Client Service Lessons from Sports

I alluded in a previous post to the 2007 Women's World Cup call that allowed Japan to tie the game against England on a phantom call. I was thinking about it this weekend at my sons' soccer games. Like it or not, referees hold the power to determine the game's outcome. They can call (or not call) whatever they please.

Clients and client service are much the same way. Like it or not (here we go again!!), clients hold the "whistle," and they have the power to take their business elsewhere. Whether or not we agree with them, if we want to keep serving them we will listen to their wants.

Another analogy: It's rare to see a call successfully argued and reversed. The time to listen is before they blow their whistle on you!  

By the way, the refereeing was fabulous this weekend. Frankly, the referees are rarely the problem. It's the rose-colored glasses we as parents see through that create the problems. And frankly, clients are the same way: rarely unreasonable. Firms just need to take off those rose-colored glasses.

Good game, Nate and Sam. I'm really proud of you guys.

Generic Communications and the Human Touch

I really enjoyed JD Hull's post this morning about the loss of human touch. In talking about how we so frequently use e-mail now, he adroitly notes:

But what happened to voices, vibes, faces, bodies, winks, hand gestures, touching another's hand or shoulder impulsively, stares, grins, frowns, hand-written thank you notes, human electricity, NOT-typing, non-virtual joking, yelling, ragging and flirting, occasional confrontation, intimacy and the "god-in-the-room" magic that starts with two breathing humans in one real place.

A great reminder to not forget to connect with our clients on occasion. They'd probably enjoy having lunch with you, or having you stop by their office.

The women's World Cup 2007 is upon us. I watched the second half of the England-Japan game. It ended in a 2-2 tie on what can literally be described as a last-second goal. Worse, on a phantom call that allowed Japan to tie it. Credits to the Japanese player for a beautiful shot in the corner, but England got ripped off. There just was no foul there. To the utter disregard of my post, I'm going to e-mail one of my favorite customers who comes from England. :-)

The US goalie to the right, Hope Solo, comes from my home state (Washington) and played ball for the UW. Sorry for the shameless promotion.

Treating Clients Differently

A great post by Seth Godin on treating clients differently. It has a direct bearing on client service. Every client is different. If we treated everybody the same we probably haven't taken the time to ask how that client wants to be treated.

It's okay to treat clients differently. In fact, it's fine to give preferential treatment to key clients. I'd be nervous if my bank treated me just the same as it treated Bill Gates. Would I really want to trust my money to an organization devoid of any business smarts?

I wish churches would figure this out. When you treat every congregant the same, you really only treat some right and the rest get left behind, or end up leaving. (David Murrow's book, Why Men Hate Going to Church, is a great read for those interested in the topic). No more holding hands across the aisles; the perfect sermon length: 20 minutes; if you have more than one drummer who can join the worship team, they should arm wrestle--the loser plays.  :-) 

Oh yeah, there are wrong answers. And it's a virtue for someone to care enough to confront you on it. But I've digressed.

Client Service and Asking for Business

Tom Kane's recent post touches on a nerve for most lawyers: asking for business. He closes with this comment:

The point is that there ways that lawyers can ask for work in a professional manner that doesn't involve groveling. It is part of the closing process that comes with business development.

I really do not disagree with his post. In fact, I highly recommend reading it. I'm going to offer my naive opinion, though, that the firm that really gets client service right will at least ask less often than others. Clients will want them to handle their additional work badly enough that they'll often ask.

Serving Your Ideal Client

A very interesting post by Jim Hassett on defining your ideal client. Good advice, and worth reading. I'm no expert on that side of it by any stretch. But a thought comes to mind as it relates to client service.

When I was in high school, I received a great piece of advice relating to girls. While my memory of those years is fading (at least my confidence that I remember them accurately), I can recall my share of crushes on the good-looking young ladies. And there were a few that were interested in me that I deemed sub-par. The advice, simply put, was even if there's a girl that's less than attractive, and you're just not interested in her, be very, very nice to her. She almost certainly has "hot" friends.

Time has shown  that advice to be true. Very true.

Even if you have a client that you're not particularly keen about, or is 165 degrees off from being your ideal client, as long as they're your client, serve them well. They may have "hot" friends.