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Clients for Life: How Great Professionals Develop Breakthrough Relationships

Clients for Life: How Great Professionals Develop Breakthrough Relationships

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Read Mitchell's Review First
Review: Don Mitchell's review is first-rate. I agree completely with his reasons for praising this book, and, I agree completely with his (and Drucker's) comments about so-called "lifelong relationships." If you are looking for some rock-solid advice to achieve "breakthrough" relationships with clients, Sheth and Sobel provide it. But as Mitchell and Drucker correctly point out, it is possible but highly unlikely that those relationships can be sustained indefinitely, especially now when change is the only constant and occurs at ever-increasing velocity. Give careful thought to the word "breakthrough" because it has so many relevancies to today's competitive marketplace. When in pursuit of a prospective client, first you have to break through clutter to become visible; then you have to break through other clutter to differentiate yourself from the competition; then overcome other clutter to begin the new relationship; finally, you have to break through still more clutter to sustain that relationship. (Think about juggling handgrenades in a minefield at 2 AM...during an electrical storm...while wearing a blindfold.) Sheth and Sobel offer a wealth of information as well as sound guidance. Much of what they share can also help with the formulation of customer recapture strategies. But take no one and nothing for granted. The "life" of a customer relationship should not be measured in terms of years; rather, in terms of how effectively you nourish that relationship while you have it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Answers to Fulfilling a Professional's Dreams!
Review: Every professional I know feels uncomfortable about the fact that at some point in the future they see no revenues coming in, after current assignments and contracts are completed. In private discussions, many professionals have told me how deeply they ache for the security of having long-term client relationships. Many find it difficult to attract new clients, don't enjoy that role, and know that it is time-consuming and costly.

Anyone who feels that way should definitely read this book. Primarily drawn from the experiences of the authors and of top advisors they interviewed, the answers ring true for me. Having been a management consultant for 30 of the past 33 years, all of my long-term relationships had the qualities described here.

The book outlines the characteristics that clients are typically looking for. These include:

Balancing detachment and dedication to the client's cause to act in selfless ways (you are especially warned against the 45 minute hard sell for the next assignment at the end of the current one.)

Becoming empathic with your client at such a level that you pick up on tiny, unspoken clues about what is on their minds

Moving beyond being a specialist into becoming a deep generalist so that you can help connect the perspectives of your specialty to adjacent issues

Seeing the big picture so that you can help synthesize solutions that no one else would have thought of

Improving your judgment so that you can sift the winning options from the losing ones (this section is particularly well done)

Acting from conviction by operating from your values rather than your self-interest

Having earned a deep level of trust you can draw on based on the integrity and competence you have shown in the past

The authors make these points very well by contrasting the role of experts (the one-time assignment of a specialist in a narrow area) with advisors (the broader role). For example, professionals often make the mistake of focusing on presentations and reports while clients often most value working sessions and one-on-one discussions.

There are also many examples in the book of great advisors like Gertrude Bell, David Ogilvy, George Marshall, Peter Drucker, Henry Kissinger, and Harry Hopkins. These role models help make the points clearer.

The authors also have a good section on evaluating whether or not you should want to have a long-term relationship with certain clients.

Now having praised the book, let me also point out that I disagree with the book's premise as it relates to management consulting. In my experience, it is bad for clients and consultants to focus on lifelong relationships.

Let me explain. Here are the problems from the client's point of view. First, if the consultants have done a good job, the company should at some point have learned how to do what the consultants do. Second, the firm is obviously larger than the consulting firm in most cases, and the expertise of the client should grow faster than the consultants. That means that the consultants should run out of relevant, needed expertise at some point. Third, if your clients are wildly successful as a result of your collaboration, they surpass their goals quickly and retire. As Peter Drucker has often said to me, "Don, the last person the new CEO wants to see is you if you have been close to the old CEO." The reason for that is because the new CEO wants to create her or his own mark. Peter Drucker has advised working for every other CEO in a company if you want to have a long-term relationship. Well, CEOs stay in their jobs about 7 years, and that is decling. That's not a lifetime. Finally, the time and money the client spends with you is time and money that they cannot spend with another consultant who may have expertise they need more than yours. I have seen famous, brand-name firms stay on too long in such circumstances and do great harm to their clients.

Now, let's look at the same question from the consultant's point of view. Peter Drucker's first client was General Motors, for example. Yet his biggest contributions have come in assignments for organizations like the Girl Scouts and churches, which came late in life. If he had stayed with only his first clients, even as large and interesting as they were, he would have cut off his opportunity to do his best work. I think that consultants should always be looking for where they can make the most positive contribution. That may not be in a lifelong relationship, and will usually not be.

Also, it is new clients who push you the most because you don't know exactly what is going on. When I look back on assignments, I find that I have usually learned the most from working with a client in the first 6 months. If I had stopped taking on new clients, 90 percent of the ideas I have developed would never have occurred to me.

