Convert More Leads & Get More Sales, Guaranteed!
Pulse smartpen


Welcome Contributor Login
-New Articles-
Deep connection: How to get your clients to tell you what they really want
Molly Gordon

horseconvo.jpg
A while back I wrote that it's essential to know what your clients want from their point of view. I said that it's not "Do what you love, and the money will follow," but "Do what you love and what serves others, and the money will follow."

(You'll find the earlier post here}.

Several readers wrote to ask how, exactly, to get clients to tell you what they want. What do you do when you ask them, and no one responds?

Here's what I teach my students about learning what clients want. It's taken directly from the Profit Alchemy course. You can learn more about that program at the end of the article.

It begins with a conversation
The first first thing to understand about finding out what clients want is that it involves a conversation, an exchange. And the first requirement for a meaningful conversation is for you to be 100% present.

That can be a challenge when your business is at stake. Even though it is ultimately of service to your prospective clients, you may feel uncomfortable asking for information that will help you to market and sell more effectively.

So I teach my students to get into their Personal Safety Zones.

Create a zone of safety and respect
Your Personal Safety Zone is a conscious sense of personal space in which you center and ground yourself.

One way into your Personal Safety Zone is to bring your awareness into your body. Breathe into your abdomen and, when you exhale, expel as much air as you can. Repeat this for three breaths.

Surrender to gravity, allowing your weight to settle until you are aware of the soles of your feet on the ground beneath you.

Invite your body to show you how it feels to be perfectly centered, grounded, and safe. Take a few moments to feel that.

Practice getting into your Personal Safety Zone in all kinds of situations until it becomes second nature, and you can do it in a moment. Then, use it whenever you talk about your work.

When you feel safe, you put others at ease
When you feel safe, people naturally feel safe in your presence. There is room in the conversation for them to be exactly as they are.

This is especially important in conversations with clients or prospective clients. As you show up naturally and with peaceful confidence, the person you speak with feels comfortable. There is no need for either of you to contract or defend.

Have a one-on-one intentional conversation
A successful conversation about what a client wants happens intentionally and one-on-one. Schedule a specific time and place for the conversation, and be clear about the purpose.

It can be scary to ask for such a conversation! So practice your Personal Safety Zone. Throughout the process of learning what clients want, you will find that returning to your Personal Safety Zone is the key to success on many levels.

As for what to say when setting up the conversation, be simple and direct. "I'd like to understand what it's like for you to.... May I have 30 minutes of your time to talk about that?" (Fill in the blank with the problem or need the client has.)

Set a date to speak by phone, Skype, or in person. Email and surveys don't work for this kind of conversation. They aren't personal enough, and they don't allow you to get beneath the surface.

Take the time to get under the surface
Most conversations start on the surface. People naturally want to please you, and, in the beginning, they tend to say what they think you want them to say.

You can help the client move past this phase by gently redirecting the focus to their experience. Repeat that you’re truly interested in what it is like for them to have this problem, desire, or need. Ask them questions that take them deeper.

As you continue to ask respectful, probing questions that shift the focus to what the client experiences from inside their problem, the client's answers will become more spontaneous. Your client will express more emotion and will tend to use less formal language.

This is exactly what you are looking for. Not a neat and clean global description of a problem, but an in-the-trenches report of what it is like for your client to have a pressing challenge or urgent desire.

Listen literally
At this point, your client (or prospective client) is telling you exactly what you need to know. To make sure you get it, listen literally. That means listening to the precise words and phrases (and intonations) that your just-right clients use to talk about the world from their perspective.

That sounds simple, and it is, in principle. But when you are deeply immersed in your work and listening to a client who is talking about the things your work is designed to address, you tend to hear through the filter of your experience.

This is why it’s important to capture the conversation as exactly as possible, which is what we’ll talk about next.

Capture the conversation
Every word from your client’s lips is golden, so capture the conversation in as much detail as you can. Recording the conversation (with the other person’s permission) is ideal. Taking notes is another way to capture what is said.

Whether you take notes or use a recording, you’ll be going back to the conversation time and again to steep yourself in your client’s point of view and language. Capturing the exact words and phrases the client uses will be immensely helpful when it comes to describing what you do, making people aware of what you do, and making it safe and easy for them to hire you.

Allow problems to go unsolved
Problems are, well, problems. And we generally prefer not to hang out in the problem space, especially if we are trying to make a good impression on someone.

But a conversation with a client about what they want is not a problem-solving conversation. What may sound like a cry for help is often a cry to be heard. If you rush to solve the problem, you miss the point.

It will be easier to let go of the pressure to problem solve when you remember your Personal Safety Zone. Remind yourself that your client is a whole person. Detach from the impulse to fix things and tune into the work of connecting.

If you are truly focused on connecting from your Personal Safety Zone you will be able to hear your just-right client without being swamped by the problem or distracted by rushing to a solution.

That's how to find out what they really want.

Into action
If you've been reading this ezine for a while, you know that I give you specific guidance in how to create wealth from self-employment.

Yet, you may not be putting everything you read into action. Perhaps you lack the confidence to follow through on a daily basis. Maybe your motivation lags.

You may be struggling with inner and outer roadblocks.

Or maybe you are overwhelmed by the challenge of keeping the big picture (what you are up to in the world and what it takes to succeed) and the details (the daily actions that will make that happen) in focus at the same time.

Whatever the reason, you're not doing what it takes to become profitable while honoring your vision and your values.

That's why I developed Profit Alchemy. It's a nine-month program that gives you the clarity, skills, confidence, and momentum you need to make a profit. It begins January 12, and I'd love to talk to you about it.

You can learn more and apply here.
Photo by Kibondo via Flickr


Full Article...
Add a Comment:
Your Name:
Email Address*:
Website:
*Required. Email address will not be visible.
Molly Gordon
Molly Gordon

Hope, help, and hilarity for Accidental Entrepreneurs

Full Profile & Contact Information...
Rivers Corbett
Rivers Corbett
5 Minutes With An Entrepreneur
Full Profile & Contact Information...
Tara Enns
Tara Enns
Tara Enns (ACC) is a professional life coach and a credentialed member of the International Coach Federation (ICF), who owns and operates Solution Pathways, her private coaching and personal development practice. As a coach, Tara is passionate about connecting people with their inner brilliance...
Full Profile & Contact Information...
Tanya Geisler, CPCC
Tanya Geisler, CPCC
Life Coach, Board of Your Life Program Facilitator...and more to come
Full Profile & Contact Information...
Pearl Mattenson,
Pearl Mattenson,
Pearl’s clients become better leaders, and better people. They are better at having the real conversations that create results. They are better at moving their organization towards the changes they believe in. They are working more collaboratively and learning to thrive in teams and partnerships.
Full Profile & Contact Information...
Linda Dessau
Linda Dessau
Linda Dessau, CPCC, is the author of Write Your Way to More Clients Online. She helps coaches and other small business owners get better results from their online writing. Visit her website for a free article writing tool.
Full Profile & Contact Information...
Kathleen Schulweis
Kathleen Schulweis
Executive Coach focusing on leadership, life, and career.
Full Profile & Contact Information...
Sound Advice


© 2009-2012 Synchronicity Business Coaching
info@coachspotlight.com

Cabins for Sale