Customer Relations Is Not Just A "Sales" Function
By
Erich Heintz
Consulting is a service business and engineers, administrators
and technicians are the heart of it. Sadly, too many of us see
customer relations as a "sales" function. While the sales
department can be very effective at generating leads and
performing a lot of the up-front work that initiates a customer
relationship, long term success depends highly on the
implementers themselves.
Repeat Technology
Services Business
Much of the repeat business
that I get from clients comes not from "sales" beating them down
with phone calls and emails, but by clients approaching me
directly to satisfy newfound needs.
I'm proud to say that I have
clients who refuse to deal with our sales department for any
function other than signing contracts. These customers are no
longer looking to be "sold" solutions; they come to me
specifically to "buy" them.
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If you are content with perpetual
strings of one-off projects you can stop reading here. My focus is
maintaining long standing relationships that produce reliable
revenue streams.
Don't Be A Drone
Too many consultants show up, drop
in a solution and leave, making no effort to establish a
relationship with their client. Get to know the client and their
business. Showing an interest in the client's work can not only help
you develop a rapport, you may learn something as well. Being able
to show up at a site, ask about the client's family AND being able
to address their kids by name will help establish you as more than
just the "computer guy". The "computer guy" is generally about as
memorable as the "phone guy" or the "cable guy".
Be Flexible
Very few consultants are so good
that they can get away with a "my way or the highway" attitude.
There are a few out there and if you think you are one of them you
probably stopped reading by now.
As a solution provider, your first
effort should bring to your customer the best fix for their problem.
Whether that fix is hardware, software, policy or procedure, there
are almost always client considerations you weren't made aware of
during design. Budget usually lands at the top of that list.
Rarely is there a single solution
to a problem. Be able to provide options to your client. If they
balk at your first solution, have alternative approaches ready to
discuss and explain to them the tradeoffs involved. A client will
always respect your efforts to work with them and meet all their
needs, as opposed to just providing a canned solution.
Know When To Be Inflexible
When client constraints force a
loss of proposed functionality be fully prepared to explain, or even
argue, how the compromise will degrade or even nullify the
effectiveness of your proposal. Implementing a poor solution because
"the customer told you to" is a bad idea and will generally come
back to haunt you.
If you have the flexibility, you
may decide to decline a project because of too many forced
compromises. Believe it or not, turning down work on principle will
sometimes jostle the customer into accepting the original proposal,
because they now see that you are looking out for their interests,
not just billable hours. Once in a while, "my way or the highway"
works.
If You Don't Know An Answer,
Admit It
Too often when confronted with a
client challenge consultants try to "fake" their way through an
effort. While you may be able to get a way with this once (or even a
couple of times), eventually it will catch up with you. I've found
that most customers respond surprisingly well to "I do not know, but
I will find out."
Any time you try to bluff your way
through a scenario, you run the risk of being discovered. Once you
break a client's trust, it's virtually impossible to regain it.
Keep Your Attitude In Check
Frustrations exist in every facet
of business. Due to the need for customer interaction, consulting
can be particularly stressful. There are ways to express
dissatisfaction or frustration without blowing your top. When faced
with a stressful situation, measure your words and your disposition
carefully. Delivery is often more significant than the message.
Carefully worded, you'd be surprised just what you can tell a client
to go do with themselves, and get away with it.
Conclusion
There's no holy grail here, just a
few nuggets of advice that I've come to realize in my own years as a
consultant. I'm not giving any guarantees of success. If I could,
I'd write a book and retire on royalties. What I can guarantee is
long term survival in this industry hinges on established customers.
Keeping these customers returning to you requires the same care and
feeding as any other relationship.
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Erich Heintz currently specializes
in providing network and security solutions for small to medium
businesses that frequently have to resolve the conflict of need
versus budget. His commitment to precision and excellence is
eclipsed only by his fascination with gadgets, particularly ones
that are shiny, or that blink, or that beep. If you would like to
contact Erich you can e-mail him at erich.heintz@gmail.com. If you
would like to know more about computer security please visit us at
http://www.defendingthenet.com.
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The individual Customer Service representative today holds extraordinary influence over the consumer's entire relationship with a company. Maximizing the positive response potential for each Customer Service employee makes the difference between customer dissatisfaction, and customer delight. And maximizing the positive influence of Customer Service professionals is what CRKInteractive is all about. Learn more about CRKInteractive's Customer Service Programs >> |
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