---
title: Harmonzi-Style Performance Guarantee Structure
type: article
created: '2026-04-05'
updated: '2026-04-05'
source_docs:
- raw/2025-11-11-sales-standup-100718228.md
tags:
- sales
- guarantee
- risk-reversal
- pitch
- closing
- asymmetric
layer: 2
client_source: null
industry_context: null
transferable: true
---

# Harmonzi-Style Performance Guarantee Structure

A risk-reversal offer framework designed to remove client uncertainty and close deals by making the downside of engaging negligible. Inspired by Alex Hormozi's "irresistible offer" principles, this structure ties our compensation to measurable client outcomes.

## Core Concept

Rather than asking a prospect to trust that we'll deliver results, we pre-commit to a specific, measurable outcome and accept the financial risk if we fail to hit it. The prospect's maximum exposure is capped at the initial engagement period; our exposure is continued unpaid work until the goal is met.

This reframes the sales conversation from *"will this work?"* to *"you already said you want this, we've guaranteed it, so let's go."*

## The Three-Step Structure

### 1. Define the Baseline
Establish a concrete, verifiable starting point together with the prospect. Don't accept a vague claim — look at the actual system.

> *"Show me where you're registering these leads. How do you record them? How do you know the source?"*

Examples:
- 10 leads/month (tracked in CRM)
- 700 organic visits/month (verified in Ahrefs)
- Sales volume down 20% YoY (pulled from their reporting)

### 2. Set a Specific, Ambitious Goal
Agree on a target that is meaningful to the client and achievable within 90 days. The goal should be expressed as a concrete number, not a percentage alone.

Examples:
- Increase leads from 10 → 15/month (50% increase in 90 days)
- Grow organic traffic from 700 → 1,100 visits/month
- Recover 5 percentage points of a 20% YoY sales decline

### 3. State the Guarantee
If the agreed goal is not met within 90 days, we continue working at no charge until it is.

> *"If we don't get to that baseline increase within 90 days, we'll continue to work for you without charging you until we get to that point."*

This is not a full money-back guarantee — the client still pays for the initial 90-day period. The guarantee is on the *result*, not the fee.

## Why It Works

- **Incentive alignment:** We only get paid after 90 days if we deliver. This makes underperformance directly costly to us, which prospects recognize.
- **Objection removal:** The three hardest objections — *"I'm not sure it'll work," "I can't justify the risk," "I need to think about it"* — are all neutralized by the guarantee structure.
- **Closes on logic:** Once a prospect has stated what they want and you've guaranteed you can deliver it, the conversation shifts from persuasion to logistics.

## Ideal Use Cases

This structure works best when we can project results with high confidence. Strong fits include:

| Goal Type | Why It's a Good Fit |
|---|---|
| SEO / organic traffic | Measurable in Ahrefs; predictable improvement curves |
| Lead volume | Trackable in CRM with clear baseline |
| Domain authority | Reliable metric with known improvement levers |
| Sales recovery | Clear YoY comparison point; incremental targets are defensible |

Avoid using this guarantee with goals that are hard to attribute (e.g., brand awareness) or where the client's own sales process is the primary bottleneck.

## Value Framing (Hormozi Economics)

Before presenting the guarantee, anchor the prospect on the economic value of the outcome:

1. Ask: *"What's one sale worth to you?"*
2. Multiply by the incremental volume you're promising.
3. Compare that number to your fee.

> *"If we increase your sales by 100 units and each unit is worth $40, that's $4,000/month in incremental revenue — recurring, not one-time. Here's what we charge, and here's the guarantee."*

This makes the fee feel small relative to the upside and makes the guarantee feel like a formality.

## Connection to the David & Goliath Pitch

The guarantee is most powerful when paired with the [[wiki/knowledge/sales-enablement/david-and-goliath-pitch-framing|David & Goliath pitch framing]]. The narrative arc is:

1. *You're competing against better-resourced rivals* (creates urgency and resonance)
2. *We've built a system specifically for this asymmetric environment* (positions our solution)
3. *And we guarantee the result* (removes the final barrier to yes)

## Related

- [[wiki/knowledge/sales-enablement/david-and-goliath-pitch-framing|David & Goliath Pitch Framing]]
- [[wiki/knowledge/sales-enablement/conversational-cold-call-script|Conversational Cold Call Script Approach]]
- [[wiki/meetings/2025-11-11-sales-standup-outreach-readiness|Sales Standup — Outreach Readiness & Strategy (2025-11-11)]]