How to identify what potentially difficult clients look like?
By Laurie L. O’Neil
Let’s face it everyone has had that difficult client that they stumbled upon. You know the one I am talking about, the one that makes you cringe when you see the number come up on the caller ID unit. So how do you recognize that vampire-like, energy-sucking client at first sight?
1. Watch for the warning signs. In that initial interview process you may recognize traits you do not like. It could be a behavioral issue, they may be needy, demanding, or just have unrealistic expectations. I recently was out on a sales call with a potential bookkeeping client. He was looking for someone to come on site weekly. He started to dictate to me how he was going to oversee and review everything we did and then told me how to write the proposal to him. In a very nice way, I told him really what he is looking for was an employee. He was not the type of client I was looking for.
2. Watch out for the drama! Let’s face it, all of our clients have drama but the ones who have constant drama are the hardest clients. Learn how to stay out of the drama. I recently terminated a client relationship because of all of the drama. He was an auto repair shop that had two employees embezzle from him. On top of that he had two previous bookkeepers that did not do him justice either; I knew about one of the bookkeepers but did not realize he had gone through two. One of them represented herself as a forensic bookkeeper – there is no such thing! He was being audited by the state as well. We cleaned up the books for his audit, but he just could not get past all the previous stuff that had happened to him to focus on moving forward. I did not want to be part of his drama.
3. Your client’s emergency is not your emergency. These clients can put you into chaos. I received a call the other day from a mechanical engineering company that was looking to get their books cleaned up in a day and wanted me to come in the next day to do it. One of my staff members took the call and nicely told him I book a week out and asked if he wanted to meet me then. It’s your choice whether or not you want to stay in chaos. People will only do what you allow them to do to you.
4. Set boundaries for your clients. When I take on a new client, I immediately set an expectation of when the client will send us the information or when we will be onsite to do the bookkeeping. If the client can not follow these simple rules, fire the client. These clients will run you ragged, with you constantly trying to chase down their information.
As you grow your practice, it is not necessarily the quantity of clients that you are looking for but the quality of clients. The next time you are out on a sales call, stop to really listen to that client and think is this really a client I want to have and do not be afraid to say “NO”.
Tags: Bookkeeping, Business Owners, Communication










