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Entries in Client Service (4)

Wednesday
Dec022009

How to Lose a Client in 10 Days

Editor's note: this is a guest post from Kimberly Alford Rice of KLA Marketing Associates.

I recently attended the American Bar Association Law Practice Management Section’s Law Firm Marketing Strategies Conference at which numerous lawyers, marketing partners and other legal professionals from across the country gathered to learn how to integrate key marketing principals into their practices as the profession increasingly focuses on the essential aspect of marketing in the business of law, for both small and large law firms.

Some of the best minds in the law firm marketing arena presented an array of topics to broaden the thinking of how marketing is perceived and utilized in U.S. law firms and how practitioners can incorporate basic principals to strengthen their practices in the current economic climate.

Among one of the speakers was James King, in-house counsel of The Boeing Company in Ridley Township, Pennsylvania.  He introduced six ways lawyers can lose a client and steps to avoid those landmines.

First, advice sans counsel. Mr. King asserted that clients do not merely look to their lawyers for advice but rather their insights and wisdom into a particular problem.  It is more helpful to counsel a client on the full scope and implications of a problem and possible solutions than it is to simply tell someone what to do. There is a difference in perceived value from the client’s perspective.

Second, a quick way to lose a client is to demonstrate a lapse in integrity. Clients look to their lawyers to earn their trust through action, not just by their pedigree and resume. Once a client discovers she has not learned the complete and utter truth about a matter, regardless of how little or much is at stake, it is difficult to put the genie back in the bottle. Better to keep the lid on this one, real tight.

Third, one of the most frequent client complaints is that their lawyers fail to communicate with them.  Because there are so many means of communications available to us, it is a useful practice to speak directly with your clients regarding their preferred means of communications whether by telephone, email, mail, fax or some combination thereof. Whatever a client’s preference, adapt your communication style to respond to their needs. This will send a positive message that you are listening to your clients and that you genuinely care about nurturing the relationship.

Fourth, untimeliness is a common problem between lawyers and their clients, and is another way to prompt a client to look elsewhere for their legal services. Often in a corporate environment, in-house lawyers are required to make legal decisions by committee. A frequent complaint is that their outside counsel does not anticipate this process and, as a result, does not deliver work product in a timely fashion in order to meet their client’s needs and accommodate their process. This problem can easily be remedied with direct communication in connection with a client’s expectations of how and in what time frame they need to receive ongoing projects.

Fifth, “nickel and diming”.  We all can relate to this peeve.  How many times have you phoned your IT consultant regarding a seemingly simple computer glitch and subsequently received an invoice for a 15-minute consult.  Most clients expect their lawyers to invoice them for outstanding matters and communications, but it reflects poorly on the lawyer and his perception of the client-attorney relationship if he invoices a client for each and every time they have any contact. In an effort to build a long-term relationship with clients, lawyers would be well served to carefully monitor their billable time and resist the urge to bill for every 6 minutes.

In fact, a powerful way to communicate to clients the value you place on your relationship is to include in your monthly invoice one or two instances where you communicated with the client on a matter but did not charge her.  Show the time spent and then beside it, cite no charge.  Clients love feeling that they are receiving a few (valuable) minutes “off the clock” with their lawyer.

Sixth, tying into the communications theme above, clients appreciate receiving some form of “value-added” service through the lawyer’s usage of various marketing and communications tools such as newsletters, e-newsletters, legal alerts, blogging, or some other form of communications device. Not only as a means by which to stay abreast of relevant areas of law, clients appreciate hearing from their lawyer and law firm to learn how they are involved in the community, how they are positioned in the marketplace which may potentially lead to deeper connections for your client and their clients.

Lastly, while the six items described above can certainly lead a client to sever a relationship with her lawyer, it is safe to say that if lawyers heed the “Golden Rule” by treating others (in this case, your clients) as you would like to be treated (in a corporate sense, in this instance) fewer clients would decide to change teams, which is a loss to both lawyer and client.

