It may seem an obvious question to many however understanding who the most valuable clients are to a firm is not actually universally known it seems. There is often an innate understanding of who they are however it is often not underpinned by any analysis.Even when there is, and a segmentation strategy has been developed and adopted, there is usually no consideration to the most important criteria of all:
“ does the client get it? ”
A key part of the rationale for client segmentation in the first place is to work out who warrants more of the business’ resources – who is worth investing more into? While it is absolutely logical to assess the importance of a client to the firm on the basis of their current or future potential monetary value to the business, I would question whether that is enough.Of course the financial value of the relationship matters: Investment in the most valuable relationships (current and potentially valuable) should be assessed on the basis of probable return for risk or effort undertaken. The same philosophy should be the primary consideration when it comes to client segmentation, with particular emphasis upon “probable return” over the anticipated life of the business. Those with the highest value to the firm become the highest category for service and attention. That is logical…but is it enough?A client who pays $10,000 per year today is generally assumed to be a higher quality (or higher category) client than one who pays $1,000 per year today. If however the $10k client simply doesn’t get the value of advice, or the value you can provide and treats the professional as little more than an order-taker then they are not probably worth as much as the $1k client who buys into the process and understands the value the adviser delivers.The first client is a transient…they might stay for some time, but then they are far more likely not to. You are probably “renting their business” in reality. You are a commodity to them. The second however is one who can become an advocate for the business with the right attention and investment of effort, even if their personal spending with your firm on services never rises to magnificent heights. That client is far more likely to generate a very good return for the investment of time, effort & resources because of the potential marketing value to your firm through introduction of other clients.Related: Why You Should You Be Marketing to Your Existing ClientsMost advisers do not appear to consider this when it comes to assessing the value of a client. The majority who do employ client segmentation strategies are still focusing on the immediate value, or cost, of the client rather than their future worth.