Anyone who has been to Sonic knows what unmet
expectations feel like. If you’re a small business owner, you’ve probably come
to hate the verb “expect” more than any other word. Customers have a whole lot
of dreams about what you can deliver, and it’s all too easy to come up short
when someone has their eyes to the sky.
In the tech world, expectations are especially
killing. Terms like “the cloud” don’t help. Clouds are huge fluffy things that
float and take on a million, ever-changing forms, so you can’t blame people for
thinking that anything is possible in this industry. But when you’re operating
on a budget, you can’t fulfil every whim, so part of the responsibility—and
surely thrill—of owning a business is learning to set and then meet your
clients’ expectations.
Attract the right business
As the voice of your product, you have the power
to draw the kind of customers you want, and that starts with your brand. If you
spout yourself as a full-service operation that holds the customer’s hand from
start to finish, you need to deliver on that immediately to keep your clients
around. If you are more hands-off, you will be going after independent clients
who are up for do-it-yourself. Communicate who you are and stick to it. If
people are coming through the door with the wrong idea about you, you’re not
being loud enough.
Understand your clients
Once you gain someone’s business, the expectation
game really begins. You will get clients who love you (referrals, anyone?) and
clients who really… don’t. Treat them as case studies. Let them vent. Learn what
went wrong. These people will help you grow more than your biggest fans, even if
you end up losing their business. Biting the bullet and asking honestly, “Where
did we screw up?” will indulge them and enlighten you. To initiate these
conversations, you need a method of taking your clients’ temperature before
they’re fuming. Periodic check-ins, whether digital or in-person, give your
customers the sense that they’ve been heard, plus provide you with regular
insight on how you’re faring.
Transform your relationship
Feedback in hand, you can tweak away. The next
time you identify a “difficult” client, you will know where they came from and
what you could have done to make them happier. Sometimes it just isn’t meant to
be—tough people will slip through the cracks regardless of how accurately you
build your brand around your business. But more often than not, angry clients
are open to changing their minds if you give them the chance. Start by
empathising and end by advocating. Hear them out, then tell them exactly what
you will do to change their mind. Don’t tack on higher expectations than they
already have; give realistic solutions that you’re confident you can see
through. By taking control and forecasting your relationship, you begin moulding
it into one you both want, and this is where progress flourishes.
Rinse and repeat
When you lose a customer, treat it as an
opportunity to attract a better one. Armed with new knowledge about who you do
and don’t want to work with, you can revisit your branding, up proactive
communication, and apply the band aid when necessary. We all dream of being
comfortable enough to turn down customers we know aren’t a good fit, but for
most businesses that’s not an option. Instead, you’ll better yourself for next
time, and the time after that.
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