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Especially Now, Relationships Are the Key to Good Referrals

In these uncertain economic times, my experience tells me that there are still people out there who need your services. But because they are more concerned with getting the best value for their increasingly scarce resources, they turn to the people they trust to introduce them to professionals who deliver value.

Said another way, referrals are how good business gets done when times get challenging.

Who are your best referrers?

Have you thanked them?

Have you reached out to find out how you can help them?

Are you relying on a small group of people to refer you or have you systematically positioned yourself to be the recipient of your perfect referral over and over again?

Or are you still relying on a random stream of referrals?

I’ve been advising my clients to get proactive. Especially now. Because even if only 25% of their business comes from referral, if that business dries up and goes to someone else, they are in trouble.

Take action now!

1. Audit your last 3 years of clients.

Determine to the best of your ability where each piece of business came from. What did it add to your top-line revenues? What did it add to your overall profitability? What source stands out as needing immediate attention? If it is a person or a firm, what’s the current state of your relationship?

One client who did this exercise noticed that there were several distinct groups of people who referred him business. He broke them up into areas – real estate, import/export and invited them to a luncheon at his office. He introduced them all to each other and had them share what they needed to be successful – resources, contacts, etc. He shared the same thing – and his practice grew 30% in under 6 months.

2. Connect with your referral sources.

Cement your relationships. You know what needs to be done. Do it. Don’t put it off. In the current economic climate, those relationships can be the access to your very best clients – because those sources have social capital behind their recommendations and provide social proof that you are the attorney with whom they should be speaking.

I spoke on the phone this morning with another client who had changed firms and never reconnected with old sources of referrals. She shared that just by picking up the phone and reaching out to people who used to send her cases, she increased her business immediately – one sent her a new case that morning.

Connecting frequently and consistently is the key to staying top of mind. Enlist your staff to help you make this happen.

3. Actively reproduce your best referral sources.

Take a look at the characteristics of your best referral sources. What is their profession? Do they belong to a specific professional association? Get clear about which are your best sources and begin recruiting new ones just like them. LinkedIn® is a great resource for this project. If you don’t know how to use it – Learn.

Think about what would happen to your practice and your pocketbook if you added a zero to the number of people who actively refer you your ideal client. Come up with a project to build 20-30 relationships who can keep you and your firm busy and profitable.

4. Develop a regular touch strategy.

I know you are busy. All professionals are. But the most productive have systems in place that allow them to accomplish the repetitive tasks that create continuity in relationship. The old adage “Out of sight, out of mind” can wreak havoc on your referrability. Set – or have your staff set – lunches at regular intervals. Get a system to regularly send out birthday and anniversary cards. Involve your support staff in collecting and sending clippings of pertinent articles or snippets of what they read in on-line news. The key here is to stay ‘top-of-mind’ while you deepen the relationship.

5. Train your referral sources

You know what you do. But do your referral sources? Really? Ask them what they think you do. You’ll be surprised at some of the responses. If your sources don’t know what you do and who is best to send your way, chances are referral quality is poor.

Most importantly, get clear which problems you solve that keep your clients up at night – from their perspective, not yours. “I’m a intellectual property attorney” is very different from “I help the creative protect and defend their million dollar ideas.”

Draft a document which illustrates what you do (not just a list of services) and for whom. Clearly articulate who your ideal clients are and then share that with your sources. Encourage them to do the same for you.

Building reciprocity builds relatedness. Relatedness is a trigger for referrals.

6. Develop a stable of professionals that you can refer – and refer them.

Referrals out can be tricky for some attorneys. The concern about liability is one I often hear from my clients. However, reciprocity doesn’t work if you don’t refer out. One of my clients dealt with his concern this way – when he passes a referral he uses this disclaimer – “I recommend X – s/he’s done a great job for my clients in the past. You should do your own due diligence, though, as s/he’s not always a fit for everyone.”

You do not serve all your clients’ needs. You can position yourself, in their minds, to do so by developing a stable of reliable professionals who serve those needs which you do not, and educating your clients as to their availability. Listen for opportunities to refer. Be known as a resource for your clients AND as a referrer by your key sources.

7. Repeat this process

Referral development is a process, not an event. Relationships are not event driven and credibility is something that is built – over time. If you have three to five hours a week – think lunches and breakfasts – you can easily roll this out over a year long program. It takes some planning and discipline, but the payoff far exceeds the perceived pain.

It takes something to alter results you are currently getting. The biggest hurdle you will have to conquer is the belief that you “don’t have the time” or that you are “too busy” to do something different.

The most productive and profitable firms have handled these conversations and developed the skills and the networks to consistently land the right kind of profitable business.

