by guest blogger: Lauren W. Prosser
Believe it or not, the New Year is rapidly approaching.
With 2012 on the horizon, has your firm thought about taking a step back to evaluate the best way to take a step forward?
Below are 12 key considerations centered on positioning your firm for success in 2012.
1. Build From Within
- Identify and communicate your firm’s unique value proposition. Get younger generation firm members engaged and invested in it to help ensure that a consistent message is sent beyond the walls of your office.
2. Cultivate Your Clients
- Do you have a system in place for measuring your firm’s CCA (Cost of Client Acquisition) and LTV (LifeTime Value (of a client))? – These are two critical metrics that you firm should be measuring and monitoring.
- Develop new clients at a higher level of service by demonstrating the value of your industry insights and targeted, relevant service offerings.
3. A Forward-Looking Firm Focus
- From mechanics to meaning. Don’t let minutia of the day-to-day get in the way of the big picture. Do firm members at all levels see how their roles directly impact client relationships and firm success?
- As Vince Lombardi once said, “Success demands singleness of purpose.”
4. Client-Centric Foresight
- Add value to client relationships by providing insight and foresight, not just hindsight.
- Transition from a historically-focused, compliance-based service model to become a partner in the future success of your client’s business. Begin by dialoguing with your clients to identify their specific financial goals for 2012 and beyond.
5. Encourage Employees
- Go beyond just communicating firm strategy and vision to employees – solicit their input and insights.
- Cultivate a culture where firm members at all levels are committed to and invested in firm values and firm success.
- Ensure firm members see how their contributions tie into final results.
6. Trusted Advisor
- Strategic guidance can greatly enhance client relationships, which in turn will strengthen retention and drive profitability.
- Value is in the eye of the beholder – Do you know what is most important to your clients? Initiate a Discovery Process to identify these key items.
- Listen to learn. To quote Lou Holtz, “I never learn anything talking. I only learn things when I ask questions.”
7. Referrals
- According to a recent survey, only 16% of clients say they would be “highly likely” to recommend their CPA firm. What is your firm doing to ensure your clients are your biggest fans?
- What system of recognition and reward do you have in place to acknowledge and incentivize your top referral sources?
8. De-Commoditization = Differentiation
- Eliminate boundaries to understanding and uncovering client service needs.
- Develop cross-selling tactics to transition compliance-only clients into consulting clients.
- Be the link. Do you have a system in place for translating your client’s financial statements into management tools?
9. A Standard for Success
- Build a standardized consulting framework which allows you to transfer certain processes between engagements while also enabling you to identify individual client needs and opportunities.
- Leverage integrated service teams to maximize resources – this will allow clients to benefit from your firm’s full spectrum of expertise and experience.
10. Create Clarity
- Through improved means of gathering and interpreting business intelligence.
- Through improved quality and consistency of information.
- Through improved channels and means of communication.
11. Maximize Your Message
- Does your service model communicate value and benefit to the client? Does your marketing approach reiterate this?
- Start by focusing on the tangibles. Eliminate information on the periphery that may cloud your message.
- Contextualize.
12. A Solution-Provider, Not Just a Service-Provider
- Focus on becoming a solution provider, not just a service provider – clients don’t buy services, they buy solutions to problems.
- Cultivate a firm culture that rewards staff at all levels for uncovering and communicating opportunities for better serving clients.
- Commit to developing a process-focused, not just project-focused or product-focused firm.
Lauren Prosser is currently the Manager of Advisory Services at Sageworks, Inc., “The Leader in the Financial Analysis of Privately-Held Companies.” Lauren joined Sageworks in June 2006 as a Director of Business Development and soon thereafter became a leader in the company’s Consulting and Advisory Services Groups.
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