Executive Directors are busy administrators, not sales prospects
Subject Lines
A
Closing the loop β€” [CESA #]
B
Leaving the door open β€” iPlanRx + [CESA #]
Email Body
CTAClean exit β€” no pressure, long re-engagement window
Strategic Notes
  • CESA Executive Directors are long-term relationship targets β€” the exit must be respectful and leave no bad taste
  • "A district raising the benefits question" is a realistic trigger β€” districts often bring issues to their CESA before going external
  • Move to a 6-month re-engagement in Apollo β€” not 90 days. These are senior administrators and over-contacting is relationship-damaging
  • Add to an annual "WI district benefits benchmark" distribution list β€” a one-page annual summary of district benefits trends is a legitimate reason to re-engage with zero sales pressure
  • A warm introduction from any district contact you've already connected with is far more valuable than any cold sequence β€” always ask district contacts "Is your CESA involved in benefits decisions at all?"
Sequence Strategy Touch 1 frames the conversation as exploring a fit β€” no pitch, no product β†’ Touch 2 calls and offers Tom on the discovery call to elevate the conversation β†’ Touch 3 introduces the 413-district scoring data to signal real capability β†’ Touch 4 exits cleanly with a long re-engagement window. Every CESA contact goes into a 6-month nurture cycle. One warm introduction from a district contact is worth more than this entire sequence.
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Chamber of Commerce β†’ President / CEO

WI Chambers β€” each represents dozens to hundreds of member businesses Β· Member benefit conversation

πŸ”€ Multiplier Track πŸ“… 21-Day Cadence 4 Touches

The Ask β€” 30-Minute Exploratory Conversation

"We'd like to have a 30-minute conversation about your role serving Wisconsin business owners and whether there's a fit for iPlanRx to become a member benefit your Chamber offers β€” something that gives your members access to health benefits benchmarking and strategy at no cost to them or to the Chamber."

Touch 1 β€” EmailDay 1
Touch 2 β€” PhoneDay 4
Touch 3 β€” EmailDay 10
Touch 4 β€” BreakupDay 21
Subject Lines
A
A member benefit worth a 30-minute conversation
B
iPlanRx + [Chamber Name] β€” exploring a fit for your members
Email Body
CTA30-minute exploratory β€” "what that could look like" signals flexibility
Strategic Notes
  • Chamber Presidents hear vendor pitches constantly β€” the key differentiator is leading with member value, not iPlanRx value
  • "What that could look like" β€” signals you're not arriving with a fixed program. You're open to shaping the partnership around what works for their Chamber
  • "At no cost to the business owner" β€” removes the most common Chamber objection: "our members don't want to be sold to"
  • Subject line A is warmer β€” better for smaller regional Chambers where the President wears many hats
  • Subject line B is more direct β€” better for larger metro Chambers (Green Bay, Madison, Milwaukee area) with more structured partnership processes
  • Tom should lead or co-lead Chamber discovery calls β€” founder-to-executive conversations carry more weight for partnership discussions
  • Send Tuesday–Thursday, 8:00–9:00 AM
Phone Script β€” Live Answer
"Hi [First Name], this is Ben Madden with iPlanRx β€” do you have just a minute? I sent you a note a few days ago. We work with Wisconsin business owners on health benefits strategy, and I wanted to reach out to you specifically because of what you do for your members at [Chamber Name]. The short version: most Wisconsin business owners have never had an independent look at whether their health plan is cost-competitive β€” we provide that at no cost to them. And I'd like to explore whether that's something [Chamber Name] would want to make available to its members. No cost to the Chamber. Just a 30-minute conversation to see if there's a fit. Would that make sense?" [If yes β€” book it. Offer to include Tom: "Would it help to have our founder Tom Madden on that call? He leads our partnership conversations."] [If "we have a benefits vendor already" β€” "Totally understand β€” we're not looking to replace anyone. This would be an additional resource for members who want an independent second opinion on their current plan. Different from what a vendor typically offers."] [If "send me information" β€” "Happy to. I'll send something brief β€” could we find 20 minutes to talk after you've had a chance to look at it?"]
Voicemail Script
"Hi [First Name], Ben Madden with iPlanRx. I emailed a few days ago about a potential member benefit for [Chamber Name] β€” specifically around health benefits benchmarking for your members at no cost to them or the Chamber. I'd love 30 minutes to explore whether there's a fit. Sending the link now. Talk soon." [Send immediately:] "Just left you a voicemail β€” happy to find 30 minutes at your convenience. [Calendly link]"
Strategic Notes
  • "We're not looking to replace anyone" β€” critical objection handler for Chambers that have existing broker or benefits vendor relationships
  • "Independent second opinion" β€” positions iPlanRx as additive, not competitive with their existing relationships
  • Always offer to include Tom on the discovery call for Chamber conversations β€” this elevates the conversation immediately
  • Best call times: 8:30–10:00 AM, 1:30–3:00 PM
  • Chambers often have monthly member meetings, newsletters, and events β€” ask about those channels during the discovery call as potential distribution vehicles
Subject Lines
A
What [Chamber Name] members are likely paying β€” and don't know
B
Re: [Chamber Name] β€” one more thought on member value
Email Body
CTA"Tangible member benefit that costs nothing to offer" β€” the Chamber value prop
Strategic Notes
  • "Tangible member benefit that costs nothing to offer" β€” this is the core Chamber value prop stated plainly. It answers "what's in it for us" without being asked
  • "Delivers real value at first contact" β€” signals that members don't have to commit to anything to get something useful. That's important for Chambers protective of member experience
  • "Path of least resistance" is a peer insight β€” Chamber Presidents know this is true of their members and appreciate the honesty
  • Keep it under 130 words β€” Chamber Presidents are busy and this email should feel like a quick read, not a sales deck
Subject Lines
A
Closing the loop β€” [Chamber Name]
B
Moving on β€” but leaving the door open
Email Body
CTARespectful exit β€” names Chamber-specific re-engagement triggers
Strategic Notes
  • "New board year" is a real Chamber trigger β€” leadership transitions often bring new appetite for partnerships
  • "A member asking about benefits strategy" β€” positions the Chamber President as someone who might proactively reach out when a member need arises
  • "We're building our Wisconsin presence" β€” honest, not overselling. It implies you're growing and that early partnerships matter
  • Move to 6-month re-engagement in Apollo β€” same as CESAs, over-contacting Chamber Presidents is relationship-damaging
  • Attend Chamber events in your target markets (Green Bay, Madison, Fox Valley, etc.) β€” in-person introductions at Chamber events are far more effective than cold email for this contact type
  • Consider joining 1–2 key Chambers as a member β€” it gives you instant warm access to the President and legitimacy with the membership
Sequence Strategy Touch 1 leads with member value and flexibility β€” "what that could look like" signals a partnership, not a vendor pitch β†’ Touch 2 calls, handles the existing vendor objection, and offers Tom on the discovery call β†’ Touch 3 states the Chamber value prop plainly: tangible member benefit, zero cost to offer β†’ Touch 4 exits cleanly with Chamber-specific re-engagement triggers. Chamber Presidents who engage become distribution channels β€” every discovery call should explore newsletters, member meetings, and co-branded touchpoints.