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Many professionals approach the task of giving advice as if it were an
objective, rational exercise based on their technical knowledge and expertise.
Alas, giving advice is almost never an exclusively logical process. Rather, it
is almost always an emotional "duet" played out between the advice giver and
the client.
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Editor's Note:
David Maister is one of the world's leading experts on the management of professional services.
He graciously allowed me to share some of his articles here since I
believe that technical groups are very similar to professional service
firms.
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A revised version of this article, written in 1997, appeared in The
Trusted Advisor (2000) by Maister, Green and Galford.
Many professionals approach the task of giving advice as if it were an
objective, rational exercise based on their technical knowledge and expertise.
Alas, giving advice is almost never an exclusively logical process. Rather, it
is almost always an emotional "duet" played out between the advice giver and
the client.
If you can't learn to recognize, deal with and respond to client emotions,
you will never be an effective advisor.
Early in my career, the management team of a large professional firm asked
my opinion about how they were conducting their affairs. I responded with a
very direct and candid answer. "Here are the things you are messing up," I
said, "and this is what you should have been doing!"
To my surprise, I was fired for being a disruptive influence. This was hard
for me to understand because I knew (and they knew) that I was correct in my
diagnosis and prescriptions.
Eventually I learned the obvious lesson. It is not enough for a professional
to be right: An advisor's job is to be helpful.
Among other things, I had to develop the skill of telling clients they were
wrong in such a way that they would thank me for giving helpful advice! I had
to learn how to disagree without being disagreeable.
Proving to someone that they are wrong may be intellectually correct (and
let's be honest, occasionally fun), but it is not particularly productive for
either the client or the advisor.
Criticizing one's clients is, by definition, a part of every
professional's job. However, suggestions for improvement always carry the
implied critique that all is not being done well at the moment, and it is
usually the person hiring you who is responsible for the current state of
affairs.
Lawyers are usually retained by the in-house general counsel, accountants by
the chief financial officer, marketing and communications consultants by the
vice president of marketing and actuaries by the head of human resources or the
pensions officer. More often than not, the person hiring you is a key player in
the issues you are being asked to address. The advisor therefore needs to tread
carefully!
Because of this, the diagnosis and solution of a client's problem can never
be performed without considering the sensitivities, emotions and politics of
the client situation. No matter how technical one's field or discipline, the
act of giving advice is crucially dependent on a deep understanding of the
personalities involved and on the ability to adapt the advice-giving process to
the specific individuals involved.
The Client's Perspective
To understand some of the emotions surrounding the client's use of
professionals, think of the personal risks (reputation, promotion
opportunities, bonuses, perhaps even one's career) that go along with the
responsibility for choosing (and working with) any outside provider for a risky
or expensive corporate matter. How would you like to be known by the board as the
person to blame if the corporate headquarters designed by the architect you
chose doesn't work out? If the major lawsuit is lost? If the new marketing
campaign fails to deliver the goods?
Viewed in this light, the client has every right to enter the process of
using an outsider in a high state of anxiety. What's worse, the client's
inevitable caution and trepidation are reinforced by the fact that outside
professionals often see complications in a project that the client doesn't see.
In fact, it is an essential part of the professional's craft to reveal
nuances, problems, barriers and issues that the client is unaware of. If these
are not conveyed with tact and skill, the client could easily believe (however
unfairly) that, rather than relieving fears and being helpful, the professional
is creating complications.
There are other emotional issues usually present. In the normal course of
their business lives, client executives are people of accomplishment, authority
and respect within their organization. When hiring an advisor, they are forced
to place their affairs for an uncertain period of time (and cost) into the
hands of a practitioner of an impenetrable art, who often uses indecipherable
jargon and engages in mysterious and unexplained (but probably expensive)
activities. It is predictable that the average client experiences unwelcome
feelings of dependency or loss of control.
