A simple enough question with a not-so-simple answer. To be an outstanding “face” of an agency and to build strong client partnerships, you need a multitude of talents. A balance of style and substance. A blend of left- and right-brain thinking. A combination of internal and external influences. A lot is required.
There is no right or wrong answer to the question. It's subjective. Anyone who has ever had success as a client manager or as the leader of an account team will have his or her own opinion.
This multiple-edition post captures my list of quintessential qualities and skills for your consideration.
#7: Be STRATEGIC
A daily demonstration of passion and initiative can be very impressive. Unsolicited business-building proposals are a great way to show your clients how excited you are to help them succeed. But, in order to avoid looking like a used-car salesman, you need to be strategic.
This is an area ripe with opportunity to shine, because among the majority of clients it is a key perceived shortcoming. Most clients think their agency representatives are spread too thinly and, as a result, don’t have enough time to develop a strategic understanding of their businesses. If you can demonstrate successfully to clients that you are fully engaged and that you have sound strategic ideas for their businesses, you will quickly shatter their pre-conceived notions and rise above the status quo.
At its core a strategy is a CHOICE.
So, to be strategic you have to be selective. To achieve an objective, you need to assess all your possibilities and identify only a manageable number of options that will have the most impact. A strategy requires sacrifice. This is how your clients manage their businesses and it’s how you should, too.
In order to successfully sell new business-building proposals, the first thing you need to do is gain an understanding of key client dynamics. How are your clients evaluated? What is on their work & development plans? How do they go about securing approval from their management for new proposals? What are their company’s criteria for reviewing commercial innovation ideas? When is the best time to submit proposals? It’s great to share unsolicited strategic proposals with your clients, but if you do so two weeks after their annual budget-planning process is complete, your chance of success is drastically reduced.
Once you understand these critically important client dynamics, set out to develop and share with them your carefully thought-through proposals that truly make sense for their businesses. But you can’t sell a solution until you strategically assess the situation and simplify the problem or opportunity. To do this, you must truly know their businesses, industries and competitors. And you need to really understand the unique benefits of what your agency offers. Then, look for ways to strategically marry what your agency can do with what your clients need.
Once you have done this, work hard to develop a compelling but simple proposition for your clients. If your proposition is too complex, and thus takes too much work on your clients’ behalf to understand it, you will compromise the potential of what may be a big idea.
Share compelling ideas with your clients, but don’t talk price. First, make your clients excited about the possibilities. Then, work with them to determine the value.
Lastly, you must focus on quality, not quantity. If your clients perceive your proactive efforts as just a constant attempt to sell them everything your agency offers—regardless of how relevant it may be—your good intentions will go awry. Focus on the clients, not the sale. You must be selective. You must be strategic .
These are my thoughts on how companies can connect more strongly with their clients/customers, from my book Tell Your Clients Where to Go! A Practical Guide to Providing Passionate Client Leadership. I would love to hear yours.
Thanks for reading. The rest of the list will be published over the next few weeks. I hope you find it helpful.
p.s. If you'd like to connect more strongly with your target audience, I'd love to help. Please message me at Todd@LINKTrainingAndConsulting.com , or call me at (513) 240-8383.