relationship building

Client Retention – Building Relationships is Critical to Keeping Clients

How often have you heard that relationship building is the key to client retention and acquisition? We know we have trouble counting the number of times we’ve read about it. Guess that means it’s important, huh?

Of course, this begs the question of how you build relationships online, as well as person-to-person.

After all, and as we’ve often claimed and continue to believe, the internet is as impersonal a place as can be imagined. By its very nature, it is completely indifferent to your wants and needs and, while it has value to all of us, we have no value at all to it.

Now that we have the metaphysics of our online world out of the way, what does all of this mean when it comes to doing business online?

The simple answer is – it is entirely up to you to learn how to build relationships with your clients and prospects as the foundation of your online marketing strategy. To do this, you will need to understand what compels them to search for solutions in such an unforgiving environment and let them know that you can be trusted to help them.

Clearly, this is no small task.

client retention

Sustain and Grow Client Relationships

Thankfully, we’ve found help for you (and us!).

In an article at Business.com, editor and author Chad Brooks keys us in on how to get this done: “The most important thing in marketing is to retain your most profitable business customers.”

While Mr. Brooks offers a dozen or so valuable ideas to help small businesses improve client retention, we will focus your attention on those we believe to be the most valuable. Our hope is that these will resonate with you and inspire you to follow the link above for more.

  • Continually evaluate your market and network – Research your customers’ markets, needs, and goals. Big data analysis tools should be part of your sales team’s planning. Market trends shift often, and you need to know what strategies to employ to increase shares or enter new markets. Engage customers in product development and enhancement via beta tests, focus groups, and pilot programs. Learn their business habits, purchasing patterns, and requirements for effective proactive solutions.

  • Use a CRM system – A Client Relationship Management system stores client and potential client data in a format that is digestible by your team. It also monitors things such as customer satisfaction and may provide overviews of sales and other metrics. Typically cloud-based, these programs help businesses organize customer relationships and facilitate interactions.

Since existing clients are your most valuable asset, it is critical to your ongoing success that you understand them on both an organic (i.e., in-person) and digital level (i.e., the metrics).

  • Communicate relevant information regularly and effectively – Keep in touch with existing clients with targeted emails and newsletters. Update customers on industry trends potentially affecting them and give your take on upcoming issues. Let them in on your visions for their (and your) success, and then explain your take on achieving it.

Social media is a great connector, so use it wisely to keep communication channels open. However, making a person-to-person connection means much more. Be a person, not a talking head on a website. Humanity trumps digital every time.

  • Be accessible and responsive – Talk and listen to customers to maintain a dialogue and build a trust-based relationship. Make it easy for customers to reach you. When they contact you, make it a point to return calls and emails promptly. Implement a customer satisfaction policy that provides a way to resolve and remedy problems and issues. Provide support, service, advice, and information. Train team members on how to manage calls efficiently and effectively so customers have their concerns addressed no matter whom they reach at your business.

  • Become the “Go-To” person in your market – Develop skills and knowledge that make you an authority for your customers. A reputation for expertise means the ability to provide valuable resources to clients unobtainable elsewhere, especially your knowledge. Look for ways to add value, be a real partner, and help your customers achieve results. Provide guidance even when there is little chance it will mean any immediate business gain for you. Doing so almost always pays off down the road.

  • Redefine your concept of who and what a client is – Clients are much more than a roster of potential purchasers of products and services. Retaining customers requires fostering long-term relationships over pursuing short-term money-making possibilities. Recast the relationship as more of an extended partnership. Then be prepared to meet client needs by adjusting your business services as necessary.

Existing Clients are More Likely to Buy Again

There’ are a few reasons we are so focused on client retention. Based on the latest market research, designers and furnishing dealers will do themselves a favor if they can devise ways to retain or reengage existing and past clients. Why?

  • New clients are 7x more expensive to acquire than keeping or reengaging existing or past clients.

  • Probability of converting an existing customer is between 60% &70%.

  • Probability of converting a new client is just 5% to 20%.

  • Repeat clients spend an average of 33% more than new clients.

  • Repeat clients are 60% to 70% more likely to buy an up-sell.

These are just a few of the reasons that re-engaging and working to establish customer loyalty is critical to the growth of your business.

