The Calibration Layer

The Wheel of Colors.

Match their color, not yours. The one move that doubles your prospecting effectiveness overnight.

If you only learn one prospecting tool — make it this one.

YELLOW BLUE RED GREEN

Tap any color

The Methodology Trinity

This is Big Al's framework — a 30-year-old network marketing classic. The premise is brutal and simple: every prospect is wired differently, and the way you naturally communicate is probably wrong for 75% of them.

Four colors. Four wirings. Read which one they are in the first 60 seconds — then deliver your message in their language, not yours. That's it. That's the whole skill.

This page is the companion to F.A.B. and Action for Traction™. FAB tells you the WHAT, Colors tells you HOW MUCH, AfT tells you HOW OFTEN.

Color 1 of 4 · The Yellow

Yellow

The helper. People-first. Wired for warmth.

How they're wired

  • Care deeply about people
  • Loyal — once they're in, they're in for life
  • Avoid conflict at all costs
  • Slow to decide, fast to feel
  • Stable, steady, trustworthy

Spot them in 60 sec

  • Asks about your kids, your weekend
  • Soft voice, lots of listening
  • Talks about helping, family, community
  • Career often in service: teacher, nurse, caregiver
  • Says "I want to be sure this is right for everyone" a lot
FAB recipe for Yellow Heavy B with a relational frame. Skip the studies. Lead with how this product helps the people they love. "Imagine being the mom who isn't tired anymore." Use stories about families — yours, mine, theirs. Yellows close themselves on the people they'll help.
What to say: "I'm not here to sell you anything. I just remembered you mentioned [their kid / their parent / their friend] last time, and this is the thing that's helping me show up for mine. Would it be okay if I told you what it's been doing for me?"
Color 2 of 4 · The Blue

Blue

The spark. Fun-first. Wired for the experience.

How they're wired

  • Energy — they brighten the room
  • Spontaneous decision-makers
  • Love stories, vibes, novelty
  • Bored by spreadsheets and small print
  • Social — the connector of every group

Spot them in 60 sec

  • Big personality, hands moving when they talk
  • Asks about your vacation, not your KPI
  • Says "ooh!" out loud when something excites them
  • Tells you about their last cool experience
  • Often in creative or sales-leaning careers
FAB recipe for Blue Heavy B with high energy. Tell a story. Make them feel the fun part — the trips, the freedom, the people they'll meet, the energy they'll have. Skip the studies entirely. Skip the comp plan math. They buy the vibe.
What to say: "Okay, I have to tell you about this thing. You know how I've been so dragging lately? I started taking this and I swear I have my mojo back. We're going on this trip next month and I'm actually pumped about it for the first time in like a year. You'd love it."
Color 3 of 4 · The Red

Red

The driver. Results-first. Wired for the win.

How they're wired

  • Decisive — they want the answer, not the journey
  • Competitive — they keep score
  • Direct — they say what they mean
  • Impatient with fluff and small talk
  • Builders — they want to win at something

Spot them in 60 sec

  • Skips the pleasantries: "What is this?"
  • Asks about numbers — income, growth, % of comp
  • Cuts you off when you go too long
  • Doesn't make eye contact with what doesn't matter
  • Often: founder, exec, top sales rep, athlete
FAB recipe for Red A and the bottom line. Tell them what's different. Tell them what they get. Tell them what it costs. Ask for the decision. Reds RESPECT directness — and they're insulted by anything that wastes their time.
What to say: "I'll get to the point. 4Life Transfer Factor Max — the only product with PhytoFactor. Patented. Award-winning. I take it every day. I sleep better and I haven't been sick in a year. It's $99/month. You want to try it, or not?"
Color 4 of 4 · The Green

Green

The analyst. Data-first. Wired for the proof.

How they're wired

  • Analytical — they need the data first
  • Skeptical — they vet everything before they buy
  • Careful — they don't make fast decisions
  • Researcher — they'll read every PDF you send
  • Quietly committed once they're in

Spot them in 60 sec

  • Asks specific, technical questions early
  • Wants to see the studies, the patents, the mechanisms
  • Takes notes. Often pulls out their phone to research
  • Says "let me think about it" and actually means it
  • Often: engineer, doctor, IT, accountant, scientist
FAB recipe for Green F first, then A, then B. Don't skip the science. Don't apologize for the depth. Send them the peer-reviewed paper. Send them the patent number. Walk them through the mechanism. Greens close themselves on the data. Your job is to give them enough of it.
What to say: "I think you'd actually appreciate the science behind this one. PhytoFactor — plant-derived transfer factor, peer-reviewed in Molecules journal, DOI 10.3390/molecules28247961. Want me to send the paper? Take your time with it. We can talk again whenever you've had a chance to review."

First — what color are you?

Before you can read someone else's color, you have to know your own. Because here's the trap: you naturally pitch in your own color, to everyone.

A Blue affiliate pitches everyone with energy and stories — and loses every Green prospect. A Green affiliate sends everyone the peer-reviewed paper — and loses every Yellow prospect. The mirror is the first move.

"The way you naturally communicate is probably wrong for 75% of the people you're talking to."

Read back through the four panels above. Which one is YOU? That's the one you have to consciously dial DOWN, so you can dial up whoever is in front of you.

Most people are two colors.

Pure colors are rare. Most people lean strongly into one and secondarily into another. Your job is to read the dominant color first and lead with that recipe — then pull in the secondary as backup.

Common pairings you'll see in the field:

Yellow + Blue — the heart-led storyteller. Lead with relational benefit, weave in the energy.
Blue + Red — the high-octane closer. Energy first, then the bottom line.
Red + Green — the analytical executive. Bottom line first, then the data to back it up.
Green + Yellow — the careful caretaker. Data first, then the relational frame for the people they'll help.
Practice this week

Five drills. Build the muscle.

  1. The mirror

    Identify your own dominant + secondary color. Write it down. Now read your last three prospecting conversations — were you pitching in your color or theirs?

  2. The 5-person scan

    In your next family dinner or team meeting, silently scan five people. Assign each one a dominant color in your head. Notice the cues — voice, posture, what they ask about, what they avoid.

  3. The color rotation

    Pick one 4Life product. Write a 30-second pitch for a Yellow. Then a Blue. Then a Red. Then a Green. Same product, four versions. If they all sound the same, you're still pitching in your color.

  4. The opening question

    Practice one "color-reading" question you can drop into any first conversation: "What's one thing you'd want to improve if you had a magic wand?" — the answer tells you the color. Yellows say "my family." Blues say "I just want more fun." Reds say "I want to win at X." Greens say "I want to understand how this works."

  5. The team scrimmage

    On your next team call: one person describes a real prospect (no names — just behavior, job, what they said). The team votes on the dominant color. Then everyone takes 90 seconds to draft a FAB pitch in that color. Best one wins.

⚠️ The one thing you can't do

Don't get stuck in analysis paralysis.

You can spend so much time trying to nail someone's exact color that you bypass the most important thing — just being you and opening your mouth.

When in doubt, forget about colors and focus on the two things that actually move the needle:

01

Connection

Are they seen? Are they heard? Do they feel like the most important person in the conversation?

02

Communication

Are you actually saying something? A clumsy conversation beats a perfect analysis every single time.

Colors are a tool, not a test. If you're not sure — just be YOU and open your mouth.

Slow down to read the color. Speed up to deliver in their language.

That's the move. That's the whole move.

The Wheel of Colors is Tom "Big Al" Schreiter's framework — the standard 4-color personality model in network marketing for 30+ years. It's the calibration layer that turns F.A.B. into a precision instrument. Both are part of the canonical 4LifeUp training toolkit.