-
When Clients are Your Biggest Problem
Posted on December 28th, 2009 Comments
We give seminars all over the country about feedback and it’s impact on professional services firms, their clients, and the industry. We often ask a fun question:
What is your biggest problem?
Every seminar we pose this question, a large percentage of the audience quickly and simultaneously chime in “THE CLIENTS!”
The audience says this in jest, but the notion is rooted in truth. Too many professionals have the attitude that it’s clients that make our life so difficult. That somehow, if we could just get the client out of the way, we could really do some good work. The client hires us to solve their problem, then we commandeer their problem and turn it into our project. No wonder why clients are our biggest challenge – they don’t care about our project at all! All they care about is their problem.
Whose agenda are we serving when we preempt the client and claim a project? Many architects are talking about “green” everything. Many try to be environmentally sensitive on all their projects – even if it costs more. Is that really what the client wants? Or, is your social conscience to save the planet costing your client the only “green” he cares about? Don’t get me wrong – green is good, and it often can save a lot of money. But if your client’s problem is a budget that’s too thin – green should only be a consideration where it saves him money. Use green strategies to solve his problems, not to create new ones!
The same thing applies with any variable on the project. Our preferences for quality, aesthetic, budget, social conscious – they really shouldn’t matter. In order to maximize our value to clients, we need to focus doggedly on their needs and preferences, not ours. We need to demonstrate an awareness of the client’s problem, and demonstrate that we care enough to solve it.
The thing is, we can’t actually know our clients’ preferences if we’re not asking! Even worse – their preferences change! Their problem is not static, but constantly shifting, evolving, and responding to a vast matrix of variables and external influences often beyond control. How can we possibly get the project right without constantly seeking to understand the evolving nature of the original problem as presented?
You can’t, of course. We need conversation, communication, and feedback throughout the project life-cycle. Feedback allows us to identify when we’ve gone off track and made the project ours. Feedback makes known the changing parameters of the client’s problem. Feedback keeps us focused on the client’s problem, let’s him see our focus, and truly maximizes our value.
Imagine what business would be like if we truly embraced the clients’ problems and became their expert problem solver, instead of just another problem they had to manage?
blog comments powered by Disqus



