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PROBLEM – "Our firm has no pipeline."

In the next several blogs, I’ll describe problems law firms have brought to us and solutions that worked.

PROBLEM: “Our firm has no pipeline.”

RESPONSE: Manage your speakers, greeters, authors, communicators, trainers, marketers, etc.

RESULT: Properly assigned, with concretely defined roles, the firm’s staff will become a kind of conveyor belt. All of their designated tasks will funnel toward the actual sales moment. The pipeline thereby remains engineered to support the one final moment – the closing – that justifies its existence in the first place

Hidden Business Development Opportunities

By: Allan Colman

Marketing The Law Firm (An ALM Publication)

January, 2015

These days, all firms must provide more value-added services. In the short run, the more you know the better chance you have at winning the business. In the long run, close client knowledge and an understanding of the marketplace will augment client retention.

We often ask, “what is their takeaway?” In other words, look beyond Power Point and fancy letterhead. Think creatively and empathetically. Who is the competition? How close on the heels are they in respect to your target?

Identify the one major asset you bring to the table, the one major differentiator between you and your competition, the major problem you can solve for them and make this your “takeaway” message. Repeat it often during the meetings so if they should remember nothing else during their decision making process, they will remember it.

When you market your firm and services, the only thing a perspective client cares about is what you will be able to do for them. Learn as much as you can about your prospects, identify their needs and prepare for your meeting accordingly.

It is essential to practice your presentation or dinner conversation. By taking time you will:

  • Be able to anticipate questions;
  • Identify and better understand the current and recent patterns of the prospect’s business;
  • Have your primary “takeaways” refined;
  • Establish what you need to plan ahead for your next contact.

Preparation is essential. It will ready you not only for the sales/pitch meetings, but also for conducting a review and “post-mortem” of the meeting once it is finished. Remember the old joke, “How do you get to Carnegie Hall?” The answer to the question, “How do you achieve success in the closing zone is exactly the same: practice, practice, practice.

Perhaps one of the most unique opportunities to grow future business is rejection! Use it to turn rejection into a future close. What happens when your firm has found a target through business development and marketing tactics, done their due diligence with research to ascertain potential client needs, then finally presents a killer presentation to only be rejected in the end?

Losing never feels good. But don’t count yourself out just yet. Follow this process and you might turn that loss into an engagement … eventually.

Ask what the element was that won it for the competition and what were the strengths and areas of improvement your presentation needed.

Now it’s time to take a tough, retrospective look at the marketing business development strategy and sales/closing techniques used to pitch that piece of business. If you made it to the closing zone then the marketing and business development tactics you used were sufficient to get your firm considered. Where did your closing skills miss the mark? Did the prospect/client feel you had a full understanding of their needs? Conduct a post-mortem from events that occurred at the presentation and then try to pinpoint the areas needing improvement.

Find out which firm won the business, and then find out everything about them From the client’s perspective, what was your firm lacking that they believed the others might deliver? Also remember that if you made it to the finals, they know and appreciate you and have an investment in you and your firm as well.

Stay in touch and you stand an excellent chance of being hired in the future. Maximize this “Hidden Opportunity.”

IN 2015 – Will You Have Tunnel Vision or Funnel Vision, 1- 4.

To really understand your firm’s business development potential, you need to ask a series of questions we offer based on the 7 key accelerator segments,
* Opportunities
* Communication
* Objections
* The “ASK”
* The “CLOSE”
* Results
* Pipeline.

The first 4 firm-wide Business Development questions are:

1. Are you making decisions on underperforming activities and investments?
2. Are your attorneys multiplying the use of single marketing tools to leverage wider exposure and response generation?
3. Is your firm expanding the number of attorneys actively selling/
4. Do you establish completion timelines with specific assignments to attorneys and/or staff professionals?

We’ll post the remaining questions on tomorrow’s blog. Collect them, answer them and send to us on a confidential basis. We’ll provide a complimentary assessment of your business development strategic plan options.

COMBAT COACHING

At the Closers Group, we talk a lot about our CLOSING ZONE approach to business development. We focus on the importance of having your strategies and tactics practiced and ready so that, when you meet face to face with prospects, you’ll be ready to close the sale. Marketing Guru Jay Abraham calls this
COMPETITIVE COMBAT COACHING. It is considered to be a professional but more aggressive and productive way of looking at growing successes.

