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Marketing Speaker - A New Kind of Reference

  
  
  
  
  

Marketing speaker, marketing coach Philadelphia PAI got a phone call a few days ago from my friend Steve who is a fellow independent professional. He said to me at the beginning of the call, "David, I'm calling you as a reference."

So I'm thinking, "OK, he wants to hire someone I've worked with or someone I know - perhaps even a client of mine whose testimonial he saw on my website."

I say, "Steve, what can I do for you?"

And then he mentions someone's name. Let's call this person Larry. Now I like Larry and he's a good guy - perhaps a little confused about his marketing and messaging... and frankly that's OK because Larry is NOT a client of mine (although I've given him plenty of chances!)

Steve stops me and says, "No, no... I don't want to hire Larry. Larry wants to hire me. I'm calling you to ask you what kind of client do you think he would be?"

Wow. It's not a consultant reference, speaker reference, or service provider reference - Steve was asking me (essentially) "Would this guy be a good client?" FYI Steve saw me connected to Larry through LinkedIn and some other social media sites.

Lessons for YOU:

  • We live in a hyper-connected world
  • People DO read your social media profiles
  • People DO judge you on the "company you keep" both online and off
  • If you're a pain in the ass - as a consultant, speaker, vendor, partner, OR client... word will spread faster than you can imagine
  • The top people in their field (ahem, YOU) do not have the bandwidth nor the interest to work with folks who are a pain in the butt
  • YOU can't afford to be a pain in the butt on EITHER side of the professional services buying equation

Comments? What do you think? Have you had some experiences to share along these lines? Would love to hear from you in the Comments section below...


Comments

David - how true! I now do research on potential clients. If people I have worked well with in the past have had issues with a potential, then I avoid. Sometimes no amount of money can overcome a trying client! 
 
 
 
That being said, when I turn down an offer I let the client know why. I don't come right out and say that I think they'll be a pain...but come up with a 'nice' way to put them down! 
 
 
 
Unfortunately too often people just say no and don't say why, never giving the offending party the opportunity to change their ways! (they may not even know what they are doing wrong - and unless someone tells them, they'll just keep doing it!) 
 
 
 
Bottom line - keep your relationships strong - both as a client and provider - you never know how that relationship will affect you in the future!
Posted @ Tuesday, September 15, 2009 9:36 AM by Heather Padgett
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