Addressing Your Client's Hidden Expectations
Harvey Bergholz, Jeslen Corporation
A lightly edited version of this article appeared in the
Journal of Management Consulting.
Introduction
Some nerve . . . clients who expect more from consultants than
that we fix their companies. They pay a fee, and expenses. That
entitles them to a set of outcomes. These outcomes are usually
tangible and often measurable. That should be enough, yes? . . .
but . . . no . . . they want more. Through my thirty years of management consulting, every client has had expectations on three levels. Collectively, these expectations typically sum to a whole lot more than delivering the deliverables. I believe that client expectations exist in these three categories:
Perhaps you've already learned that clients expect more than what
the fee has been paid to deliver. If so, you've made those
expectations a natural part of your work mode, your client
management strategies, and your firm's economics. Failure to do so
will place you far behind the "full-value consultants" who do. In
the unconscious bargain with clients, you want to be the
consultant who delivers on all three levels, Technical,
Professional, and Personal. When you do, you'll achieve a rare
positioning: the consultant who "gets it done"; the consultant
clients want to spend time with, and from whom they want their
people to learn.
The full-value consultant generates sustainable competitive
advantages and far higher retention and referral rates. This is a
natural by-product of achieving that rare positioning. It results
from meeting or exceeding the unexpressed client expectations in
Technical Competence, Professional Contribution, and Personal
Style.
In this article we explore typical client expectations and a few
suggestions for exceeding them. I believe several common
denominators exist, the first of which is this: clients have
expectations in all three categories because that is their natural
risk-management strategy. Most often, this risk-management
strategy is unconscious, but it is there. What risk? The
consultant's shortcomings in any of the three areas puts the
hiring executive, or direct client, in jeopardy.
Your direct client has (a) spent money; (b) endorsed a performer
unknown to others (you); (c) committed to delivering an end result
by a deadline; and (d) dropped an interloper into the corporate
cultural mix (you again). Together, these four elements create
anxiety - in the direct client and in the people watching him/her,
and in those who will be affected by the consultant. Anxiety, in
turn, triggers self-protective behaviors by the client's peers,
subordinates, and superiors. If you've consulted even a year,
you've experienced these behaviors. They can be harmful to you and
your efforts; they can be deadly to your client - and the client
knows it. These behaviors (lack of cooperation, information
hiding, delays, unavailability, expressed cynicism about the
engagement or the consultant) may be harmful to the client's
career health.
Ergo . . . your direct client is at risk when inviting in a
consultant. Ironically, the risks do not diminish solely by the
consultant's performance in the Technical Competence arena. In
fact, sound performance there is easily undercut by failure to
meet expectations in the other two areas: Professional
Contribution and Personal Style. Effective consultants manage the
three areas consciously and smoothly, and reap dividends as a
result.
Technical Competence
The simplest of the three value categories, Technical Competence
means delivering what we promised in return for the fee. The dry
cleaner takes your $2.00 and promises to deliver a clean, pressed
shirt by a certain date. Simple. Integrate two newly merged
departments; facilitate a strategic planning retreat; design an
incentive plan; execute a search; develop a training workshop.
This basic quid pro quo doesn't require much discussion. This is
the business - on the surface. This is what is visible and
measurable. This is what the client pays for, right? Well, not
quite.
For many consultants, life is grand when the engagement is that
straightforward: "Give me the deliverables on time and I give you
money and you leave town." Alas, the other two dimensions are
usually present, though under the surface.
Professional Contribution
As consultants, we bring a wide range of professional skills and
experiences that reach far beyond technical task accomplishment.
Clients expect us to contribute these skills unselfishly,
proactively, and at no added cost as we execute the engagement.
This is a reasonable expectation. We all have such expectations
around the "professional behavior" of service workers. When you
bring the car in for repair, you expect the Technical Competence
to do the repairs; but you also likely expect the service people
to return the car clean, on time, and at the promised price. You
may expect them to teach you something in the process too, or you
may expect some priority treatment if you're a regular, long-time
customer.
Expectations of "Professional Contributions," layered on top of
Technical Competence, are natural in every field. Do we understand
what they are in the typical consulting engagement? Below are the
expectations for Professional Contributions I've encountered most
often. When I place myself inside the client's mind - to empathize
- these are things they want to say:
"with me personally"
"with my team"
[A client pursuing a growth-by-acquisitions strategy wanted help.
