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This month: Doing Things Differently - Orchestrating Improvements in Professional Service Marketing Processes
 
 
October 2007 
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News

Upcoming Speech:

Strategic Firm Leadership and Management, Society for Marketing Professional Services, New York, November 9, 2007

Articles and Publications:

The One Piece of Advice You Can't Generate Leads Without, Rain Today, September 2007

What Would a Female Superhero Do for Gender Diversity?,” American Bar Association’s Tort, Trial and Insurance Practice Section newsletter, July 2007

Suzanne Lowe contributed to: Marketing Metrics De-Mystified: Methods for Measuring ROI and Evaluating Your Marketing Effort, by Sally Handley FSMPS, President of Sally Handley, Inc.. Sally is an adjunct faculty member at Pratt Institute in Manhattan, where she teaches Marketing /Communications for design firms.

Practice Management: Re-evaluate how you evaluate your marketer (PDF), by Suzanne Lowe and Sally Glick for Accounting Today, September 2006 (also published with permission on The Marcus Letter)

New from the Expertise Marketplace Blog

Five Biggest Professional Service Presentation Don'ts

I'm tracking others' insights - on Pricing and Value Propositions

I'm tracking others' insights - on Innovation

I'm tracking others' insights - on Value Propositions and Differentiation

Here's why marketers leave their professional firms

I'm tracking others' insights - on Marketing Roles

I'm tracking others' insights -- on Economics

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Recent Issues

  • Reinventing the Marketing and Sales Function at Professional Service Firms, September 2007
  • How Executive Education is Preparing Professional Services Firm Leaders to Compete More Effectively, August 2007
  • Service Portfolio Management with Yoh's Jim Lanzalotto, July 2007

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    Orchestrating Improvements in Professional Service Marketing Processes

    Frank Sinatra famously sang "I did it MY way." But when you’re marketing professional services, this notion can be particularly paradoxical.

    On the one hand, marketing the firm requires strong internal coordination of strategies, brand promises, messages and processes. In order to make Sinatra's song really hum, his band members had to harmonize together, in time and in tune. On the other hand, revenue-generating practitioners have to customize their marketing and business development processes for potential and current clients. This is often where real competitive advantage is discovered.

    Professional service marketers are uniquely positioned to observe this nexus, and to orchestrate improvements in marketing processes. They envision how to help the band be even MORE harmonized, MORE in tune, and also MORE able to customize when needed.

    But it takes a special kind of "professional bravery" to encourage a firm's wholesale adoption of new marketing processes, even if these new processes are an improvement. "Doing things differently" means people must stop doing things "my way," for the benefit of their larger organization.

    This is the topic of our October issue: how marketing leaders are optimizing their firms' marketing processes and influencing –positively – their firms' competitive effectiveness. Jeff Durocher, Vice President of Market Development of Illinois-based RHR International, told me how he's faced this challenge. RHR International is a 60-year old consulting firm specializing in executive and organizational development, assisting senior management in areas of executive integration, high potential development, succession planning, team building, talent management, executive coaching and board effectiveness.

    Suzanne Lowe


    Suzanne Lowe

    Author, Marketplace Masters: How Professional Service Firms Compete to Win
    President, Expertise Marketing, LLC



    "Let's Implement Marketing Your Way . . . AND Mine"

    One of marketing's most complicated processes relates to communication: managing contact lists and deploying these lists to disseminate the firm's content. Most professional service firms harbor a legacy of the "gatekeeper" syndrome, where fee-earning practitioners closely guard their relationships and contacts lists, instead of sharing information to their firm's centralized contacts database. Durocher, who joined RHR International in the mid-1990s, discovered his firm's gatekeeper legacy the hard way. He recounts below how this discovery became the springboard for his leading the firm toward a significant marketing process change.

    Jeff Durocher
    Jeff Durocher

    Our firm creates excellent content. I tell our consultants that their personal distribution of the firm's intellectual output is a fantastic way to stay in touch with clients or prospective clients, and helps expand the way they perceive us. For example, if clients just knew us as people who did organizational assessments, they could also think of us to do their succession planning.

