Monday, April 27, 2020
Client Inquiries 101 A How-To Guide To Knocking It Out Of The Park - When I Grow Up
Client Inquiries 101 A How-To Guide To Knocking It Out Of The Park - When I Grow Up Girl, youâve got yourself a client inquiry? Thatâs GREAT! Now what? First donât freak out (unless itâs a happy dance). Client inquiries mean someone found you on their own time, took interest in your service(s), and want to know more. It means they see you and with any luck, theyâre ready for you and your kick-butt business, too! For a lot of first-time creative business owners, the initial on-boarding process for new clients might feel clunky. Establishing the âwhatâ and âhowâ of working together is key to ensuring you and your client have a successful relationship. The truth is: how you handle/respond to client inquiries is the first step to making a good impression *and* streamlining that process. Fortunately, I know a few ways to make it smooth as silk and easy as pie. Hereâs how to tackle client inquiries and ultimately come across as super profesh with your (potential) new clients. Step #1: Create a client inquiry form for your âWork With Meâ page Listen to me very carefully because I cannot stress this enough: Make a client inquiry form. Seriously. Do it. Put it as a call-to-action on your âWork With Meâ page and make sure itâs available on any packages and offers, too. Ask for their name and email address along with these three questions: âWhat do you need help with?â If you have multiple offers, this might be a drop-down menu. Or, you can leave it as a âfill-in the blank.â This allows the client to vocalize what they want out of working with you so A.) Theyâre clear on their expectations B.) Youâre clear on their expectations and C.) You can assess right away how â" and/or if! â" youâre able to solve their problem. âHow did you find out about me?â This is helpful for so many reasons! First, if they were referred to you by someone, youâll want to know who so you can thank that person and tap them again as a resource. Secondly, it might point you to your strongest marketing strategies (like social media campaigns or Google), so you can capitalize on and amplify them! âWhat is your location?â (if necessary!) If your services require you to be in the same geographical location or timezone as your clients, this is key and maybe not immediately obvious to ask about! And here are two more Qâs that could be worthwhile, too: âWhat are your biggest roadblocks?â (as they pertain to your industry/line of work) Again, this will further help you drill down on how you can help them and then respond with the best suggestion. Itâll also be a good way to see whether they need a different type of solution than what you offer. Sense a theme here? Each of these questions is not only designed for you to give this prospective client your best, most helpful response but not ensure youâre working with your right people. Win-win! âWhy do you think I might be the right person to help you with this?â This will tell you if they even read your website and forces them (in a nice way!) to sell themselves to you, too. Youâll know right away if you and this person are a right fit based on how they respond to this question, and whether theyâve read your services page! ***If you have yet to get this form up on your site (hereâs an example for ya!) and are responding to a more general email that says, âHi I think we could work together, can you tell me more?â (which almost every inquiry will say if youâre just sending them to a general name/email/message form) you can simply start by asking them to respond to these questions so you can learn more about them! Step #2: Answer the inquiry with your best solution (i.e. offer) Now that you have the details on what their pain points are and what theyâre hoping to get out of working together, you have the luxury of combing over their particulars and deciding if you want to help at all. If so, respond with exactly what you think you can do for them for them whether itâs the offer they filled out the form for or something you need/want to customize for them and what the expected results would be. (Itâs all about the value, baby!) If itâs clear to you after reading their responses that you are not the right fit, you can simply respond with a kind message letting them know your gut says thereâs a better match made in business heaven somewhere else for them. Then, if you have âem, send along any referrals or references that could help them!!! (â" Great opportunity to promote someone else in your network and sweeten that industry connection.) Step #3: Be sure to include next steps AND a deadline to act This is key. Once youâve established youâre a match, donât leave them hanging! Make it easy for them to sign up to work with you by directing them to exactly what you need in order to make things final (payment details, contracts, etc.). Additionally, give them a due date. Adding a sentence like, âI will save your spot for 48 hoursâ promotes action on their part and will ultimately help finalize the sale and start the process so they (and you!) can start working towards the pay off! Final tip: If you have someone on the fence who feels they need a little bit more clarification/face-time/lip-service before they can pull the trigger, get comfortable offering a 15-minute consultation phone call. All they might need is to hear your friendly helpful voice and have some of their bigger questions answered in real time. You can also get creative with how you respond to larger questions via email by including voice memos or Loom videos theyâve been a gamechanger for me and add a high-end, personal touch to all your responses. Hereâs the SWEET BONUS: Client inquiries also serve as an opportunity for continued evolution on your elevator pitch, practice on how you communicate about yourself and your business, and to fine-tune your business operations, processes, and systems. Nothing is as confidence-boosting as understanding what your clients need and knowing you can help them, you amazeballs boss, you. Loving this refresher and feeling like your client base could use some more love all around? Jump on my Build Your Client Base interest list ASAP. By filling out the interest form, youâll get early access to the limited number of spots in this program on June 13th thatâs tomorrow!
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