The Key Ingredient in Client
Satisfaction: Underpromise and Overdeliver
Like anyone else who operates a small service business, your word
is your bond with your clients. A client might tolerate a broken promise here
and there for a very good reason, but if the broken promises continue, the
client's trust in you will be lost, and in very short order you will lose the
client. Granted, things happen to you as a small business owner that are out of
your locus of control--a family member becomes ill, you lose electrical power (I
know about this one only too well!), or your computer crashes. So, on occasion,
there will be times when you won't be able to honor your word and you'll have no
control over that.
For all the other times, I employ a practice I learned about from the late
Thomas Leonard, founder of Coach
University and
Coachville. It's the principle of underpromise and overdeliver. As a small
service business owner, it can be challenging to juggle the needs and requests
of 10, 20, 30 or more clients simultaneously. My experience has been that
typically when the needs of one client slow down, the needs of another increase,
and somehow it all manages to balance itself out in the end. On a rare occasion,
though, it hits all at once, and that's when the beauty of this principle is
demonstrated.
When in conversation with a client, instead of projecting the quickest time I
might complete a consulting project, I give them a conservative estimate, taking
into account the worst-case scenario. Many clients will push you for an earlier
completion date; after all, they're excited about the project and want to see
results. Don't let them detract you from your underpromise and overdeliver
strategy. Almost always I deliver on what I have promised earlier than the time
projection I made to the client. When that happens, I emerge smelling like a
rose....my client thinks I have accomplished a great feat and have completed her
consulting job early! When I'm not able to finish something earlier than
projected and instead complete it by the date I initially gave my client, the
client still loves me. Why? Because I've continued to honor my word and done
what I said I would do in the time I said I would do it.
This is an incredibly powerful principle to use because it's tough for either
you or your client to lose under these conditions. What you're creating for
yourself is some wiggle room just in case things don't go according to plan for
one reason or another. In most of my conversations with clients, I'm fairly
certain that I'll finish before I say I will, but I don't want to paint myself
in a corner---just in case.. If something happens, like the
"worst-case-scenario", I'm still able to deliver at the time actually promised
to the client because I've built in some extra time for myself.
In the process, if you're really good and always deliver ahead of schedule, your
clients might wise up to your strategy and ask if you can finish something
sooner because "you always do". Don't let them box you in--still give a
conservative estimate and continue your practice of "underpromising and
overdelivering". You'll find it the quickest way of become a hero in the eyes
of your clients.
(c) 2008 Donna Gunter
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Online Business Resource Queen
(TM) and Online Business Coach Donna Gunter helps independent service
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on the Internet, and get more clients online. To claim your FREE gift,
TurboCharge Your Online Marketing Toolkit, visit her site at
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Ask Donna an Internet Marketing question at
http://www.AskDonnaGunter.com. Read about running an online biz at her blog,
http://www.GetMoreClientsOnlineblog.com.
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