What clients really want is someone who will take away their worries and
absorb all their hassles. Yet all too often, they encounter professionals who
add to their worries and create extra headaches, forcing them to confront
things they would prefer to ignore. ("Doctor, I came to you about my sore feet,
and you are giving me grief about my weight. Can't you just treat my feet and leave
me alone about my weight?") Since clients are so anxious and uncertain,
inevitably they are looking for someone who will provide reassurance, calm
their fears and inspire confidence.
It can take some time for many professionals to realize that it is a central
part of their profession to develop these skills. Certainly no one ever teaches
us these skills in our professional training, neither in school nor inside the
typical professional firm.
A Chat with Mom or Dad
Essential to being an effective advisor is having a good understanding of
one's role. This is illustrated by something a lawyer once told me: "Sometimes
I feel like I'm explaining things to a child. My client can't seem to grasp
even the basic logic of what I'm trying to convey. I feel like saying, ‘Shut up
and just accept what I'm telling you-I'm the expert here!'"
What makes this lawyer's comment so understandable is that in almost every
advisory relationship, the client is usually untrained in the professional's
specialty, while the professional may have seen the client's problem (or
variants of it) many times before. There is thus an almost natural tendency to
come across to the client as patronizing, pompous and arrogant.
While it is understandable why advisors can feel this way, it is equally
clear why clients resent it. After all, when I'm the client, I'm the one in
charge. If I don't understand what you are saying, then maybe the problem is
you, not me.
Maybe you don't know how to convey what you know and understand to a lay
person. Of course I don't know your field; that's why I hired you! Explain it
to me in language I can understand. Help me get it! Your job is not just to
pitch solutions at me, but to help me understand why your recommended course of
action makes sense. Give me reasons, not just instructions!
Although advising clients sometimes feels like explaining things to a child,
the secret to becoming a good advisor is to do exactly the opposite: Act as if
you were trying to advise your mother or father.
If you are going to convince Mom or Dad to do something, you are more likely
to find the right words to convey your point so that it comes across with
immense amounts of respect, so that the implied critique is softened as much as
possible.
This doesn't mean avoiding the issue or rolling over and playing dead to
whatever they say. It may be that what they are doing is disrupting the rest of
the family or that it goes against their own interests. You need to get your
point across. Nevertheless, you must enter the encounter with the right
attitude and with careful attention to phrasing.
When talking to a family member or a client, a primary task is to diffuse
defensiveness (which, it should be noted, is always present). If you are to
influence a parent, you must find a way to prove that you are trying to help
and that you are not just being critical.
As one thinks about advising a parent, it should be readily apparent that
you don't just tell Mom or Dad what to do (even if they ask you directly).
Instead, you focus less on the advice (or conclusion) itself and more on
creating a dialogue or conversation that would help them see the issue from a
new perspective. "You've every right to do that, Dad, but sister has a few
extra burdens because of what's happening. Can you help ease the pressure on
her? Is there anything we can do to help her?"
A corporate equivalent to this might be, "That's a sensible decision, but if
we take that path the dealers would probably be very unhappy-and we need their
cooperation in order to succeed. Is there some way to modify the plan so that
we can keep them enthusiastically supporting the new plan?"
Finding the Right Words
Excellence in giving advice requires not only the right attitude but a
careful attention to language. There are always a number of ways of expressing
the same thought, each of which differs in how it is received by the listener.
Saying, "You've got to do X," even when you're correct, is very likely to evoke
emotional resistance-no one likes to be told that they've got to do anything
(even when they must).
It is usually better to say something like this: "Let's go through the
options together. These are the ones I see. Can you think of anything else we
should consider? Now let's go through the pros and cons of each course of
action. Based on these pros and cons, action X seems the most likely to work,
doesn't it? Or can you think of a better solution?"
If the client doesn't want to do X, the conversation is still alive. If
you've said "You've got to do X," and the client says, "No, I don't," you've
nowhere to go. Your effectiveness as an advisor has just been lost, and you
have placed yourself and the client on opposite sides. The odds are that what
will follow will be an argument, not a discussion.
Numerous other examples of "hard" and "soft" phrasing can be given. For
example, take something as simple as "What are your problems?" Seemingly a
simple question, this can easily be taken as challenging. A good substitute
might be, "What is most in need of improvement?"
