Grant Hicks, CIM
In real estate, it
is location, location, location. In practice management, it is process,
process, process. What is your process for ideal clients in a progress
update meeting? How can you enhance your client’s experience at your
meetings? What keywords do you use on your agenda’s? Instead of the word
reviews, use a progress update.
Create an agenda with time blocks
Creating agendas are what top financial professionals use to enhance their
client experience to ensure that all areas of your client’s comprehensive
financial and investment plan are covered and discussed. Do you add to the
agenda hidden areas that may have been forgotten, such as estate planning,
tax planning, wealth management or other investment planning ideas? Do you
put on the agenda possible time frames for these discussion points to keep
the meeting on track? Time blocking key activities will help you and your
ideal clients focus on the key areas to cover, and not get off focus in a
meeting talking about something that can be done at a later meeting or
time. By adding these three keywords will help your practice implement key
practice management processes into your business.
The three keywords are 1. Events 2. Communication and 3. Feedback
These processes will help you build world-class communication strategies, gain
valuable feedback and clone your best clients. Here is how these practice
management processes work.
The first keyword to put on agendas is events.
Imagine starting a meeting with your ideal client inviting you to an event
or referring you to another ideal client? How do you think the rest of the
meeting will go? Events are the way wealthy clients want to meet their
potential financial advisor or new financial professional. Your clients are
meeting financial advisors at events all the time. What events are you or
your wealthy clients involved in? What is near and dear to their heart such
as a charity or children’s event that you could be involved in? Top
advisors target their ideal client by strategic networking or introductions
from their clients. Getting personally involved and personally introduced
to those high net worth clients through strategic events will help you meet
your next ideal client. Making it a process for your top clients by asking
them what I call “ the golden question”.I like working with retired pilots
like you. If I were to meet a group of retired pilots, where would I go to
meet them and how would I meet them?
Get involved
Wealthy people are out at events 3-4 nights of the week helping others,
their community and causes they are passionate about. Do you know what they
are involved in? Ask ” is there any events this year that you are involved
that is near and dear to your heart?’ Small events (less than 20 people or
10 couples) can be a great way to meet people through favorable introductions.
Align your practice with your client's interests, and see what happens.
Communication
First, asking clients how they want to communicate and find out their
expectations (not creating expectations) when it comes to communication.
Communication has dramatically changed over the past three years, does your
client want a different experience when it comes to communication. Ask five
clients “how” questions: How satisfied are you with our communication to
you? How can we improve our communication with you (and your family )? How
would you change our communication? One advisor, I worked with found over
100 hours of time in a calendar year by asking these questions. His clients
wanted 2-hour reviews twice a year ( 4 hours per year) instead of quarterly
reviews ( 8 hours per year), creating a win-win experience. The real answer
to better communication is always in your questions. Research by Business
Health Pty Ltd. In Australia, ( key value drivers USA advisors) states that
your best clients want up to 10 personalized touches ( communications) per
year. Only 38% of advisors do 10 touches per year, and they earn up to 68%
more than advisors who communicate less than 10 times per year. What is
your process for 10 touches or communications per year to your best
clients?
Feedback
Have you created a formal feedback process? According to Business Health
Pty Ltd. In Australia, one of the most disappointing statistics of practice
management is that only 15% of financial advisory practices in the US and
Australia have sought feedback from their very best clients. ( www.businesshealth.com.au ) How you do feedback is up
to you. However, put it on your agenda and make it part of your process.
You can ask questions, send a detailed survey or questionnaire, or do a
feedback forum with clients. But you must do some form of client feedback,
ask key questions and make it a process for your top clients. Advisors who
do feedback on a regular basis earn more than advisors who don’t ( up to
33% more) according to research by “Business Health Pty Ltd”. Your best
opportunity to create a unique client experience is to ask for feedback and
manage the discussion with the client. This is what I call advisors blind
spot. You can not create and continually enhance an ideal client experience
without constant feedback.
Keep the agenda simple
Keep the agenda simple. Have a bullet point list of items to discuss. Ask
the client before you begin if there is anything else to add to the agenda,
or consider sending it before the meeting. Then you can direct the meeting
by starting at the top of the list or you can ask the client where they
would like to begin. The big truth is that time is far more valuable than
money. The agenda will make time together in your meeting more valuable.
Now you get to implement three key practice management processes,
communication, feedback and meeting new ideal clients.
“If you aren’t fired with enthusiasm, you’ll be fired with enthusiasm”.
Vince Lombardi
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