The general playbook — reusable across any franchise-scale operator in the Genesis orbit. Sonesta-specific contact strategy lives in the sibling document.
Most outreach dies in the inbox of someone who never read it. Not because the writer lacked competence, and not because the operator lacked interest. It dies because the message treats the operator as a title — EVP, Principal, Asset Manager, Director of Revenue — instead of as a person with a lineage, a family, a pressure they cannot say out loud, and a decision they have been avoiding for weeks.
The operator knows this. They have read a thousand cold emails. They can spot the template from the first line, and they have developed a reflex that deletes anything that smells like one — not out of rudeness, but out of self-defense. Their attention is the only irreplaceable asset they own. Anyone who treats it as inexpensive has already lost the right to earn it.
Before this became a business conversation, it was an experience. That is the first sentence of every relationship Genesis ever earns. Everything else is earned from that sentence, or not at all.
The premise of every Genesis outreach sequence is that the operator is a person first and a prospect second. That ordering is not decorative; it changes every artifact we ship. It is why the cover letter is a letter and not a deck. It is why the first asset they receive is a complete intelligence package, not a brochure. It is why the P.S. of every closing document is the part the operator remembers.
There are seven doctrinal claims that govern every outreach sequence Genesis runs. They are not slogans. They are constraints on what is shippable.
Exhibit 01 — The Seven Outreach Doctrine Points| # | Doctrine | What It Looks Like In Practice |
|---|---|---|
| 01 | Show up with work, not slides. | The first artifact is a completed intelligence package. No deck. No summary. The artifact is the proof. |
| 02 | Start from the Person. | The opening sentence references something specific to the operator — a property visited, a founder story, a lineage honored. |
| 03 | Be specific or be silent. | If Genesis cannot name a figure, a deadline, a campus, or a competitor, it does not send. Vague outreach is worse than no outreach. |
| 04 | Give before ask. | Every asset delivered is valuable to the operator even if we never speak again. The ask follows the gift by weeks, not by sentences. |
| 05 | Name the uncomfortable truth. | We tell the operator what they already know but nobody else is saying — a deadline, a missed incentive, a scoring gap. Truth is what earns trust. |
| 06 | Close with a covenant, not a contract. | The closing sentence of every outreach is about relationship, not transaction. We grow together. |
| 07 | Write it so it survives being forwarded. | The operator will forward the letter to a spouse, a CFO, a partner. Every sentence must stand on its own when it is read by the third reader. |
If every one of the seven doctrine points is met, the operator reads. If any one is violated, the operator deletes. There is no middle state. Outreach is a binary outcome measured at the operator's inbox, and the doctrine exists because that inbox is the only place the score is kept.
Not all channels are equal. The bar chart below shows the relative response rate Genesis observes across franchise-scale operator outreach, normalized to a baseline of one hundred for cold email. Channel choice is not cosmetic — it changes the probability of being read by an order of magnitude.
Exhibit 02 — Channel Effectiveness Index (Cold Email = 100 Baseline)The default Genesis sequence leads with a channel in the top three — either a physical visit, a warm introduction, or a direct letter plus intelligence package. Cold email is used only as the sixth or seventh follow-up touch, never as the opener. The bar chart is the reason: cold email is a signal of low commitment to the operator, and operators respond to signals of commitment.
Every franchise-scale operator conversation Genesis has ever won has ridden on one of four underlying archetypes. The 2x2 below maps them to the two variables that actually predict response: depth of personal specificity (does this letter know me, or could it have been sent to anyone?) and urgency of the window (does this matter this quarter, or could it wait a year?). Every sequence below pulls from one or two of these archetypes intentionally.
Exhibit 03 — Message Archetype 2x2 MatrixCombines the lineage frame with a real deadline (tax credit, event compression, leadership transition). Highest response rate; used only when both elements are genuinely present. Example: the letter to Adam Suleman (Richardson cover letter).
Specific to the operator's property or portfolio; no immediate deadline. Relies on showing a figure the operator has never seen — revenue leak, comp-set gap, demand cohort missed. Used when there is no calendar driver.
Industry-wide deadline framed with operator-relevant specificity. Less personal than Q1/Q2 but still time-sensitive. Used when Genesis is reaching a cohort (e.g. all DFW franchisees before 179D).
Generic positioning — weakest archetype. Used only as the fifth or sixth touch for an operator who has not responded to deeper outreach, and only when paired with a new artifact.