Clearly, there is work to be done to improve the future of your business. There is also further guidance available if you choose to use it. Ted remains available for business consulting to the trade. We think he is a master at both relationships with clients and retaining them. So, feel free to… Contact him at TD Fall today..

Are Client Referrals the Best Way to Grow a Design or Furnishings Business?

client referrals.jpg

Perhaps second only to working with previous satisfied clients, gathering referrals from them will likely be the best way to garner new business. Whether a luxury furnishings store or interior designer, happy customers are usually eager to share their positive experiences with friends and family. So, use them to get client referrals as often as you can.

A marketing plan that does not include asking for referrals, especially in a service-oriented business like interior design, is incomplete. Yet, just like “asking for the sale” during a presentation, many designers neglect this step in relationship building. And, not to be left out, many furnishings salespeople do the same.

Turns out, online reviews and testimonials have nearly the same power as direct referrals from clients; that is, a recommendation to people they know.

“Did you know that 97% of consumers regularly read reviews before choosing to work with a business? Did you further know that almost all of those consumers trust online reviews and give them as much weight as a personal recommendation from someone they actually know?” (Podium.com)

Value of Online Reviews and Testimonials

  • Expand Your Online Footprint – From your website to review sites (e.g., Houzz.com), online reviews and client testimonials are fantastic reputation builders. In fact, recent research shows that positive customer reviews make 73% of customers trust a business more. And, of 74% of customers who were asked to provide feedback, 68% were willing to do it.

  • Learning to Ask is the Hard Part – Make asking for a client review part of the process by mentioning reviews at the beginning, middle, and end of every project so it will become a habit. This will also make it more difficult for a satisfied client to refuse your request (for whatever reason).

  • Manage Your Reputation Online – Reputation management is a big deal these days because everyone is online where impressions can last forever. A bad review can cause lasting damage and may be very hard to remove. Instead, respond to negative reviews immediately with a request for more info or a call. Then, get busy asking your best clients for a positive testimonial to counter the “bad press”.

  • Create a Testimonials Page – Websites without a page full of client testimonials are incomplete. Just like before and after images of your design projects, testimonials offer “social proof” that you're good at what you do. They can also offer the big plus of telling prospects that you're easy to work with. (So, best advice – BE easy to work with!)

  • Get Direct Referrals – Asking for reviews and testimonials should be a given but, you also need to ask former clients for names. Your goal here should be to get the names and contact info of people your client knows; people who respect their opinion and who will be open to your approach. Make sure to ask them if it will be OK for the referred prospect to call and ask for more information about you too. This could be critical to landing that lead as a client.

Follow-up is Critical (As Is a “Thank You”)

Whether an online review, testimonial, or direct client referral, showing your gratitude proves that you value the relationships you have with your clients. At a minimum, a big fat “Thank You” is called for, though many business owners offer a reward for a direct referral. This may be something as simple as a gift card or if the referral has enough value, a discount on future work.

Finally, make all reviews available to prospective clients to showcase your credibility and experience as a pro, and include them in any prospective client welcome materials. And yes, it’s perfectly OK to proof and edit for typos and such. (In fact, it’s highly recommended as further reputation protection.)

Looking for more tips on sustainable design trends, designer marketing tips, and product ideas? Get in touch with TD Fall today.

Designing Your Design Business – Successful Designers Business Model

designers business model

designers business model

While it would be unethical to copy the work of a more successful interior designer, learning from a successful designers business model makes perfect sense – and does not present the question of ethics.In his latest article for BusinessOfHome.com, columnist Maury Riad presents a glimpse of just such a business model and offers it as a guide for both fledgling and established designers to follow on the path to lasting success.While it should go without saying that clarity of focus and organization are two of the most crucial business principles every design business should follow, many designers struggle to achieve them. If profitability depends on performance at every level, and it does, then building a cost-effective process for implementing the work you do is crucial.3 (+1) Characteristics of a Successful Design BusinessSo, where does Mr. Riad focus his attention?

  1. Operational Procedures – “The big difference that I’ve noticed between a designer who is just starting out and a more established studio lies in their operational procedures. It may sound obvious, but a major key to any design firm’s success is business practices that are organized, efficient, and thorough. Where working with a new designer may require a lot of back and forth about a handful of purchase orders or invoices, an established, profitable firm can juggle thousands of these processes at any given time.”

