Bissett Bullet: Expertise Is Too Valuable to be Given Away for Free

Today’s Bissett Bullet: “When we can listen to our prospective client’s issues without giving away all the answers in our replies, we’ve got a chance of winning work.”

By Martin Bissett

It’s one of the hardest things to do in a professional selling situation. We want to oust the current accountant, we want to explain why we are a better choice and we want to demonstrate that we can solve their problems, but loyalty is a demanding mistress.

In the same way that our proposal should include the “what” not the “how,” we must appreciate that when we tell our prospective clients how to go about fixing their issues before we have their signature on a payment plan, we’re simply encouraging them to go back to their existing accountants and save themselves the pain of change.

Today’s To-Do:

Practice advising the prospective client “what” can be done to help them but not “how.”

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Bissett Bullet: Who Should I Say is Calling?

Today’s Bissett Bullet: “Imagine you’re a business owner and you’ve just had a meeting with an accounting firm. The meeting went really well; in fact they made a very positive first impression and you are seriously considering leaving your current accountant to work with them. You did forget to ask something, so you make a quick call to their office … and nobody knows who you are.”

By Martin Bissett

You could be forgiven for feeling a little deflated. Now imagine you called and instead were greeted by a member of their support team who not only knew exactly who you are but had been instructed to put you straight through should you happen to call.

This is a very easy and effective way to make prospective clients feel valued, prioritized and ingrained in your firm’s culture but simple though it is, your competitors will not do it. Stand out by making sure that clients are handled in this way by your firm.

Today’s To-Do:

Diarize time after a meeting or set aside time each week to brief support staff on all prospective clients.

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Bissett Bullet: There’s No ‘I’ in Team

Today’s Bissett Bullet: “All it takes for an accounting practice to stagnate is capable, talented partners to take up a position of ‘my clients,’ ‘my fees.’”

By Martin Bissett

How often have we heard about a multipartner practice simply being a selection of sole practitioners operating under a common brand? So many accounting firms operate from silos, never really looking above to see what is going on anywhere else. So, as soon as it becomes “my clients and my fees” rather than “our clients, the firm’s fees,” then you can be sure the practice is on a slow steady decline.

Today’s To-Do:

If you ever catch yourself or one of your colleagues talking about “my clients, my fees,” remind them that they are a “partner in a practice” and that they are working for the good of the whole, not solely the good of the individual.

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Bissett Bullet: The Emotional Argument

Today’s Bissett Bullet: “When a prospective client already has an accountant, it is important to recognize that although they are demonstrating an interest in working with you by agreeing to meet, there will be a degree of loyalty to the current firm even if they’ve identified the need for change.

By Martin Bissett

This is important because it places them out of their comfort zone. They may feel apprehensive about severing ties and it may not be that the accountant is doing a bad job, simply that their business has grown past the point that the existing firm can continue to support them. Whatever the case, you won’t win an emotional argument with logic. 

Today’s To-Do:

Look at the next prospect meeting in your diary. What do you know about them already that will help you to speak to them in emotional terms? Select a story about how you helped a similar client that may resonate and have it in your armory.

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Bissett Bullet: Bigger Isn’t Always Better

Today’s Bissett Bullet: “I’m a small firm. How can I possibly be perceived as ‘superior’ to the much larger firms that my prospective client is meeting?”

By Martin Bissett

There is a mindset shift needed here. “Superior” is not “bigger” so turnover, office size and number of partners bear no relevance.

You are superior when you show a genuine interest in the business you have gone to see and take the time to understand their personal and professional motivations. When you take that understanding and use your experience and your service lines to bring the answers to their door, that is being superior. Win the advisory war by becoming the best relationship builder firm, not the biggest firm.

Today’s To-Do:

Previously, I asked you to identify three clients who had come to you having been dissatisfied with their experience with their previous accountant. Were any of those firms larger than yours? What about the previous firms of other clients whose situations you have improved? When imposter syndrome creeps in, remember those clients.

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