What Does 2012 Hold for Professional Services Firms?

Creative Growth Group recently hosted a breakfast roundtable for a small group of our Chicago friends. Attendees included an intimate group of Professional Services Firm Marketers, Strategists and Senior Leaders focused on the growth of their firms.

Our conversation theme focused on what market conditions professional services firm leaders must anticipate to succeed in 2012.   While our invited group guests would have had no trouble keeping a compelling conversation going without extra help, we stacked the deck in favor of an extraordinary discussion by asking a few guests to serve as “conversation starters.” Our special appreciation goes out to these first-among-equal experts who joined us for our breakfast discussion:

  • Pam Daniels, Director, IDEO
  • Tim McHugh, Senior Analyst, William Blair & Company
  • Patrick Palmer, EVP & Global Strategy Director, Leo Burnett

We have provided a brief excerpt of the discussion here, looking at Pressures, People and Preferences  If you would like the full summary that includes our take on the implications of the discussion, please send an email to me at Andrew@creativegrowthgroup.com.  Just put “full summary” in the headline and I will send you the full 7-page discussion summary. Continue reading

Grow Your Own Practice by Bringing the Firm

Network of peopleEspecially for winning the most transformative and consequential prospects, business development requires personal accountability and team effort. If you’re not using the full power of your firm and colleagues, you may be neglecting exceptional marketing assets.

And remember—if collaborative business development is going to be successful, you must cultivate your internal relationships just like you do your external referral sources.

How To:

Collaborate
– Collaborate across your practice group, across offices, across your firm. As you do with targets, identify which colleagues are most likely to “fit” with you and your practice. Then cultivate the relationship. First, make sure your colleagues know what you’re famous for. And, you need to know what they’re famous for. Identify joint targets and approach together. Whenever possible, visit prospects and referral sources with a colleague in tow. For the biggest targets, consider putting a client pursuit team together across the practice or firm.
Surround the client – Collectively network across the firm to find out who knows whom at your key prospective clients. Knowing one person at the target is not enough. And, getting in front of more than one influencer or decision-maker at the prospect is more easily accomplished when you have more players on your team than just you. The more positive impressions you make on as many decision-participants at the prospect, the more likely you are to win and expand the business.
Include the client – Bring your client into your client team meetings on occasion; Invite your client to speak to your colleagues about how they manage certain aspects of their business. This lets them know that you are truly focused on them and exposes them to more professionals at your firm so they get a fuller sense for your capabilities and creates opportunities for relationship expansion.

Grow Your Practice by Understanding the Altitude of Growth

What business leaders can learn from pilots.

By Travis Dommert

AirplaneWhat does your professional practice have in common with an airplane in flight?  A lot.  Both require careful and seasoned stewardship to stay aloft.  Both yield catastrophic consequences if they fall.  As professional advisors, consider these lessons we can learn from pilots and take action to make sure your practice isn’t losing altitude.

Part 1.  Gravity and drag…24/7

An airplane in level flight is a contradiction in terms.  Every second an airplane is in the air, it is in a fight to stay aloft.  Thousands of pounds of metal and wire are summoned to earth relentlessly by gravity, and drag pulls it backwards with every passing moment.

The blessing, if there is one, is that pilots and engineers know this to be true.  The entire airplane was specially designed to maximize lift and minimize drag.  And, the pilots are trained repeatedly on the dangers that lurk below if they take their attention away from fighting gravity and drag.  They could lose their lives and those of their passengers and crew.  Shutting off the engines while they take a break or tend to other matters isn’t just dangerous, it’s idiotic.  Who would do that?

Well, how about us?  As professional services providers, do we ever idle our business development engines because “more pressing matters” are at hand?  If you are an accountant, do you really do a lot of selling during tax season?  If you are a consultant or attorney, do you really maintain all your sales and marketing activities after you land a big engagement or client?