I encourage you to do the same.

Raymond Chip Lambert
Network 2 Networth
Your Outsourced Business Development Training Partner


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I am constantly amazed at the resources that are available for those of us who work in the area of Business Development. In the last few weeks I’ve used the following resources to narrow down potential clients and potential target markets given my ‘Perfect Client Profile’.  If you are taking or have taken one of our Business Development Intensives, you may find these resources invaluable.

Reference USA

ReferenceUSA – This database is available at your public library.  If you are not a member, go to www.scottsdalelibrary.org and sign up for a card.  It will allow you access to their databases. 

Scottsdale Public Library

Reference USA is an InfoUSA company.  You can drill down on local businesses by multiple criteria (which we talk about in our classes) and pull up a list of companies and contact info for those companies.  It’s a great way to begin to narrow your search for your perfect client.

Linkedin

LinkedIn – Now that you know what companies to target, you can go to your LinkedIn network and see who you know or who knows someone who you need to meet.  It is likely that there is a pathway into these companies that will get you introduced to the right person THROUGH someone you know.  Can you cold call?  Sure.  If you have trouble cold calling, check out my friend Connie Kadansky from Exceptional Sales Performance.  Her programs get you out of the headgame you play with yourself.  I highly recommend her.  However, if you prefer to be introduced, LinkedIn provides a fantastic resorce to do that.

Furthermore, you can begin to do some research when you find the right people.  The old Axiom "Birds of a Feather Flock Together" applies here.  What groups do they belong to?  Where do they hang out?  Where might you "bump into" them or other folks like them?  This is where social media gets interesting.  You not only learn about the people you know, but you can learn about their companies, their interests, and as you aggregate this info across prospects/potential clients, you get some pretty serious intelligence about your markets.  This leads you to get ENGAGED with your markets.

Remember, from the Cluetrain Manifesto, "Markets are conversations". If you learn the conversations in the environment they are happening, you are positioned to deliver the the correct message into the correct context. It’s like learning a foreing language – listen, repeat, learn, create.

These are a few of the concepts we cover in our Business Development Intensive.  If you fit our ‘Perfect Client Profile’, please consider having a conversation with me about how it could dramatically improve your results!

Raymond Chip Lambert
Network 2 Networth
Deep Business Development


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Those of you who subscribe to my blog know that I am as strong believer in building solid, strategic, well-thought out networks.  Further, I am a HUGE proponent of LinkedIn (that’s why I teach courses on getting started with LinkedIn) because we spend the majority of our lives engaged in our professions – and the social falls out of that.

I got an email and a request to forward and introduction today that I thought I would share with you.  It illustrates the magical, wholistic nature of networks.  The introduction request looked like this:

Hi Chip, you’ve inspired me to explore LinkedIn in more depth! See my note to XXXX. This is a CLASSIC example how this power here.
A—-

A—- R—’s note to XXXX:

Hello XXXX,
I found your profile today when I was doing a search for Bob Proctor. I love his work and get his Daily Insight email. Then, your profile shows that we have a contact in common, Chip Lambert. I also noticed that you have a Nikken site. My good friend J– W—’s wife is really into Nikken here in Arizona. You two should talk!

Gotta love how LinkedIn works!

And it was quickly followed by an email to both myself and J–:

Just wanted to share this experience I have with LinkedIn this am. You and Chip have inspired me to explore it further, so I was doing some searches for people I know and admire. I typed in Bob Proctor to see what I could find. At the top of the list was a woman named XXXX. She must work for Bob’s coaching organization. Then, I saw that Chip was one of her connections! In reading here profile I saw that she is a NIKKEN rep! I contacted her and told her about (your wife) and that the two should talk. 

This illustrates the power here! Literally one blind search connected several dots with people I know. (emphasis mine)

A—

While names here are withheld to protect privacy, this illustrates the power of networks.  Especially online SOCIAL networks.  The technology unlocks the true potential of your network because it connects the dot for HUMAN BEINGS. 

We are social creatures.  Our friends – social.  Our colleagues – social.  Our prospects – social? Our customers – social?  You betcha.  And if you miss that point, you are missing the opportunity of a lifetime.

Why do you think 18 million people use LinkedIn?

Why do you think the blogosphere is so enormous?

I suggest that we are in the middle of a revolution in our capacity to relate.  And revolutions cause chaos, confusion, misunderstanding, uncomfortableness, skeptics, zealots, humbugs, and millionaires.

Which are you?

Jump in.  The water is profitable.

Raymond Chip Lambert
Network 2 Networth
Deep Business Development

 


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