We conducted as much of our work as we could on-site, with their
people, to make our processes and thinking visible - to pull back
the curtain. As the series of small acquisitions developed, they
took on more of the direct process step responsibilities. Did it
cost us some days with each succeeding one? Yes, but a dozen years
later, they remain a steady client, with engagements in multiple
areas, without us having to solicit more business. And in every
acquisition event, we're still at the table]
"with the organization"
If these are some of the common expectations and desires clients
have around Professional Contributions, then the question is How?
How to deliver on these.
Here are a few ideas to consider . . .
The add-on value services described above come "free," or should.
You won't find them listed in the engagement letter or a contract.
They are generally unstated, embedded in the client's
expectations, which makes them even more powerful. Your ability to
deliver these - effortlessly, seamlessly, transparently - yet
still ensure the client knows you've done them is one valid test
of a professional consultant.
Personal Style
Most clients are pragmatic: their consultant selection process
rests primarily upon the Technical Competence question. Clients
have too much at risk to do anything else. Now, if a relationship
already exists from earlier engagements, then Professional
Contribution comes into play as well. It becomes the next branch
in the decision tree. However, these things being equal, Personal
Style will carry the day.
I believe Personal Style becomes the equal of Technical Competence
and Professional Contributions once the engagement is underway.
This is because the client comes to see Technical and Professional
contributions as natural and expected. This is akin to Herzberg's
"Hygiene Factors," like compensation or supervision, in his study
of what motivates high performers. If these work just right, all
they do is help maintain average performance. They're neutral.
People expect reasonable pay and quality supervision. Providing
them is not, then, a source of true motivation; but failure to
provide them is certainly de-motivating. The real bang comes from
the true motivating factors, like achievement, recognition, and
the nature of the work itself.
Similarly, clients expect to see Technical Competence and
Professional Contributions. Meeting those expectations may satisfy
the clients "hygiene needs," but they are not sufficiently
motivating to sustain long-term relationships. The differential
versus other consultants may well rest in the Personal Style
arena.
Again, clients hold a set of expectations in this arena. Usually
unspoken, these expectations work like a report card. The client
fills out the little sections mentally with each interaction; only
you don't get to see it. The secret entries contribute mightily to
the potential for follow-on work. Where clients will discuss with
you issues related to the Technical and Professional arenas, here
they do not. Personal Style embodies too much that is, well,
personal. So as with that blind date that went sour, you'll find
after the first engagement a series of ignored phone calls, or a
few too many "No, we're going a different direction this time"
comments. How many sour dates have you told directly, "I'm afraid
the personal chemistry just doesn't work"?
What can you do? Well, beyond understanding the typical client
expectations in this arena, perhaps not much. We can all make some
adjustments, but Personal Style has far more to do with embedded
personality and far less to do with learned behaviors. Popeye put
it well when he said to Olive, "I am what I am, and dat's what I
am!"
But before we just give up on this issue, let's try to understand
the most common expectations and desires our clients hold:
Simple, huh? These are the common line items on the report card
under the Personal Style heading. How much of who we really are
can we change? Probably not a lot; but we can be aware that these
things really do matter to the clients at the personal level. They
aren't the deciding factors at the front end of the selection
process; but they fast become future knock-out factors once the
engagement is underway.
Technical Competence, Professional Contribution, and Personal
Style: none of the three alone is sufficient for building a
sustainable, independent consulting practice. But mastering all
three will yield significant competitive advantages. The large
firms try to stock their work teams with elements of each; but we
independents have to bring it all.
About the Author
Harvey Bergholz is president of
Jeslen Corporation, a
consulting company he has headed for more than 30 years. His for
profit clients range from small ($100 million) companies to
multi-billion dollar global giants. His nonprofit clients include
large health care, religious, and educational institutions. His
practice centers on providing senior executives with counsel and
assistance in shaping and implementing large-scale, high-impact
initiatives. Harvey also numbers among his clients some of the
world's largest consulting firms. Harvey can be contacted at jeslencorp@gmail.com |
This Page Was Last Updated on July 31, 2019