Business professional casting a fishing line at golden hour, representing landing clients of all sizes

Don't Wait for the Big Fish to Bite — The Power of Every Connection in Business

April 13, 2026

Every entrepreneur, sales professional, and business owner knows the feeling. You've got a whale in your sights — a dream client, a massive contract, a partnership that could change everything. You've done the pitch, sent the proposal, and now you're waiting. And waiting. And waiting some more.

Because here's the truth nobody talks about enough: big fish take time.

They have longer decision cycles, more stakeholders, bigger approval chains, and higher stakes for everyone involved. Reeling one in can take months — sometimes years. And while you're patiently working that line, your bills don't pause. Your team still needs to get paid. The lights still need to stay on.

So what's the move? You fish the whole pond.


The Big Fish Fantasy

There's nothing wrong with dreaming big. Ambitious targets drive growth, push your team to perform at higher levels, and can genuinely transform your business overnight.

But ambition without strategy is just wishful thinking. Too many businesses make the fatal mistake of putting all their energy — and all their cash flow hopes — into one or two large prospects, leaving themselves dangerously exposed when the deal takes longer than expected or falls through entirely.

The smartest businesses don't just cast one line into the deep end. They cast many lines, at many depths, for many sizes of fish.


The Small Fish Are Running Right Now

A vibrant network of business connections of all sizes

Here's what a lot of business owners overlook: small businesses move fast.

A small or mid-sized business can make a decision in a week. Sometimes in a day. They don't need three rounds of legal review or a board sign-off. They see value, they feel trust, they say yes. And while a single small client might not match the revenue of an enterprise deal, a portfolio of them absolutely can — and they come with some surprising advantages:

  • Stronger relationships. When you're not just a vendor number, you become a trusted partner. Small business owners are loyal. Treat them right and they'll refer you to everyone they know.
  • Faster feedback. Smaller engagements let you test, iterate, and refine your offering in real-time — making you sharper and more competitive when the big fish finally bites.
  • Consistent cash flow. A steady stream of smaller accounts creates a financial foundation that gives you the freedom to pursue bigger opportunities without desperation.
  • Word-of-mouth marketing. Small business communities are tight-knit. One great experience turns into five referrals. Five referrals turn into a track record. A track record turns into credibility that attracts larger clients.

Building a Network That Works at Every Level

The most successful businesses don't separate their world into big clients worth my time and small clients not worth my effort. Instead, they build a diverse ecosystem of connections — a rich network that creates value at every level.

Think of it like a garden. You plant seeds of all sizes. Some grow quickly and provide immediate results. Others take longer but eventually become the tallest trees in the yard. If you only plant the seeds you hope will become giant trees and neglect everything else, you'll have nothing to eat while you're waiting.

Every connection matters. Every relationship has potential. That local business owner you helped last quarter? She might just be the sister-in-law of your next big fish. That startup you took a chance on? They might be acquired by an enterprise firm next year — and bring you along for the ride.


How to Fish the Whole Pond Strategically

A thriving garden representing business growth at every level

Working a full pond doesn't mean spreading yourself thin. It means being intentional. Here's how to do it right:

1. Tiered Client Strategy

Categorize your prospects into tiers — enterprise, mid-market, and small business. Dedicate a percentage of your outreach energy to each. A good starting ratio? Spend 40% of your energy on small business (your lifeblood), 40% on mid-market (your growth engine), and 20% on enterprise (your moonshot). Adjust as your capacity grows.

2. Lead with Value, Not Size

Whether you're talking to a Fortune 500 or a family-run business, lead with genuine value. The businesses that win long-term are the ones that show up with solutions, not just sales pitches. Reputation transcends client size.

3. Keep Your Pipeline Diverse

A healthy pipeline should never be dominated by a single opportunity. If one deal represents more than 50% of your expected revenue, you're vulnerable. Diversify deliberately, even when things feel good.

4. Stay Connected, Even When You're Not Selling

Check in with past clients and prospects of all sizes. Send a relevant article. Celebrate their wins publicly. Be present in their world. The relationship you nurture today is the referral or renewal that saves you tomorrow.

5. Show Up in Small Business Communities

Attend local networking events. Join industry groups. Be visible in spaces where small business owners gather. Your next big client might be watching how you treat the small ones before they decide to trust you with their own business.


The Psychology of Patience and Pragmatism

Landing a big fish is exhilarating. But running out of runway before it arrives? That's devastating — and it's avoidable.

The most resilient businesses understand that patience and pragmatism aren't opposites. You can dream big and act smart at the same time. You can pursue enterprise clients with fierce ambition while simultaneously nurturing a thriving portfolio of smaller accounts that keep the engine running.

In fact, the pressure is off when the lights are already on. When you're not desperate for any single deal to close, you negotiate better. You show up more confidently. You walk away from bad fits without hesitation. Financial stability makes you a better business person in every way.


The Big Fish Will Come

Stay consistent. Stay connected. Deliver exceptional value at every level. Build your reputation across the full spectrum of business relationships. Keep the lines in the water.

Because here's the thing about big fish — they always circle before they commit. And when they do, the businesses that win aren't always the flashiest or the biggest. They're the ones with the strongest reputation, the deepest relationships, and the track record of showing up — for clients of every size.

The big fish are watching how you treat the small ones.

So cast wide, fish smart, and keep the lights on. Your moment is coming — and when it does, you'll be ready.


Ready to build a client network that works at every level? Start by nurturing the connections you already have — and watch how far they take you.

Pro Tip: Segment your contacts by business size and set up tailored follow-up sequences for each tier. That way, no fish — big or small — ever slips through the net.

Jay Walmsley — Professional Problem Solver for Small Business
30+ years in sales, marketing and community building across APAC. I help small businesses win customers, build referral pipelines, and create partnerships that actually grow revenue.
I install the Infrastructure—Networking, Education, and Technology—that turns a "Business" into a Sovereign Territory

Jay Walmsley

Jay Walmsley — Professional Problem Solver for Small Business 30+ years in sales, marketing and community building across APAC. I help small businesses win customers, build referral pipelines, and create partnerships that actually grow revenue. I install the Infrastructure—Networking, Education, and Technology—that turns a "Business" into a Sovereign Territory

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