  2. Vendor Relationships – “Profitable designers know how to leverage their vendors as extensions of their teams to get their work done. Any given design firm works with a wide range of vendors – whether they provide fabric, furniture, or flooring – and knowing what their vendors can do for them is crucial to their success.”

  3. Elevated Design Opportunities – “The whole impetus behind hiring an interior designer – besides having someone else do the legwork for you – is the idea that they can find the decor that clients can’t achieve themselves. This ties back into maintaining good relationships with your vendors… [and] involves knowing who to go to and what to ask for. The right pieces or components elevate your design above the ubiquitous DIY aesthetic that is so popular today – and are the reason your clients will seek you out.”

What’s the +1 Design Business Characteristic?While each of these business characteristics of successful designers is vitally important to your success, we would add:

  1. Contractor Relationships – The contractors and subs you work within any design project can make or break your business. These folks will often have more direct contact with your client than you do, which makes the relationship you have with them critically important. Building positive relationships with talented and committed contractors foster loyalty toward you – investing them in the success of your design business because they know that their success is dependent on yours.

While most of these characteristics of aa successful design business may seem obvious, the truth is that many designers struggle to craft and implement something that matches the most successful designers business model. By focusing on these four areas of your business, you are far more likely to enjoy long-term success.Are you looking for more tips on designing your design business, new home design trends, designer marketing tips, and product ideas? Get in touch with TD Fall today.

Designing Your Design Business – Your Design Studio is a Good Investment

design studioDoes it still make sense to invest your hard-earned revenue in a design studio when online shopping has become so popular? In a word, yes.In a previous post, we shared the importance of designing a strategic business plan for your business. Here, we argue that investing in a design studio should be an integral part of that plan; a comfortable and stylish place to schedule face-to-face meetings with potential clients, as well as a beautiful space that allows you to share your vision with them.The reason for this is simple: despite the popularity of internet shopping, and your concurrent need for a quality website to showcase your talent, potential clients will want to touch and feel samples while also meeting you personally. You also get to know them better and both of you will benefit from engaging in an environment that promotes building a relationship.This is simply impossible to accomplish in the impersonal world of the internet.Brick-and-Mortar Locations Remain Valuable Client Acquisition ToolsIn a recent article at BusinessOfHome.com, editor-at-large Maury Riad makes a compelling case that traditional brick-and-mortar design centers remain important to vendors in the age of internet shopping.If that is true, then investing in a design studio also remains important to interior designers, for some of the same reasons:

  • Brand building – Building your brand, a unique identity within your market, is difficult to do in an environment that is flooded with competitors from around the world (as the internet is). On the other hand, a well-designed retail location puts you right in front of clients and potential clients. Being able to see and speak with you directly will only enhance your brand as one of the few designers willing to make such an effort – and investment.
  • Reputation enhancement – Like building your brand, building your reputation in a highly competitive marketplace is difficult in the extreme. In-person contact with potential clients, and being available to existing and past clients, ensures that you will be seen as a designer who is committed to customer service and satisfaction. And, since interior design is above all things a local business, enhancing your reputation locally offers massive potential for success.
  • Relationship building – Building relationships is critical to your long-term success as a designer. We’ve said it before (here) and will say it again: repeat customers are more valuable than new customers since they are more likely to buy from you and are less costly to engage, offering you a far greater ROI. Your design studio is the perfect place to re-engage with them and build a lasting relationship that can lead to future work for them. It’s a win/win for both of you.
  • Vendor support – Vendors love to support interior designers who feature their furnishings in their design studio. They tend to offer better pricing and larger discounts, sneak previews of new designs, priority shipping, enhanced payment terms, and even cash-back promotions that can help reduce overhead. Such vendor support can be invaluable to your business and you should take advantage of these types of relationships whenever possible.
  • Community involvement – Being seen as an integral part of your community will automatically build brand recognition, enhance your reputation, and leads to great relationships and profitable networking opportunities. It is also fulfilling on both a professional and personal level. Get involved and make your mark in your community, if you hope to have long-term success.

While it may seem to make sense that the expense of maintaining a design studio in the internet age flies in the face of logic, for the reasons listed above, and more, a brick-and-mortar location makes perfect sense for the success of your design business.Looking for more tips on designing your design business, new home design trends, designer marketing tips, and product ideas? Get in touch with TD Fall today.