Hmm.  Should you be surprised that you have lost altitude the next time you get back into the market?  Probably not.  The fact is, your practice is under the same perpetual forces as the plane.  Client relationships that go unnourished fade and die.  Merely satisfied clients are the next to leave.  Competitors and new entrants are constantly looking for a bite out of your book of business.

So what do you do about it?

First, acknowledge these facts.  Just to maintain your practice revenues, you must constantly work to grow your business.  Sales and marketing aren’t for the good times or the slow times, they are for all the time.  You can’t afford a week to go by without sales and marketing activity.  Every week.  And, if you don’t have a dedicated business development team (frankly, even if you do), then YOU must be doing some of this work every week.

The exact prescription depends on your practice, but as a rule of thumb, think about what effort it would take to grow your professional practice revenues by 10%.  How many new clients, accounts, or sales would that be?  What does the prospect pipeline and business development cycle look like in reverse?  To yield a 10% gain, what recurring actions would you have to do each and every week?  Lead generation, prospect contacts, business development and client cultivation meetings, presentations, pitches, proposals, assessments, follow-up calls, touch-points, recommendations.  THAT is what you probably need to do just to stay even.

Think you can take the tax season off while you prepare returns?  No.  Think you can stop pursuing new client relationships while you work on the one you have?  No.  It won’t work.  You will be losing altitude.  And the scary thing about losing altitude is that you don’t even feel it.  Pull up and you’ll feel it in your gut; coast gradually into the side of a mountain and you may even enjoy the flight…until you notice what’s happened.

Don’t let this happen to you.  Don’t idle your engines.  Take time, even in the busiest of times, to sell.  Get focused on a few key recurring business development actions.  Keep track.  And, with a little luck you can smooth the ups and downs from your business cycle, gain ground from one season or project to the next, and stop scaring the passengers each time you go dashing back to the cockpit.

Part 2.  Reading your instruments.

Instrument Panel

We already talked about the fact that you can’t trust your gut instinct when flying an airplane.  A steady descent feels just fine, as does a slow turn or a gentle roll.  Pilots know that they are safer flying with no visibility and quality flight instruments than with blue sky and no instruments.
With a half dozen gauges, they know the attitude of the airplane relative to the horizon, the speed through the air, the rate of climb or descent, the amount of fuel remaining, and the finer points regarding direction.

The question is—can you run your business or professional practice using your gut?  Many people seem to think so.  Or worse, whether they think so or not, they tend to do so because they don’t have any instruments.  Are you smarter than a pilot or just less attuned the perils of losing altitude?

Okay, maybe both, but our pilot friends are generally a pretty smart bunch.  They know that a plane falling from the sky is bad.  A plane running out of gas is bad.  A plane flying at an unsustainable rate of climb or descent is bad.  They know exactly how bad, and they know how to make changes to sustain the delicate balance that is flight.

So what does this mean to you?  Well, for one thing, if you don’t have them already, develop a set of quality instruments.  Whether you call these key performance indicators (KPI’s) metrics, analytics, or just your rules of thumb, figure out the handful of measures that indicate that business is coming in the door (remember—if you aren’t gaining new business, you are losing altitude).  Figure out how much gas is in the tank (working capital, credit).  Assess the attitude of your operation—are clients and colleagues happy or under distress?

Then, once you understand your instruments, identify several key actions that keep them in a healthy state of operation.  What activity is required on a weekly basis to keep business coming in, keep colleagues engaged, keep service levels high, keep quality in check, and keep the tanks from running dry?  Delegate these actions to the appropriate team members and hold them accountable for making time each week for getting them done.

If you don’t undertake these actions, then don’t be surprised when the next time you consult your instruments, one or more of them signals trouble.

Travis Dommert is the Chief Operating Officer at two companies in the area of human performance and HR solutions, IRUNURUN LLC and The Lindquist Group

Social Experiment – Part 3 – Where Do I Find the Time for LinkedIN ?

In our last newsletter, we talked about your LinkedIN profile.