As a quick rule of thumb, it is usually better to try to turn one's
assertions into questions. Instead of saying, "This is the best solution," try
the following: "My other clients usually do X for the following reasons. Do you
think that reasoning applies here?"
Many years ago, when I taught mathematical statistics, I would stand at the
front of the class writing the mathematics on the blackboard. Pausing from time
to time, I would ask my students, "Did everyone understand that?"
There would usually be silence in the room. I therefore assumed I was doing
just fine as a teacher. However, at examination time everybody failed the exam.
I had failed as a teacher! I was frustrated because (in language I would use
today) I thought I had created many opportunities to check for my clients' (my
students') understanding.
A colleague pointed out that my attitude was fine but my skills were weak.
By asking, "Did you understand that?" I was creating an atmosphere where a
student would have to confess weakness if they said, "No." My friend
recommended that I change my language to, "Have I made myself clear here?"
Phrased that way, it was easier for someone to say, "No, you haven't." Even
if this was more challenging to my ego, it helped me to ensure that my points
were being understood. Another way to deal with this situation would be to ask,
"Would you like to stay on this point or move on to the next topic?" This is a
neutral way of letting the student/ client express confusion about a topic (or
lack of acceptance) without threatening their ego or embarrassing them.
What all this shows is that we aren't always aware of how we are coming
across in our conversations with clients. We know what we intend to convey, but
we do not always know how we are being received.
One device to help in this skill-building process is to rehearse a client
conversation on videotape, with a friend or colleague playing the role of the
client. I have learned that the simple act of watching oneself in conversation
immediately reveals opportunities to phrase things differently to avoid the
perception of being pompous, assertive, threatening or unclear.
One doesn't need an expert in communications to help you debrief the
experience-when we listen or see ourselves on tape, the areas for improvement
are usually blatantly clear. As the poet Robert Burns noted, it is of great
benefit "to see ourselves as others see us."
A Teacher's Skills
In many ways counseling skills are similar to those of great teaching. A
teacher's task is to help a student get from point A (what they know, understand
and believe now) to point B (an advanced state of deeper understanding and
knowledge). It represents poor teaching for the professor to stand at the front
of the class and say, "B is the right answer!" (As the old joke goes, a lecture
is the fastest means known for getting ideas from the notes of the teacher into
the notes of the student without passing through the minds of either.)
A teacher needs two skills to be really effective. First, the teacher must
have a good understanding of point A-the point at which the student/client is
starting from. What does he or she understand now? What do they believe, and
why do they believe it? What are they doing now, and why are they doing it that
way?
This understanding of one's student/client can only come from doing a lot of
questioning and listening while saving one's reactions until later in the
teaching (or advisory) process.
Having understood point A, the teacher/advisor cannot jump straight into a
discussion of point B, the end point. The second required skill is to develop a
step-by-step reasoning process that takes the student/client on a journey of
discovery.
The goal is to influence their understanding so that, eventually, the
student/client says, "You know, on reflection I think that B is a better answer!"
The teacher/advisor can then respond, "OK, that's what we'll do!"
This process is, of course, usually termed Socratic teaching. It is
generally accomplished by using the following types of questions:
- Why do you think we have this
problem?
- What options do we have for
doing things differently?
- What advantages do you
foresee in using the different options?
- How do you think the relevant
players will react if we do that?
- How do you suggest we deal
with the following adverse consequences of such an action?
- Many other people encounter
the following difficulties when they try that. What can we do to prevent
such things from occurring?
- What benefits might result if
we tried the following approach?
Socratic reasoning does take a great deal of patience. It is normal for the
teacher to feel an almost overwhelming temptation to scream out, "But the
answer is clear-we should do B! Listen to me!" This would be an entirely
intellectually correct answer but a complete failure in advice-giving.
Dealing with Client Politics
Among other things, effective advice-giving requires an ability to suppress
one's own ego and emotional needs. The most effective way to win influence over
a client is to make the client think that the solution was his or her idea, or
at the very least his or her decision.
