PLANNING FOR A GOOD CLIENT RELATIONSHIP
As well as achieving the results promised in a proposal, Dick will have the aims of keeping the client happy throughout the work and establishing a good relationship so that TDH will be considered when the next requirement for outside help arises.
To this end, your planning should enable you to do the following:
1. Keep the client informed about progress: the plan should schedule regular progress meetings with the client to report on problems and successes, and future plans. Make sure you do not leave long gaps between reports, particularly at the start of the project and above all avoid unpleasant surprises for your client.
2. Whatever the rank of your client, not only do they have to be assured of the continuing success of your project but they also have to be able to assure their boss, colleagues and subordinates, some of whom may not be as enthusiastic. A well-informed client is able to refute rumour and, of course, will be more convinced that the project is being professionally run.
3. Allow yourself a safety margin in both consultant and calendar time for completing a project. It is embarrassing (and makes for poor client relations) if you have to increase the fees, or fail to meet deadlines.
4. Remember, too, that operating several assignments part-time is less efficient than a single full-time assignment (as encapsulated in the equation 2½ + 2½ = 5½ days/week).
5. Part-time operating has to be more carefully planned and organised than full-time; it wastes time, and it can be frustrating to visit a client and find the people you need to see are away.
6. Within a short time of the project starting, you should demonstrate some ‘quick successes’. A quick success consists of delivering a benefit to the client sooner than expected. In Dick’s case, he might find a way of reducing inventories of finished goods in a few areas. If this can be done very soon after starting, he will have shown his worth.
7. Aim to do a little more than was promised. This can vary from doing more on the project to providing help in other areas of the business. This has to be kept in check however — there are no points for providing so much extra in other areas that the original project falls behind.
8. Schedule your invoicing so that the client has a bill to pay when they have a sense of having received value from you, e.g. after delivering a report rather than before it.