Here, Patricia Romboletti, Managing Director of Creative Growth Group and Creative Growth Talent, and a bona fide LinkedIN Guru, shares the third tip in her custom program, “Six LinkedIN Steps to Professional Services Growth in 2011.”

Where Do I Find the Time for LinkedIN?

Whenever I lead our LinkedIN training workshops, the issue of time management is one of the first ones raised. Included in that discussion is usually the assumption that I must spend hours a day or week on the site. Not true—and I will share my strategy for leveraging LinkedIN in about 1 ½ hours a week.

But first—let’s go back to Part 1 of this series where I suggested that you reframe your thinking about LinkedIN and look at it as a “live event” rather than a social media site. Now, let’s add another dimension to the reframe—it is a “live event” and your activity on the site, if used properly, falls into the realm of business development, not Web surfing.

So to carve out some time to effectively and proactively leverage LinkedIN, I suggest that you start by substituting one current BD activity for time on LinkedIN. If you look back over your schedule for the last few weeks, are there meetings that were not productive—that did not really move your BD initiatives forward? When working with clients, I have yet to find one person who was not able to find at least one hour per week that they could convert to their weekly LinkedIN hour. And actually, it is closer to 1 ½ hours that can be claimed since there is no commuting time involved.

What to do in that 1 ½ hours? Let me share my routine with you. Each morning I take about 5 minutes (usually less, but seldom more) to go my LinkedIN Home page. There, I review the “Updates” section to see the new connections added by my Level 1 connections. If I see that they have connected to someone that I would like to know, I reach out to my contact either by phone or email and ask if they would be willing to introduce me to their new connection. My assumption, and it has held true, is that my contact has recently had an interaction with their new connection—the relationship is fresh and that person is top-of-mind for them.

I then look further down on the Updates section to see if anyone has posted a status update such as a promotion or some other noteworthy event and I send a note to that person acknowledging their achievement. It is a simple, quick and easy way to stay in touch with my connections and one that is always appreciated.

I also take a minute to click on the link “Who’s Viewed Your Profile” located on the right-hand side of the home page. You will be surprised what that exercise can tell you.

I subscribe to a very targeted article consolidation service through SmartBriefs on topics that are of interest to me and to my network. They come to my Inbox each morning and usually contain valuable information that my network could benefit from reading. Each article includes a LinkedIN Share button allowing me to post great articles to my status update in a matter of seconds. I have my Twitter account tied into my LinkedIN account so I can post to both sites with one click so I make that part of my daily 5 minute session.

I schedule the rest of my time—the weekly hour, for Friday morning. In that focused hour, I review and accept (or ignore if appropriate) any invitations sent during the week. By using a standard feature on LinkedIN (that is—you don’t need an upgraded account), I can create one message welcoming my new connections to my network and again with only one click, I can send an individual message to each new connection. Occasionally I will accept other connections in between my weekly Friday session, but those are the exceptions, not the rule.

I allocate some time—typically no more than 15 minutes during my hour, to browse the contacts of my new connections. If I find a contact that I would like to know, I reach out to my connection, either by phone (I will cover the online to off-line/on the phone strategy in a future Post) or email to ask for an introduction. I also have a goal to make at least one introduction/connection weekly during this time to two people in my network who would really benefit from knowing each other.

I belong to a number of Groups on LinkedIN and would not have time to stay active in each one on a daily or even weekly basis. So instead, I select 3-4 of my Groups each week and during my Friday hour, I “visit” those Groups and engage in a current discussion or begin a new discussion. It really is like attending 3-4 SIG events in about 15 minutes.

Next, if time permits, I go to the Q&A section to see if there is a question in my area of expertise that I can answer or an opportunity for me to ask a question, thus engaging in “dialog” across my network.

And, if I still have time within my hour (and I typically do—none of the above really takes a lot of time) I leverage additional LinkedIN features such as Amazon Books to find a way to engage in “dialog” with my network or I research clients and prospects in the Company section of LinkedIN.