One way to do this is to help the client understand all the available
options by conducting a thorough exploration of advantages, disadvantages,
risks and costs. You can then gently guide the client to the preferred
solution. Notice that this usually means avoiding the temptation to take a
stand yourself early in the process.
An advisor's role is to be an expert guide in the process of reasoning
through the problem. Your ability to be accepted as a trustworthy guide can be
damaged if your client believes that you have already reached your own
inflexible conclusion.
The advisor's role as a guide through the reasoning process becomes even
more critical when dealing with committees, groups or other situations where
more than one person is involved in the decision. In such situations, one must
learn how to assist one's client by building consensus among the client
personnel.
Rarely does an advisor have only one person as the client. Even if you are
reporting to the CEO, it is usually the case that others must be "won over" in
order for any action to take place. Even powerful decision makers such as CEOs
tend to involve their CFO, their general counsel or other corporate officers
before a final decision is reached.
Not surprisingly, since they represent different corporate constituencies,
each of these other players brings a different perspective to the problem you
have been asked to help with. It follows that client politics are unavoidable
in any advisory situation. If you can't deal with client politics, you cannot
be an effective advisor.
Accordingly, all advisors must learn the skills and methodologies for
bringing the different players "on board." For example, in many (if not most)
advisory situations, clients schedule meetings that involve a number of
important players, each (usually) with his or her own agenda. Some advisors
show up at these meetings and try to facilitate the session by dealing with the
different interests, agendas and perspectives in "real time." In reality, few
professionals are skilled enough or fast enough on their feet to deal with the
many objections and concerns that surface during such meetings.
However, if you are diligent about finding out who is going to be at the
meeting, and disciplined enough to call each of them one at a time, in advance,
you could then ask each person to share their take on the issues, their
concerns, objectives and so on. Prepared in this way, it will be easier to plan
and run the subsequent meeting(s) and to help bring the group to consensus.
Even though the individual agendas will not always be reconciled, it is likely
that significantly more progress in decision making will be made.
It is tempting (and probably true) to think that conflicting agendas,
priorities and goals are the clients' fault, not yours. However, unless you can
develop the approaches and skills necessary to deal with these, your advice
will not be acted upon, and you will not be seen as a helpful, useful advisor.
Customizing Your Approach
While I have tried to shed a little light on the principles involved in
advising clients and tried to provide a few specific "how-tos," the fact
remains that advice-giving is an art, not a science.
There are few books (if any) that provide a road map for learning these
crucial skills, and (to my knowledge) no training programs are available in the
public domain, except perhaps for Dale Carnegie's How to Win Friends and
Influence People. (I would be delighted to learn of anything that does
exist, as well as additional "tips" that experienced counselors have learned or
developed-phone, fax or email them to me!)
Most of us have to learn these skills by trial and error as our career
progresses. While I have hopes that one day a book and training program will
appear, the odds are that advice-giving will remain an art. Individual tips and
tactics are helpful, but to apply any of them unthinkingly across the board
with all clients would be a huge mistake.
The essence of advice-giving is the ability to design a process and means of
interacting that fit each unique client situation. I can imagine (and, in fact,
have encountered) clients who have little tolerance for Socratic reasoning and
say, "Cut the crap; just tell me what you think." If that's what works for that
client, that's what I'll do.
However, the burden is still on me to quickly understand each individual
client's preferred style of interaction and to be sufficiently flexible to deal
with the client in a manner that they find most comfortable and effective. The
one thing I must not do is commit myself to a single consultative style and
say, "Well, that's my style; the clients can take it or leave it."
Now that really would be pompous, patronizing and arrogant!
David Maister is widely
acknowledged as one of the world’s leading authorities on the
management of professional service firms. He is the author or
co-author of numerous books including "Managing the Professional
Service Firm," "True Professionalism" and "The Trusted Advisor." He
can be reached at David[at]DavidMaister[dot]com. A pdf of this article
can be downloaded from his site at http://davidmaister.com/pdf/HowtoGiveAdvice744.pdf. Copyright,
David Maister.
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