    When I first joined the firm, I asked everyone to send me spreadsheets of their contacts. It took a year to get all the lists, duplicate them and create my own small core database. But I also started a process of forwarding our packaged expertise to our consultants, and asking them to disseminate this thought leadership to their contacts.

    I began to find out that many of our consultants did not forward our materials to their prospects and clients. Some people would just flat out tell us, "You know, I don't do anything with that material you send me." Others would ask me why I keep sending the firm's content to them. Sometimes clients would call me and not know about the most recent item that they should have received. It was clear there were a lot of little content-distribution breakdowns occurring.

    So we surveyed our consultants: "Are you sending our materials out?" We found about 30% were distributing our packaged intellectual content; 30% or so wouldn't even consider it; and the other 30% occasionally would do it, and sometimes awkwardly, like sending out a year's worth of material all at once.

    I said to myself, "OK, fine, I'll build a list of my own potential RHR buyers." I turned my small core list into a corporate contact list, and housed it on a powerful relational database. When our consultants spoke at conferences, I got the list. When we advertised, I got the list. I hired a temp to data-enter the Fortune 500 CEOs and their company's board members. My list was about 10,000 people. The combined list of the rest of the company was less than 3,000. On my own, I started sending potential buyers our firm's materials.

    That got some of our consultants' attention. I remember vividly receiving an angry fax from one of our consultants about a letter I had sent to one of his clients. He felt I had violated some sort of unspoken code of contacting the client without his knowledge. This didn't bother me a bit. My philosophy is it's better to make errors of commission instead of errors of omission.

    But the plan worked. People who got mad about what I was doing ultimately expanded their relationships with their clients. My steps led to their having a discussion with their client, and also their getting more familiar with the services and intellectual capital of our entire firm. By forcing them to change their marketing and client relationship processes, it led to more client work, in spite of themselves.

    Three years ago, I installed a CRM system which is heavily tied to our firm's e-mail software. I wanted to make it very easy for consultants to share their contacts' information. Now, when they add a contact to their personal list, a copy also goes to our CRM list. We made it optional for consultants to let us completely direct the firm's content distribution to their clients.

    Just this year, we've noticed more people are saying, "Here, send these publications to my list too. I can't keep up with all the steps to touch a client at the right time with the right information. Why don't you just include me in your process?" People are getting over the idea that they have to "protect" their clients from Marketing, and that we can actually do a better job of managing the process of content distribution than they can themselves.

    And the results show. We just produced a webinar that we promoted over the last two months. For the first time, we had probably half the firm tells us, "send the webinar invitation to my contacts list." So we've crossed the tipping point, and it led to our largest, most successful webinar yet. We usually get about 200 or 300 webinar attendees; for this one, we had 600. I fully expect that for our next webinar, we will even get closer to 100% participation from our customers and our consultants.

    We've changed their own process.

    No Fear

    Durocher outlined three important "lessons-learned" about changing marketing processes, and getting people to start endorsing them.

    • Be sticky. "If you believe you are right, then you have to tell people over and over. Be consistent and continue to do it."

    • Endure the backlash. "You have to take a couple of courageous steps in order to break through some of the barriers. For instance, tell the consultants what you are going to do, then actually do it."

    • Don't listen to excuses. "As long as what you are doing is relevant to your business and can potentially expand the firm's work, just press forward and don't let them talk you out of making the changes you believe are necessary. You need support, of course, at the right levels. (Durocher reports to the CEO). As long as you update your senior managers about what you will be doing, they will realize what the real problems might be. When necessary, they will advocate for the change you seek."

    During my nearly twelve years of marketing management consulting to professional firms, the vast majority of marketing leaders I've encountered have stayed well behind the invisible line of their own "inside" function. Durocher, in his fearless display of direct communication with clients (without permission!) proved that a firm can indeed change its marketing processes, benefit from the results – and that everyone will live to tell the tale.

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