Kimberly Alford Rice is Principal of KLA Marketing Associates, a business development advisory firm focusing on legal services.  As a veteran law marketer of twenty years, Kimberly has helped numerous law firms and hundred of lawyers develop critical business development and marketing strategies which lead to new clients and increased revenues

Wednesday
Dec102008

Consistency

"Law practice is like delivering newspapers: it's not enough to be good one, or even most days.  You've got to be good consistently."

When my wife and I graduated from law school, her first job was as an associate in the litigation department of a large corporate law firm in Boston.  In the early weeks of her employment there she attended a firm-wide meeting where the senior partner explained to the assembled lawyers his theory on client service:  law practice is like delivering newspapers.

The reason that lesson (which, I am embarrassed to say, took years for me to appreciate) came to mind today is because of some trouble I am having with a piece of software.  For the past several days, my RSS feed reader of choice (Google Reader) has been acting up due to a recent upgrade.  I am a Google loyalist and I love and use nearly all of Google's apps (mail, calendar, analytics, maps, Picasa, etc, etc) regularly.  In particular, I have been using Google Reader steadily for several years now. 

After the past few days of it only working inconsistently, though, I am very nearly ready to toss it overboard in favor of a different solution.  After years of great free service from Google, I am getting fed up with the app not working after a pretty short time. I'm not saying that I'm right to be fed up, only that I'm not too different from most people in this regard. There is a lesson here for anyone who serves clients for living:  the speed at which goodwill is earned is entirely disporportionate to the speed at which it is spent. After all, how long would you keep subscribing to a newspaper that isn't delivered on time?

Monday
Oct272008

Your Clients Are Your Most Effective Salespeople

John Jantsch, author of the Duct Tape Marketing Blog, posted a fantastic article this morning on exactly how to get your clients to become your most effective sales force (i.e., refer business to you directly and indirectly). Some of the things John says you need to do:

  1. Educate your clients -- so they recognize good potential clients to send your way.
  2. Get testimonials -- got a happy client?  Get a written, audio or video testimonial from her.
  3. Create a client community -- have a regular (quarterly, annual) event and invite all your clients to participate.

It's not a long post and well worth your time.  Just substitute "client" for "customer" and give it a read!

Monday
Sep292008

Try Not to Annoy Your Clients

Big day in Chapel Hill today.  A new Starbucks opened a few days ago and it is located right on the route that my wife and I (we carpool whenever possible) take to work. 

We decided to stop in on this Monday morning and tank up on some Starbucks coffee (no surprise to those of you who follow me on Twitter). It was about 7:30am when we dragged ourselves into the place.  (Yesterday was our 12th anniversary so we were out drinking celebrating with a bit more abandon than was probably prudent on a Sunday night.) 

We were greeted at the counter by an exceptionally bright-eyed and bushy-tailed barista.  Now, I generally like happy, enthusiastic people in life, but this chick was peppy with a capital "P" and had clearly been mainlining espresso for several hours.

As we handed over our reusable commuter mugs (it is a ticketable offense in Chapel Hill if you fail to use one of these and instead grab a paper cup) the barista fairly well screamed at us, "are you having a SUPER AWESOME TERRIFIC Monday?" 

As I restrained my wife from stuffing the peppy barista headfirst into one of the giant coffee grinders like a weirdly caffeinated variant on the ending of Fargo, it occurred to me that this is a lesson everyone in the service business (yes, that includes lawyers and bar association employees) needs to pay attention to:  try not to annoy your clients.

Whether you practice divorce law or work up collateralized debt obligations (and if this is your practice area, thanks for helping to destroy the economy, I never wanted to retire anyway) your clients come in to see you in a particular emotional state and frame of mind.  They may be depressed, nervous, angry, or even happy (do any of you practice happy people law?  What's that like?), and it is your job to understand that feeling and mirror it.

You don't need to go all crazy active listening ("what I hear you saying is, you'd like to kill your spouse and hide the body...") just get attuned enough so that your behavior doesn't annoy your client.  Be sensitive to the fact that while you may be having a great (or awful) day, your clients are having some kind of day of their own and don't need you harshing their mellow or, God forbid, trying to pep them up at 7:30 a.m.

Have a SUPER AWESOME TERRIFIC Monday!