As the competition for legal services intensifies and client budgets fight to stay stable as time goes on, doesn’t it make sense to look within your organization and build on what you already have? In the next blog, we’ll examine the first 5 tactics we employ to strengthen business development efforts.

9 KEYS TO GROWING NEW BUSINESS – Your Elevator Pitch

You now know the 5 questions to ask in order to improve your Elevator Pitch. Now you have to use it! Here are some “platforms” that may not have occurred to you. Give it :
1. To another parent on the playground or at the dog park;
2. At a charitable or business dinner where others at your table are business professionals;
3. At the first meeting with a new client;
4. To the person sitting next to you on an airplane;
5. In the courtroom hallway;
6. At the car wash;
7. At your church or temple;
8. At the supermarket;
9. Any time you have about 60 seconds to speak to another person.

Once you get the hang of it and achieve a comfort level talking to people you meet daily, you will find more opportunities to deliver your pitch. AND, don’t forget to provide an opportunity for people you meet to deliver their own elevator speeches.

www.allancolman.com

8 Essential Business-Growth Questions – Part II.

Where, who and what were the first 3 questions in our previous blog. The next 3 Essential questions to ask about growing business are:

4. HOW do they prefer to communicate? Observe and ask; again you are looking for opportunities using their preferred communications style, and closing in on them.

5. WHY not use performance reviews and incentive discussions to demonstrate your support for the organization. Come prepared to these events and use your proposals, past and present, to embed the “go-to” image and reputation.

6. DO you know who your decision makers listen to? What are their concerns with their own path of advancement? And do they really listen? Are you also building relationships with the higher-up decision makers? Mary Barra, the new CEO at General Motors, certainly did.

8 Essential Business-Growth Questions

Here are the first 3 of the questions you must ask yourself and your team if you expect to have an impact on growing business. They are not the usual questions you may have heard before.

1. WHERE do you currently fit into the organization’s structure and how decisions are currently being made?

2. WHO are the people to build relationships with? You can’t be all things to all people, including those who are competing with you.

3. WHAT communication media and methods are available to you to sell your message? Internally, look for opportunities to get face-to-face. Externally, know where they go, what they read, where they play, what community or non-profit groups they are involved with, and see them there!

Our next column will tackle questions 4-6.

Go to our services page for more detail at www.closersgroup.com/services.

Is Your Firm Positioned to Grow New Business in 2015?

All too often we find firms where their lawyers are ready-to-go but the firm’s support structure inhibits growth. Our new BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT RAPID ASSESSMENT provides an overview for a firm, practice area or office of:
• What is currently effective?
• What is not utilized?
• How to enhance impact?
Within two weeks of your completing 15 confidential questions, our Group will provide a strategic analysis focusing on maximizing your firm’s current Marketing and Business Development:
• Structure;
• Assets;
• Underperforming assets;
• Underutilized opportunities;
• Business Growth enhancements.
A confidential written Assessment will be returned to you within two weeks and includes a conference call or in-person meeting. Following that discussion, we will provide a timeline with specific tactics to build new business, grow prospects and begin establishing a long-term pipeline.

For a minimal fee, your firm, practice area or office will have a STRATEGIC BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT ACTION PLAN for 2015.

acolman@closersgroup.com.or
fmims@closersgroup.com
www.closersgroup.com

Turn Mistakes Into Marketing Opportunities

One of the most important lessons to be learned in professional services business is that when there’s a problem, it needs to be fixed right away. The process involves identifying a mistake, fixing it quickly, and making sure that your clients know what you’ve done to take action.

While no one wants to make mistakes, when one occurs, you have the opportunity to:

1. Identify how you responded to the situation:
2. Look at the relationships that you do have with clients and see how those relationships are
progressing;
3. Determine whether or not you are providing them the support and resources they need;
4. Examine what can be done to assist as their businesses continue to grow.

Having a prompt response to a mistake — and having a rapid fix — allows you to demonstrate how important client retention is to you.

Read more at www.ownthezonebook.com.