Of course, if I have a specific need to do research in between my Friday sessions for a particular client or prospect, I do that. But this routine accomplishes a couple of things. One, by scheduling and limiting my time, I make sure that I do not get drawn into a big black hole—that is easy to do on a site with so much rich opportunity to network. Two, I ensure that I am visible, proactive and engaged with my network on a weekly basis.

As we discuss in detail in our LinkedIN workshop, each activity described briefly above ties directly to business development.

The routine is deceptively simple but significantly impacts your BD efforts.

If you missed Part 2 of this series, click here to read it

Your Career as a Business Development Test Pilot

Vans Aircraft With CreditsThe history of the word experience aligns it closely with the concept of experiment. Building a great client experience – especially during the client attraction stage – is often an experimental initiative.

Larry Fussell is a Business Development Director at PwC. He’s also an experimental airplane pilot and craftsman. Larry is an instrument rated pilot who began flying in earnest in the late 1990’s. Somewhere along the line, he decided that flying the planes wasn’t enough. Larry helped build the Defiant – a twin engine all composite aircraft designed by Burt Rutan – the famous American aerospace engineer who designed record-breaking Voyager, which was the first plane to fly around the world without stopping or refueling. Most recently, Larry built an RV-7A kit aircraft that maintains cruise speeds near or even above 200 mph. Can you imagine building your own plane and being the one person who will test it – by going up in the sky – to make sure it works OK? We asked Larry Fussell to relate his experiences building and flying experimental aircraft to his experience doing business development for one of the world’s largest accounting firms. As Larry explained, it starts with the vision . . .

Larry Fussell:

Building /flying Experimental aircraft and business development carry many of the same requirements. First is the vision. I can tell you that when I built the first part for my airplane I could not sleep that night because I could envision the day I took off for the first time. Next is the determination to follow through. Building an airplane is a huge undertaking requiring 1000s of hours and making decisions along the way that could cause the project to fail or cost a bundle to repair. You also find yourself changing plans as technology/circumstance both evolve. Constant problem solving and acquisition of new skills are a major part of the project. Then the day finally arrives where you put all your faith in the skills you have developed and the quality of work that you have done. The engine fires, you roll out onto the runway, everything is in the green, you’re scared to death but confident in your work product/skills, full throttle, dancing with the stick and rudder just like you were taught and then comes the moment that your vision feels the wind under her belly and flies. It is almost a religious experience. Which explains why there are so many serial builders in the sport. Now comes many hours of tests and tweaking. A project like this is never done. You are always making adjustments, but you’re also having fun expanding your horizons and looking for the next big breakthrough in your skills.

So how does this all relate to Business Development?

Vision – what do you want to do (and with whom). By the way this has to be your vision. You have to be committed to it and willing to make the sacrifices necessary to achieve the vision.
Investment – a business development role done properly takes well more than the traditional 40 hours per week. You have to know about the company, the people you will be working with, their families, their interests, their personal drivers and what makes your relationship a win for them.

Skills – You must constantly acquire new skills to solve the problems that will inevitably present themselves. Find a mentor, enroll in skills classes, and experiment on a small scale.

Judgment – How are your actions bringing you closer to your vision?

Enjoyment – you must enjoy the small wins along the way or the journey will become too arduous to continue.
Bring your skills and confidence to the table each time you are in front of the client. Watch your vision become reality and dance with the ever changing environment knowing that you have done the work properly, sought training as needed, and built a beautiful machine(relationship) that will meet the client’s needs as well as you own. By the way, this has to be real; fake it and you will, I guarantee, auger into a flaming hole.

Enjoy the ride – To me, Business Development is about the relationships that you build and the richness that those relationships add to your life and that of your clients. Yes, if you do it right you will be rewarded in both finances and career. But you will find the real joy comes from the ride.