So for me at least, this book points me in the wrong direction in pursuing the lifelong relationship. I suggest you ask yourself whether it does you or not, as well. On the other hand, it is always good to find ways to be more valuable to clients, and creating what could become a lifelong relationship through being a better advisor is commendable. The book can help you with that goal, as well.

Be a great advisor to your clients, regardless of the length of the relationship!



Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A great tool for those that want to have "Clients for Life"
Review: Having been in the financial services industry for seven years, I currently enjoy the business of some long-term clients. This book has prompted me to think of many other ways to become a broader, more general adviser to my clients. I read it through three times in a week, it's a very hard book to put down once you start. If you want to have those clients that won't shop your services around, you must read this book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A consultants bible
Review: I have been a professional counsellor for over thirty years, both in business management and psychology, and the one constant that can always be depended upon is change. People change, times change, technology changes, and those who want to stay in the game and win, must be prepared to accept change, keep up with it, and run with it. "Clients for Life" is a well-documented, factual outlook at how to best serve the clients one has and how to hold on to them for however long it is feasible to do so. In my line of work, on the psychology side, there are no shortage of clients but some are short-term and continually change; others are long-term. Rather than become focused on the revenue that comes in each and every month, I found if one concentrates on the clients' needs and focuses on doing the best one possible can to fulfill that need, the revenue takes care of itself!

As the author quickly points out, not all existing clients/customers will last forever. Some die, some relocate, some will try the competition, and depending on the type of business, not everyone will continue to NEED your service or product on a regular basis. Most of the suggestions provided in this book are very general and apply to almost to any type of professional business; but in my opinion, other suggestions are targeted to more specific professions - it is not a one hundred percent, one-shoe-fits-all approach. For example in this province, doctors, psychologists, lawyers, accountants, etc. are prohibited by law from advertising their services, with the exception of business cards. In business management and training, however, one can freely advertise their services. Clients come through word-of-mouth and referrals from other professionals. Word-of-mouth goes a long way, and if existing clients are happy, they will indeed refer your services to others, who in turn will continue to refer your services. As a result, the client base continually escalates but, as this book indicates, a certain portion of your client base will definitely change.

In general, the book is well written and contains some sound and practical advice for developing trusting, professional realtionships. In any profession, one first must earn the respect and trust of the client before a win-win relationship can develop, and any information learned that will allow one to do that will be of great benefit down the road.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Delivers as advertised
Review: I'm a personal/professional development coach and have put into practice the wisdom of this book, with gratifying results. What more can I say? Heavy on the theory and rationale, it helped me see that I was going in the right direction giving exceptional service and really welcoming clients into my life. Many tips on how to develop these relationships in language easy to understand. I give it 5 stars.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Delivers as advertised
Review: I'm a personal/professional development coach and have put into practice the wisdom of this book, with gratifying results. What more can I say? Heavy on the theory and rationale, it helped me see that I was going in the right direction giving exceptional service and really welcoming clients into my life. Many tips on how to develop these relationships in language easy to understand. I give it 5 stars.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This book will transform your role with clients
Review: Just for the record I rated this book 5 Stars not 3 stars, I'd appreciate a correction. Thank you

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Practical ideas built on thoughtful perspectives
Review: Sobel and Sheth have distilled a great deal of information into a few meaningful concepts with practical ideas for applying them. Professional relationships are full of complexity, whether it is with a client, boss, or subordinate. The authors have looked at the work of professional advisors throughout history, and identified the essential ingredients and dangers in client relationships. I liked the approach they take, stressing excellence, integrity, and continual learning as the foundation, and going further into looking at the essential need for independent judgement built on a solid understanding the businesses they advise. The framework they provide is not easy-- it's original and challenging to carry out. The book is well written-- it moves quickly, weaving real stories as context for the insights the authors provide. I think anyone who works in the professional services area will take a lot of ideas from this book that can be applied.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Identifies the foundations for great relationships
Review: This is a great book for anyone who wants to take his or her client relationships to the highest possible level. I am intimately familiar with a vast amount of literature on selling, but nothing I've read does as good a job at getting to the heart of what really creates lasting relationships. Clients for Life is interesting, entertaining, and successfully blends practical examples and cases with higher-level concepts. As head of global sales & marketing for a technology company, I manage large, sophisticated Fortune-500 accounts, and I found a great deal of original, immediately-usable insight in this book.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Identifies the foundations for great relationships
Review: This is a great book for anyone who wants to take his or her client relationships to the highest possible level. I am intimately familiar with a vast amount of literature on selling, but nothing I've read does as good a job at getting to the heart of what really creates lasting relationships. Clients for Life is interesting, entertaining, and successfully blends practical examples and cases with higher-level concepts. As head of global sales & marketing for a technology company, I manage large, sophisticated Fortune-500 accounts, and I found a great deal of original, immediately-usable insight in this book.


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