High-quality voice dialogue between clients and their relationship partners remains rare. Only 21% of clients report a high-quality ongoing dialogue with their main partner outside of a matter-related discussion. This leaves a lot of room to develop client relationships.
But outside attorney reluctance to call runs rampant. Here are the top 17 reasons why:
-
-
The Matter Is Over
Relationships extend beyond matters, but only if you build and nurture them along. Voice dialogue is the fertilizer to grow a matter-based relationship into an ongoing client relationship.
-
-
-
Who Has Time?
Making time brings a double benefit. Voice dialogue not only builds relationships and new business — it provides a mental refresh when you discuss new topics and learn about your clients. Top rainmakers build client calls and conversations into their daily life.
-
-
-
I Need to Update Myself On Their Matters Before I Call
Best to call clients and learn what they need and are concerned about before preparing for everything you think might come up — especially if they have a topic not on your list. Clients are fine with you calling back with answers.
-
-
-
They Don’t Want to Hear From Me
Clients get new ideas from these conversations. New ideas often arise from sharing small points of view — then grow. They will pop up at unpredictable times and even during different conversations.
-
-
-
If They Need Me They Will Call Me
Why take the risk the call intended for you is intercepted by someone else who is calling to initiate dialogue.
-
-
-
It’s Not My Relationship
Coordinate with your team — make a plan for you or someone else to be calling and talking to this client.
-
-
-
Email Is So Much Easier
Email is great — but it’s not personal enough to initiate the informal chatter proven to bring out context and other subtleties.
-
-
-
What Would We Talk About?
You can talk about the myriad new issues corporate counsel face — or ask how they are doing. Ask about their pressures and priorities. Make yourself a list of questions or see our blog post on the lost art of calling clients here.
-
-
-
I Don’t Know My Clients That Well
Calling clients is the antidote. The first call will get the ball rolling.
-
-
-
It’s a Good Day When You Don’t Hear From Your Attorney
A standard joke often embraced as reality. Clients want to hear from their trusted attorneys, both the good and the bad — and your interest in understanding them.
-
-
-
I Don’t Know Who Is Running the Show Over There
Start with the people with whom you work most closely.
-
-
-
Not Sure Who to Call
Again, start with the people with whom you work most closely.
-
-
-
Don’t Want to Call the Wrong Person and Insult Anyone
Like 11 and 12, start with individuals you know best — if you know more than one — call them all in a proximate time frame.
-
-
-
They Are Never In the Office
Leave a message and/or send an email asking to set up a call. Include why you want to talk.
-
-
-
They Never Answer Their Phone
Every corporate counsel checks their messages. Like 14, leave a message and send an email with the detailed reason you want to talk.
-
-
-
I Don’t Know Their Direct Dial
Call whatever number you have or start with the main number. Send an email. Check their email signature.
-
-
-
They Will Think I Am Trying to Sell Them Something
Share a detailed explanation of your purpose in calling — share an agenda. The specifics behind your call will alleviate this concern.
-
There is no shortage of reasons not to call and initiate voice-based communication to drive high-value dialogue. The attorneys delivering the best client service (and booking more new business than most) all engage clients by voice regularly. They make time — and will tell you the rewards dwarf the investment — and they enjoy each and every conversation.
Best in the market ahead.
MBR
The Mad Clientist