I lead our team of online marketing consultants at Compendium. Giving direct advice in a way that the client is receptive to can be challenging for any consultant. This presentation was part of a training session designed to help our team learn to give advice to clients that they need to hear, but may not want to hear.
3. Can I trust you? Are you committed to excellence? Do you care about me? Do you know what you are talking about? Questions 1-3 from Lou Holtz
4. “When retaining a professional, what you (and your clients) want is someone who understands your interests and will not put their interests ahead of yours while working for you. You want someone you can trust to do the right thing. You want someone who will care. Getting hired (and rehired) is about earning and deserving trust.” from The Trusted Advisor – pg. 17
6. Consultants fail when they: Fail to understand the client’s goals and perspective Avoid uncomfortable conversations Tell the client what they want to hear instead of what they need to hear Don’t help the client deal with internal politics
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8. 2 ways to provide advice to clients Socratic: This method helps a client “discover” a recommendation through questioning. It is typically the preferred way to provide advice as the client has the opportunity to appreciate the reasoning process that led to the advice. The Socratic method involves the client in the development of the recommendation, which is a strength. Direct: In this method we directly offer our advice.
10. 3 conditions that must be satisfied in order to “Earn the Right to Offer Advice” Understanding the client’s situation Understanding how the client feels about it Convincing the client that we understand both of the previous two items from The Trusted Advisor – pg. 43
11. Consultative Questions Seek to Understand Business Goals What do they want to achieve? What is motivating the goal? Why is that important? Personal Impact: How will this affect them personally? Why is that important to them?
12. How to recognize when direct advice is appropriate? Always seek to understand the client first. If a client asks for your recommendation or thoughts, ask the client to clarify the question first. Do not answer until you know why the question was asked. Deal with issues not symptoms. With that said…… If the client repeats the question verbatim…that is the question
13. Simple Rules for Providing Recommendations: Listen first, don’t jump to conclusions Demonstrate that you understand the client’s position Be honest Be direct Be clear Ask the client to provide their understanding of your advice Set reasonable expectations Set clear objectives and next steps with each other Follow-Through
14. Consultants succeed when they: Understand the client’s goals and perspective Address uncomfortable issues and emotional situations Tell the client what they need to hear instead of what they want to hear Help the client deal with internal politics
16. If you sense tension….”name it and claim it” Acknowledge the difficulty of raising the issue Accept the responsibility for raising the issue State the issue itself directly from The Trusted Advisor – pg. 112
17. Put the thing you are afraid of in front of the advice - Charles Green Name it and claim it: I am afraid this may upset you…, but you asked me to help you and I think we need to…. Before we continue, it sounds like you are frustrated. Can we talk about that? I know this makes both of us uncomfortable, but…..
18. When dealing with difficult issues always be collaborative: How do you think we can…. How could we get them to join us…. What do we need to do to….
19. 4 Steps to Give Direct Advice: Seek to understand first Demonstrate that you understand and seek confirmation Tell the client what they need to hear, not what they want to hear (start with “name it and claim it” and end collaboratively) Confirm that the client understands your advice and ask the for the client’s thoughts about your advice
20. Thank you! Frank Dale Vice President Operations Follow me @frankcdale