When you work in a B2B services industry, you have long client relationships. I have clients Iâve worked with for years and those are the ones I love. Then there are those, well, that require a bit more patience. Dealing with difficult clients is challenging, however, Iâm fortunate that I rarely have this type of customer. But when I do, I try to deal with them in the appropriate manner.
Below Iâve identified the most common types of difficult clients and how to deal with each. See which ones sound familiar to you.
Dealing With Difficult Clients
1. The Ultra-Hands-On Client
You know the one: They call the second they send you an email to make sure you got it. They follow up before the deadline on a project to make sure itâs on track.
In the office, theyâre known as the Micro-manager. But since youâre a consultant, itâs a bit weird that they try to get so involved. After all, theyâre paying you to do what you do best, right?
The Solution
My advice here is to establish boundaries.
Iâve had an ultra-hands-on client call me on the weekend - yes, the weekend. I firmly let them know Iâd be available at 8 AM on Monday to discuss the non-urgent marketing emergency they felt they were having. You can also give yourself some breathing room on deadlines so you can meet them before the client has a chance to check up on you.
If you tell them youâll complete a project on Friday and you know theyâll call on Thursday, finish it on Wednesday to avoid them breathing down your neck. But be subtle about it - or else theyâll start calling you on Tuesday.
2. The Untrusting Client
This is the one who isnât quite sure youâre able to handle the task or understand their company as well as they do.
Theyâre right to be a bit territorial. But itâs your job to reassure them that youâre skilled in what you do, and get them to let go of their firm grip on things.
The Solution
A lot of times, itâs about control in this situation. And you canât fight someoneâs will to be in control (just ask my husband).
To that end, include your client in the process. Ask for feedback and get their opinion â" unless you start to get the sense that they think youâre doing so because youâre unsure of yourself. In that case, show extreme confidence in what you do. If itâs early in your relationship, point them to other clients that can give you a shining recommendation.
3. The âI Can Do It Better Myselfâ Client
If your client wasnât so busy running their business, theyâd be writing, designing and/or programming whatever you do.
They took a survey course in that field in college 10 years ago, so they know what theyâre doing. (But do they really??) So they try to impart their opinion on everything you do. Itâs getting in the way of you actually getting quality work done, and sometimes their opinionsâ¦how can we say - arenât shared by the general public.
The Solution
Make them feel like youâre there to lighten their load. Stress the importance of them focusing on what they do best (run their company) while you do the silly, boring work they hired you to do.
When to Fire a Client
You can try all these strategies to try to make an ornery client easier to deal with, but sometimes itâs not worth the stress. In that case, it might be wiser to fire the client. If any of these situations below are coming up regularly, consider letting the client go:
- Projects are taking longer than they should due to constant client involvement.
- You have to revise work frequently and you arenât getting paid for it.
- The scope of projects gets bigger but the client is unwilling to pay for more work.
- You donât have time to focus properly on your other clients.
The better you can find successful ways when dealing with difficult clients you may have, the more streamlined your work will be. Itâs a matter of determining the best strategy to handle each client.
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