CGG CMO Dinner and Dialogue in Chicago

Chicago evening skylineOn Thursday March 10th, 2011, the Chicago skyline served as the backdrop for a dinner hosted by Creative Growth Group. We gathered our Chicago-based clients and friends into the Signature Room on top of the John Hancock building for a dinner discussion focused on growing professional services. Our dinner guests included Managing Directors and Chief Marketing Officers from a number of leading accounting, public relations, legal, engineering and consulting firms. We asked two renowned marketing gurus to serve as first among equals at the dinner table to jump-start the conversation. The discussion lasted well past dessert, and we have included just a couple of top-line highlights of the evening’s discussion here. Serving as catalysts for the discussion around the table were:

Tom Collinger: Chair of the Integrated Marketing Communications program at Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism. Additionally, he’s an Associate Professor and Associate Dean of Medill.

Karl Hellman: Founder and President of Resultrek, a global marketing consulting firm dedicated to creating great marketers. Karl co-authored The Customer Learning Curve and is also the primary driver and author of Kotler Marketing Group’s 2011 Marketing in Hard Times Study of CMOs.

HIGHLIGHTS OF THE DINNER DIALOGUE

The Mind of the CMO

Karl Hellman provided us with a summary of the research that he conducted with the consulting firm, Kotler Marketing Group, founded by famed Northwestern University, Kellogg School professor, Philip Kotler. The study was of nearly 200 senior marketing executives from major U.S. corporations including professional services and financial services firms.

While Karl’s findings were comprehensive – one of the key highlights that stimulated much discussion was around the idea that “Innovation is the Road to Recovery: Hellman and Kotler’s study found that the companies which performed best during the recession emphasized “New Product/Solution Innovation” in their study responses and in their market actions. Though it may be somewhat more challenging to pursue service innovation in a professional firm, Karl suggested adopting an “agile service development” model akin to what technology firms use when developing software. Involving the client in this collaborative and iterative process is also associated with agile development to ensure that new solutions are best-fits for the client audience. Agile development also connotes a diverse portfolio of new service creation taking place at any one time.

CMO as Chief Media Officer

Tom Collinger challenged our guests to think of the CMO as “Chief Media Officer” “What I think is the sea change is that all companies, all brands, have both the opportunity and the necessity to operate the way media companies operate,” Tom said. “Media is concerned with building a marketable audience franchise through information, news that matters and in some cases entertainment for purposes of engaging their constituents in an ongoing dialogue. “

Adopting the media company model calls for more than a change in the marketing communications function. Consider, Tom suggested, what kinds of talents would be needed in the enterprise if you were to follow a media model; how your enterprises might be organized differently; what kind of partners you might need to be bring in to help behave differently. Other roles Tom suggest the CMO of the future may need to take on included Chief Trend Spotter, Chief Content Officer or simply Chief Media Officer in addition to being a superb block-and-tackle marketer.

The evening was full of provocative discourse and gave everyone much to think about. We hope these two highlights stimulate your thinking as well.

Social Experiment – Part 2 – Your LinkedIN Profile

LinkedIn LogoIn our last newsletter, we talked about shifting your perspective from online to offline.

Professional services firm leaders are engaging Patricia Romboletti, Managing Director of Creative Growth Group and Creative Growth Talent, and a bona fide LinkedIN Guru, to share her custom program, “Six LinkedIN Steps to Professional Services Growth in 2011.”

Here, we provide you with a second tip from Patricia’s repository of social networking knowledge.

Your Profile – Showcasing Your Claim to Fame

Your LinkedIN profile has really become your personal Web site. It is the first place people go now to find out more about you.

I challenge you to read yours over and to answer the question—could most everyone else with my position say the same thing, or does this free and yet very valuable real estate showcase my “claim to fame” — or to say it another way, does it tell what you are famous for?

If it doesn’t, then I urge you to schedule time each week to hone your profile until you can uniquely own it. Most important, make sure that when a client or prospect reads it, they know that you have a clear understanding of their problems/ issues/ concerns or needs and the results you can help them achieve.

And one more thing—be sure that after reading it, they conclude that you, among many other professionals, can do it better than anyone else.

