When it comes to designing a client experience, we tend to approach from the ‘inside looking out’, focusing on the needs of our clients and the communications and activities that we can provide to support them. Not a bad plan.
I’d argue, however, that you also need to approach client experience from the ‘outside looking in’ and focus on if and how you’ve structured the business to support the needs of those clients. It’s the difference between sending communications that will be helpful to your ideal clients and building your business around the needs of your ideal clients.
Before digging in, however, I should make my bias clear. If you read this blog regularly this will come as no surprise. I believe that you cannot build a truly extraordinary client experience around the needs of everyone. You can deliver great service, but a great experience needs to be tailored to the needs of an ideal/target client or niche.
The question is this. What does it mean to tailor a client experience to the needs of your ideal clients?
Today is about stepping back, looking at your business from the outside in. It’s about asking if the choices you’ve made fully reflect the unique needs of your clients. To that end, let’s dig into seven parts of your business and evaluate each to uncover opportunities to shine.
When you think about each aspect of your business, there’s a litmus test to let you know if you’re on the right track. Ask yourself if each of these areas of your business would be different if you worked with a different ideal client.
More specifically, for each area of your business ask yourself the following:
I’ll look at each in detail and you can download a worksheet here if you want to complete your own assessment.
#1 Client Acceptance
Perhaps the first and most obvious place to start is with your client acceptance criteria. And the question is this. Will you draw a line in the sand when it comes to who you will and will not work with?
Defining clear client acceptance criteria means you’re drawing a line in the sand and saying that you’ll walk away from clients who don’t fit. It’s like pulling the velvet rope across your door and only allowing those in when you know they are clients for whom you can do your best work.
Consider the following:
#2 Products and Services
Next, look at the products and services you provide. The key question is this. What products and services do you need to provide to meet the unique needs of your niche?
This category could literally include the products you use, but equally the scope of advice you provide or the value-added components of what you might offer. For example, I’ve recently talked to two advisors who want to focus on the integration of health and wealth. While they’re both planners, their service is being broadened to include support on health. That’s an example of how the scope of service might change to reflect a particular niche.
Consider the following:
#3 Team
Next let’s look at the team. This is a big area, a difficult area and one that will have a significant impact on your success. The key question is this. Do you have the right people all pulling in the same direction?
Consider the following:
#4 Skills
Continuing with the team theme, you’ll also want to look specifically at skills, which leads you to consider training and development. The key question is this. Do you and your team have specialized knowledge that is tailored to the needs of your ideal client?
Consider the following:
#5 Partnerships
An offshoot of the team discussion is partnerships. The key question is this. Should you establish outside partnerships to add greater value for your ideal clients?
Related: Advisors Are Not Keeping Pace With the Disruption of Client Engagement
Those outside partnerships might include professionals or experts in accounting, legal, insurance, business consulting, lifestyle (e.g., health), specific needs (e.g., aging parents) or family (e.g., financial literacy). Who you need around you is driven by the needs of your clients. Not everyone makes a good/right partner for your business.
Consider the following:
#6 Technology
Next let’s look at technology. The key question is this. Are you using technology to support the unique needs of your ideal clients? Now I don’t consider myself a technology expert so won’t pretend. However, there are key questions I believe we all need to ask:
#7 Office Environment
Now let’s turn to the office environment. The key question is this. Does your office environment reflect a style that is relevant for your niche?
There are countless examples of younger firms that are focused on millennials creating very unique and modern environments. But that might not be you. You don’t necessarily need a vending machine and foosball table in your office, but you will want to examine the messages you’re sending with your office environment.
Consider the following:
Final Word
OK, so it feels daunting to rip the business apart. It takes a high level of confidence to question what you have built and ask if it needs to be tweaked. But if your goal is to become a magnet for exactly the right clients, then you need to be built to serve those people.