"We really don't need a lot of new client relationships,"
the chairman of a large professional services firm recently told me, adding,
"We have a great client base already. There's huge potential to grow and
develop our existing clients." Many companies feel the same way: That there is
a large opportunity to deepen and broaden-to grow-their current clients. But
what is the process by which this occurs? Over the last six months I have
interviewed a number of C-level executives in a variety of Fortune 500
companies, and one of the questions I asked was, "What has characterized the
relationships with outside professional firms, financial institutions, or other
suppliers that have grown steadily over time?" Here are the key
points-reinforced by other feedback I've gotten in many other client
interviews-which these clients have made to me:
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Editor's Note:
Andrew Sobel helps professional service firms with client relationships.
He graciously allowed me to share some of his articles here since I
thought that many of his insights would apply to Geek Leaders as well.
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1. "They've gotten to
know me as a person." When it comes to their business lives, executives
care more about their careers than anything else, and as an independent advisor
you can provide invaluable perspective in this area. To really serve your
client well you have to understand him or her as a person. You have to become
familiar with his or her goals, aspirations, fears, and values. In this vein,
the head of worldwide business development for a major corporation told me,
somewhat humorously, "If you had to call your client up on a Saturday, and his
spouse answered, would you say, ‘Can I please speak to my client' or would you
know her name and be able to exchange pleasantries with her? The personal side
of relationships is important."
2. "They've built
strong relationships throughout our organization." I call this developing
"many to many" relationships. It's not enough to have one very strong
relationship with someone you perceive to be the key decision maker-in larger
organizations, you have to build a network of relationships, for a variety of
reasons:
**Particularly in high-ticket sales situations, there are
invariably many buying influences. You need to build relationships with the
economic buyer (or buyers), user buyers, technical buyers, and other key
influencers.
**When follow-on or additional work is being decided upon,
the economic buyer will often be testing to see how widespread the support is
for a particular provider. By building many to many relationships, you solidify
that support.
**To get your recommendations accepted, it's often necessary
to build consensus in the client's organization. You need a network of
relationships to accomplish this.
**Sometimes, lower-level managers have large budgets or more
decision-making authority than you think. The head of Europe
for a major investment bank told me this story: "We have strong relationships
with the CEO, CFO, and Treasurer at a long-standing client. A competitor of
ours had a mid-level banker (an executive director) literally camp out next to
the assistant treasurer for weeks on end. It turns out the assistant treasurer
was the key decision-maker for a major convertible bond issue, which was
awarded to our competitor. We missed this key relationship, and therefore lost
a major piece of revenue."
3. "They've done
great work." As the chairman of a European rail company said to me, "There
is, after all, something to be said for just doing a great job! Isn't that the
best recommendation?" There is a lot of talk about "cross-selling" (a term
which I believe is antiquated and somewhat discredited by a lack of success),
but it all has to start with a single professional or a small team that has
established a trusted advisor relationship with the client and done a terrific
job on the initial assignment.
4. "They have
delivered on their promise of being a global organization." One client
executive told me, "Many firms say they are ‘global.' Most of them don't act
like they are, however-they are introducing themselves to each other in the
hallway outside my office right before the meeting! That's what I like about
our current advisors-they have worked together for many years, and built up
strong, internal relationships. They are able to deliver the global capability
and not just talk about it." This goes back to the idea of building many to
many relationships using a truly team approach with professionals who know each
other, trust each other, and enjoy spending time together.
5. "We feel very
special, like we're one of their biggest, most important clients." Everyone wants to feel like they are special
and important, and no-one wants to feel like they are just one among hundreds
or thousands. One client said to me, "I know we're not that large, but we feel
special, like the entire organization would be available to us if it were
needed." How do you instill this feeling in your clients? I think it comes from
doing many different things-being totally focused on that client when you are with
her, staying in touch frequently, occasionally introducing other expert
resources from within your own firm, getting to know them as people (point 1,
above), adding both core and surprise value, and so on.
6. "They stay in
touch regularly." In my experience, many professionals are weak at staying
in touch, especially if there isn't a lot going on with a client at that
moment. A client of mine-himself a superb relationship builder-likes to say
that "If you talk to a client once a day you have lots to talk about-the
conversation can go on forever; if you talk every few months, you have nothing
to talk about." In addition to staying in touch regularly and sending your
client relevant articles, ideas, introductions, and so on, think about taking
the occasional "deep dive"-do some research and serious thinking around a topic
of special interest to your client, and structure a substantive meeting around
it. Many clients have told me that a well thought-out "deep dive" into an
important subject can often be the catalyst for additional work.
7. "They keep the
ideas coming." The CFO of a major telecommunications company told me, "All
these things are important-building a personal relationship, creating many
points of contact, and so on-but in the end, they have to deliver, they have to
keep up a steady supply of ideas and perspectives in order to sustain the
loyalty and keep the relationship fresh." This goes to a practice I often
preach about, which is treating old clients like new clients.
The ingredients required to grow client and customer
relationships are really not all that baffling or obscure: Do great work, get
to know your clients as people, be creative about staying in touch regularly,
build many to many relationships, make each client feel special, invest in
building face time and trust-internally-so your organization can truly mobilize
around each client, and keep up a steady flow of valuable ideas and
perspectives. The real knack, of course, is having the dogged discipline to do
these things week-in, week-out!
Andrew Sobel is a leading authority on client relationships
and the skills and strategies required to earn enduring client loyalty. He is a
consultant and educator to major services firms worldwide. Andrew is the author
of the business bestsellers Making Rain:
The Secrets of Building Lifelong Client Loyalty (John Wiley & Sons),
and Clients for Life: How Great
Professionals Develop Breakthrough Relationships (Simon & Schuster/Fireside). He can be
reached at
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