Call To Action: Upgrade Your Firm’s Growth Talent

You are a professional and an expert in your practice area, whether it be law, accounting, real estate, management consulting, engineering, etc. When you need to add to your professional team, screening and hiring those professionals is relatively easy—you speak the same language and you know exactly how to drill down on the candidate’s expertise and experience. You can find and hire the best of the best with relative ease.

But when it comes to hiring your marketing and business development talent at your firm—you may have noticed what we have noticed—a cycle of high turn-over. Why? Because you don’t naturally speak the same language and you’ve never held those roles, so identifying the best and the brightest who also match your firm’s culture is more difficult.

Here’s what Creative Growth Group (CGG) is doing to reverse this cycle:

We launched Creative Growth Talent (CGT), our executive search practice. As the leader in marketing and client development exclusively for professional service firms, we are able to leverage our expertise to recruit exceptional talent that fits your needs and your culture in these disciplines. CGT is dedicated to equipping professional services firms across disciplines with the superior marketers and business developers needed to achieve aggressive and sustainable growth.

CGG has a deep understanding of professional service firms and of what is required to drive systematic, intentional, collaborative growth. We also know that the challenges of driving that growth have become radically more complex for professional services firms. In many instances however, marketing and business development talent has not kept pace with this added complexity.

We created CGT to solve that problem, and to solve it in a unique way. CGT delivers full spectrum rainmaker search services, from developing the competency profile of an ideal hire, to finding, screening, and interviewing candidates, including administering our proprietary Rainmaker Assessment Profile, and all the way through negotiating terms of employment.

Unique to our search service is the critical on-boarding component provided during the first 90 days. Our coaching guides your new hire to master business orientation, expectations alignment, political connection, and cultural adaptation, thus enabling the selected candidate to rapidly gain credibility throughout the firm and ensuring a rapid ROI for you.

CGG has performed successful searches for several of you in this regard and we are now establishing an official practice to provide a broader-based national service. Most recently, we successfully completed a search for a senior marketing executive at a $65 million strategic marketing consultancy. The success of that search resulted not only from CGG’s in-depth knowledge of the qualities and characteristics required, but also stemmed from our thorough understanding of our clients, their culture and their overall objectives. This unique perspective greatly enhances our ability to recruit a candidate who can contribute in both the short- and long-term.

Andrew Dietz and Patricia Romboletti will be spearheading CGT. Andrew has completed numerous senior-executive searches while working with one of the world’s leading retained search firms, Egon Zehnder International, prior to launching CGG. Pat had a successful career in sales, marketing and client development with business services firms before launching her own organization, Sage Executive Search.

CGT is ready and eager to work with you on any mid- to senior-level marketing, business development or rainmaker position you need to fill. Please call Andrew Dietz at 404-664-7484 or Pat Romboletti at 800-871-8052 for more information or to get started on a search.

Experience Required

Superb experience equals secure employment—but not necessarily the kind of experience that you think. Your professional experience matters far less to a prospect than their experience of your professionalism. That is, the only way for prospects and clients to really know how great you and your firm are at solving their problems is to let them experience it for themselves.

That is why Creative Growth Group’s Fifth Annual Client Advisor Awards program that took place in December, 2010, focused on the topic of creating a compelling experience, and it featured the world renowned guru of delivering excellent experiences: Jim Gilmore, co-author of “The Experience Economy: Work is Theater & Every Business a Stage,” which authorities have ranked as one of the top “100 Business Books of All Time.”

“Staging a compelling experience is in no way limited to coffee-drinking at Starbucks, computer repair encounters with the Geek Squad, or taking the family to Disneyland — or any of a vast array of other places and events in which consumers today spend time and money. Business-to-business experiences abound at trade shows, in executive briefing centers, and with other marketing experiences. Professional services firms would be wise to similarly stage unique experiences for their clients lest they find themselves on the slick slope to commoditization — purchased solely on the basis of price, price, price,” said Gilmore who spoke about staging superior Client Advisor Experiences to a capacity audience during the Client Advisor Awards at the Cherokee Town Club in Atlanta, GA.

