Article

Your Ideal Client

Topic: Home BusinessBy Terri ZwierzynskiPublished Recently added

Legacy signals

Legacy popularity: 1,351 legacy views

"I don't know the key to success, but the key to failurenis trying to please everybody."--Bill Cosby

Have you ever had a client/customer that was more trouble than they were worth? Maybe they were always late to pay, or didn't do what they said they'd do. Maybe you just had a personality clash, or they expected more than you were able to offer. Whatever the situation, chances are you had an inkling when you first met that client...a tiny voice that you didn't listen to, that was probably overshadowed by the bigger voice that said, "Hey, it's business; I'll take it!"

Learn to say no to those clients, before they start draining your energy! The key to being able to do this is understanding Your Ideal Client. Once you know how to recognize who is ideal and who is not, you can practice turning down business from the latter. If you have trouble saying no, you'll need to learn this critical business skill...and what to do to get rid of problem clients you already have; see the resources at the bottom of this article. If you have a coach, ask them to help you complete the Ideal Client exercise, or to role-play those "saying no" conversations.

How to discover YOUR Ideal Client
There are many ways to approach the Ideal Client/Customer Profile. You can sit down and imagine the best, most wonderful client you could have...whether that is an abstract entity, a celebrity (what writer wouldn't want Oprah as a customer, for example), or a specific demographic profile. If your customers are more likely to be companies, you could look at your current client list, and pick the company that gives you the most business, the most joy, the least heartburn.

The Ideal Client Profile
Whoever you pick, start a profile matrix with two columns: "My Ideal Client Is:" on the left; "My Ideal Client is Not:", on the right. In the column on the left, list all the characteristics of that type of person or company. Use the questions below as prompts to get you thinking about all the different aspects that client might have.

Then, either think of the opposite of all those aspects, or pick the "client from hell" and fill in corresponding traits in the right-hand column. Be really honest with this exercise! If you'd rather only have clients who make over $500,000, put that down! Your clients who don't fit your Ideal characteristics, whether you write them down or not, will eventually "know it. May as well get that over with early!

Prompts: Consider these aspects of your Ideal Customer or Client:

What career or business are they in?
What demographics do they fit? (age, sex, race, religion, income, marital status, etc.)
What do they think is important in business? In life?
What do they like most about you and your business, products and services?
What is the nature of their relationship with you? (transactional, long-time customer, acquaintance, friend, refers others to you, etc.)
How do they do business with you? (phone/in person/on the Web; quick transactions/takes time to negotiate; pays early/on-time/at 30 days; etc.)
What personality characteristics do they have?
What do you get from them (besides payment)?

Now What?
Compare your current client list to the two columns in The Ideal Client Profile. How many have the characteristics of your Ideal Client? If the answer is "not many," you may need to work on firing some of your clients! Check out some resources below on how to do this.

Next, post your Ideal Client Profile somewhere you will see it often. Every time a new potential client comes along, start looking for those Ideal characteristics...and beware the non-ideal! If that little voice starts to tell you something might be wrong, check in with the non-ideal list--and be ready with some ways to turn away non-ideal clients. Offer them other options--refer them to someone else who is a better fit, and make two people happier!

Ideal Clients--For Life
There are many ways to leverage the work you have just done with the Ideal Client Profile. Here are some ideas:nn--Audit your marketing materials. Do your business cards, brochures, ads and website appeal to your Ideal Client? Are you sending the right message, to the right potential clients? Hone your materials, and start seeing better-qualified potential clients walk in the door.
--Consider your marketing channels. Based on your Ideal Client profile, where would you expect to find these clients? Is that where your marketing efforts are focused? If not, figure out a way to get in front of them!
--Review your contracts, policies, terms and conditions. Are they set up to be friendly to your Ideal Clients? Do they give you clear avenues for dealing with non-ideal clients? If not, update them, and you might see non-ideal clients take care of themselves.

Start attracting your Ideal Clients today!
***********Find more articles like this at http://www.Solo-E.com. Solo-E.com is the coolest place on the Web for Solo Entrepreneurs who want affordable, easily accessible and juicy information to create a successful business and life. ***********

Article author

About the Author

Terri Zwierzynski is a coach to small business owners and Solo Entrepreneurs. She is also the CEI (Conductor of Extraordinary Ideas) at Solo-E.com. Terri is an MBA honors graduate from UNC-Chapel Hill. Terri has been coaching for over 10 years in a variety of settings, including 6 years as a senior-level coach and consultant for a Fortune 500 company. She opened her private coaching practice in 2001. Contact her at: http://www.FastLaneDreams.com.

Further reading

Further Reading

4 total

Article

The Secret--Lea The Laws Of Attractions The movie "The Secret" has been making its rounds, a few months ago Oprah Winfrey picked it up and did a movie review secret show, with promises for another one in the near future. This is a review of the movie "The Secret" Essentially The Secret is ...

Related piece

Article

Is there a way new network marketers can easily attract distributors to them? What's the fool-proof technique? That seams to be a common question that enters a lot of network marketers minds these days. What can the new network marketer do? Because network marketers have no BOSS to report to, network marketing requires the network marketer to take control of their business. They are their own BOSS.

Related piece

Article

What's are the two top things network marketers suffer with? More Leads and More Money! Network marketers are finding a way to attracting more leads and generating more cash by using a process called Funded Proposal. Funded proposal is a process where you attract purchased leads to you and while building rapport, you provide them with an exclusive offer to a product which will bring them much benefit. In return, your cost to generate that leads pays for itself by them purchasing your ideal product.

Related piece

Article

Have you heard of the DVD called "the Secret"? Well it isn't such a secret anymore. The DVD was released in March 2006 and according to Time Magazine, the DVD has sold 500,000 units within the first 6 months. Today it sells well over 5,000 copies a day! It ranked in Amazon's Top-5 sellers during ...

Related piece