Default to Q1 (Deep × Urgent) as the first touch whenever both elements are real. If the lineage is genuine but there is no deadline, use Q2 (Deep × Evergreen). Never lead with Q3 or Q4 — they belong later in the sequence, after the operator has already received a Q1 or Q2 artifact and knows that the work is specific to them.
The default Genesis sequence is six touches across eight weeks. The cadence is designed around the operator's reality — they are busy, they travel, they forget anyone who only reaches them once. The sequence below assumes Q1 (Deep × Urgent) framing and is the template from which Sonesta, Equinox, and every future operator sequence is derived.
Show up with work, not slides.
If an operator has not received a complete, valuable, specific-to-them artifact before the word proposal enters the conversation, the outreach has already failed — even if the operator has not yet realized it. Every operator Genesis has ever moved from cold to warm received a full intelligence package before the first real conversation. None received a deck. None received a capabilities overview. None received a pricing sheet.
This single rule sits upstream of every technique in this document. Without it, the archetype matrix is a cliche. The channel-effectiveness index is a vanity metric. The six-touch sequence is a drip campaign. With it, every downstream artifact lands with the weight of finished work rather than the weightlessness of promised work.
If Genesis ever ships outreach to an operator that is not preceded by a gift of completed work, that sequence is dead the moment it leaves our hands — even if the operator is polite enough to respond. The relationship has been seeded in the wrong soil. We would rather skip the operator entirely than ship a sequence that violates the rule. There is no shortcut past this.
Every operator who receives a Genesis package is going to run the math on what the same deliverable would have cost from incumbent advisors. The operator already knows the HVS rate-card, the CBRE pricing, the McKinsey scope. They will do the comparison whether we lay it out or not. So we lay it out — honestly — and the operator's own math becomes the confirmation that the package is real.
Exhibit 04 — Incumbent Market Rate For What A Genesis Package Replaces| Deliverable | Who Typically Delivers | Market Rate (One-Time) |
|---|---|---|
| Market intelligence brief — comp set, demand mapping, employer map | HVS · CBRE Hotels · JLL Hotels Advisory | $15K–$25K |
| Tax incentive stacking analysis — federal, state, local, deadlines | KPMG · Baker Tilly · HotelTaxExpert | $5K–$10K |
| People intelligence — lineage, acquisition history, relationship map | Strategy consulting (McKinsey, Bain, boutique) | $10K–$20K |
| Technology gap analysis with property-specific diagnosis | Hotel tech consultancy (HTNG, Hospitality Tech Group) | $8K–$15K |
| Supply pipeline + OTA ranking analysis | CoStar subscription + analyst time | $3K–$5K |
| Event-compression revenue modeling (FIFA, Super Bowl, etc.) | Revenue management consultant | $3K–$8K |
| TOTAL COMPARABLE MARKET RATE | For a single operator package | $44K–$83K |
Timing intelligence. Naming the deadline the operator has forgotten — the tax window, the leadership transition, the event compression — is not something a retained consultant produces. That insight alone is worth the engagement.
Lineage depth. The Abdul Suleman day in Dearborn, the Hyatt years, the family's specific contribution to a market — no standard consulting overview reaches that depth. It requires weeks of research per operator, and it is what turns a proposal into a letter.
Stacking logic. Most operators have heard of C-PACE. Almost none know how to stack PACE + 179D + Solar ITC + utility rebates + cost-seg + bonus depreciation on the same asset. That stack alone is worth multiples of the engagement cost.
Genesis scales. Every insight above is what Genesis delivers for every operator, every market, every time. This is not a one-off custom engagement. It is what the system does by default.
If the playbook is executed with discipline across ten franchise-scale operators in a single year, the downstream effects compound in a shape that looks nothing like a conventional consulting practice. This is the model for the entire Genesis go-to-market in 2026.
Ten operators is not a quota. It is the minimum cadence at which the playbook compounds. Fewer than ten, the reputation layer does not form; more than ten in the first year, the doctrine is violated by operators who received less-than-complete packages. Ten is the shape of the year.
Every line in this playbook exists to protect one thing: the operator's right to be treated as a person before they are treated as a prospect. That right is what most outreach in this industry quietly violates, and it is what Genesis refuses to violate on the first contact, the sixth, or the hundredth.
If Genesis ever ships a sequence that treats an operator as a title rather than a human, that sequence is broken and the playbook says to stop shipping it. There is no commercial number large enough to justify the violation, because the entire theory of the company is that the operator who is loved first is the operator who stays longest. That is not a posture. It is the architecture.
We grow together. That is the only sentence at the end of every outreach Genesis ever ships, because it is the only sentence that tells the truth about what the relationship is for.