Finalists were evaluated on their Client Advisor Experience excellence in five areas: collaboration, creativity, content and value orientation, capability and credibility. 2010 Client Advisor Awards sponsors include: The Atlanta Business School Alliance, BCHORD, Business Wise, Deltek, Creative Growth Group, and Strategies Group. Creative Growth Group founded the Client Advisor Awards in 2006 and continues to serve as the program’s lead organizer. More about the Awards can be found at http://www.clientadvisorawards.com/.

Congratulations to all of our Finalists and Winners listed below. We hope to see you on this list in future years.

2010 Client Advisor Award Winners

Large Professional Services Firm
Winner: Arnall Golden Gregory LLP
Finalists: Arc Worldwide – Leo BurnettUHY Advisors

Large Client Organization
Winner: Chick-Fil-A, Inc.
Finalists: NASCO |   U.S. Army Corps of Engineers

Mid-Sized Professional Services Firm
Winner: Smith Moore Leatherwood LLP
Finalists: Jabian LLCProject, Time & Cost, Inc.

Mid-Sized Client Organization
Winner: Butler, Fairman & Seufert, Inc.
Finalists: Iron Data, LLCMud Pie

Small Professional Services Firm
Winner: The Interlochen Group
Finalists: BrightWave Marketing, Inc.Calysto Communications

Small Client Organization
Winner: CMI Research
Finalists: REACH Call, Inc.W.F. Baird & Associates Ltd.

Community Involvement Award
Winner: BoardWalk ConsultingAtlanta Center for Self Sufficiency (ACSS)
Finalists: Jabian LLCTechnology Association of Georgia (TAG)
Pathbuilders, Inc.Georgia State University (GSU)

Wanted: Your Best Experiences

On the radio, StoryCorps records personal experiences, describing what a personal experience looks like, what it means to the story teller, and how it feels. Maybe you’ve heard StoryCorps’ weekly broadcasts on NPR’s Morning Edition? StoryCorps’ mission is to provide Americans of all backgrounds and beliefs with the opportunity to record, share, and preserve the stories of our lives. Since 2003, StoryCorps has collected and archived more than 30,000 interviews from more than 60,000 participants.

Similarly, through Creative Growth’s Client Advisor Awards (http://www.clientadvisorawards.com/), we share superb experiences between professional services advisors and their clients. This posting begins Creative Growth’s experiment in collecting Client Advisor experiences on a continuous and systematic basis. Let’s call this new initiative, ClientExperienceCorps. Only, instead of using the broadcast airwaves, though, we’ll use the Internet right here and now.

Will you help us start the collection? We are now accepting stories of the best professional services client experiences. That is, how have you and your Firm intentionally and successfully staged superb engagement experiences for your clients? We’ll also accept stories of how your clients have staged world class experiences for you as their advisor.

By staging a Client Experience, we mean intentionally orchestrating all (OK, we’ll start with low expectations…forget ALL and let’s try ANY) of the following elements of a professional services engagement:

Attracting – What’s intentionally unique, customized and excellent about how you attract your clients of choice?

Onboarding – What’s intentionally unique, customized and excellent about how you begin new client engagements to ensure a great first impression and quick results?

Engaging – How have you intentionally crafted a unique, customized and excellent experience for your clients of choice so that execution of the core engagement is a “Wow!” experience for them?

Exiting – What’s intentionally unique, customized and excellent about how you end engagements to ensure a great lingering impression?

Extending – How have you intentionally crafted unique, customized and world-class ways to stay deeply connected with your clients of choice when you are between engagements with them?

PLEASE CONTACT US with your best stories today by calling 404-664-7484 or e-mailing Andrew at Andrew@creativegrowthgroup.com. Based on your preference, we will accept your submitted stories directly or we can create an audio recording.