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The unspoken laws of client engagement

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15th Sep 2009
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Coaching experts Michael Bungay Stanier and Daniel Stane share their top tips for keeping your clients' attention.

If it’s important for you and those in your organisation to maintain and strengthen relationships with people outside your organisation, then having a number of simple but powerful skills and approaches can make a real difference.

In this short article, we’ll share two coaching approaches that were part of the 'Coaching for Great Work' programme we ran with a global consulting firm. These approaches helped their consultants strengthen the relationships with the clients that mattered (and got them to renew their contracts), and not over-serve the clients that were less important to the firm.

The unspoken contract

You already know the not-so-secret contract you have with your clients. It’s the list of deliverables: I’ll do this, and you’ll pay me that. So far, so straight-forward, and so transactional. However, there’s a secret contract that is rarely spoken about. It talks not about the 'what' but about the 'how'. It addresses the relationship between client and provider and considers how both sides might best work together for mutual satisfaction. Make no mistake, bringing this up is something of a courageous act. The temptation is to rush into the 'doing' of it all, or continually try to impress and reassure with our persuasive promises.

Leading management thinker Peter Block sums it up when he says that people "know when we are trying to manoeuvre them, and when it happens they trust us a little less. Lower trust leads to lower leverage and lower client commitment". Sure, this is a personal and perhaps vulnerable conversation and it can feel like it’s never quite the right time to ask but a willingness to step back and ask about how you want to work together can be transformational. There are two moments when this can be particularly powerful.

First, before you start a project (or a phase of a project) rather than jump to the details ask, ‘can we just talk for a moment about how we’d best like to work together?’ Then, try out some of these questions (listed here in increasing levels of getting to the heart of the relationship):

  • When you’ve worked with someone in this type of relationship before, what worked best and what didn’t work so well? (Then answer the questions yourself)
  • When things start to go wrong (and they probably will somewhere along the line), how do you react? What’s the unilateral action you take? (Don’t forget to answer the question yourself)
  • How do you feel about the amount of power you have in this relationship and over the project? (Then – you guessed it – answer it yourself)

The other powerful place to talk about the secret contract is at the end of a conversation or meeting, e.g. ‘Before we finish up here, let me ask you, how was this for you? What was most useful? What should we do differently next time?’ (Remember to share your answers too.) When handled sensitively, these discussions will help deepen the relationship and move you away from being just another transactional 'solution provider'.

Don’t jump in with an answer

Albert Einstein once said: “If I had an hour to save the world, I would spend 59 minutes defining the problem and one minute finding solutions”. With a bias towards action and busyness in most organisations, a lot of time gets spent on problems or projects that don’t matter. Stopping our clients from rushing in, by encouraging them to step back and figure out what the real challenge is, saves time, money and resources. Here are three tactics you can use right away and ‘in the moment’ with clients:

  • Make them choose: When the client reels off a whole string of issues and problems, it can be tempting to go with the one we feel we can solve best. Resist the urge to impress and instead put the onus on them and ask: 'Which of these issues is most important?'
     
  • Own the challenge: A client can become vague and too general in talking about a concern – as if it is really someone else’s. Pin them down and uncover their agenda by asking: 'What’s the challenge here for you?' The last two words here help ensure you hit on something nearer to home.
     
  • Don’t be seduced by the story: When you are 'actively' listening to a story that seems to meander forever without hitting you with the relevant points, you need to step in – no matter how interesting it might be. Time is of the essence and you need to allow space for your input and the next part of the discussion. Interject with a polite but firm ‘before you go further’, or ‘let me stop you for a moment’.

Michael Bungay Stanier is the senior partner of Box of Crayons, an organisation that helps firms do less good work and more great work. Michael is Australian, was a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford University and now lives in Canada where he was the 2006 Canadian Coach of the Year. Box of Crayons’ flagship product is the Coaching for Great Work programme.

Daniel Stane is a director of The Acumen Company, a specialist in measurable behavioural improvement for corporate people managers and leaders and a UK partner for the Coaching for Great Work programme. With a background in international sales for one of the world’s largest manufacturers, Daniel is now a regular columnist, speaker, coach and facilitator on leadership development, employee engagement, emotional intelligence and organisational change.

For more coaching tips and advice, visit our sister site, TrainingZone.co.uk.

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