Three Easy Ways to Wow Your Clients

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    If your goal is to foster your client relationships and enhance the life-time value of your clients, Canadian Michael Morrow, a financial adviser for 30 years and a recognised expert in client engagement and fostering client loyalty, has a few high-touch ideas.

    Speaking at the MDRT Virtual Global Conference he described three high-touch ideas his company undertakes that he says solves the craving for human interaction we all have.

    Michael Morrow.

    He told the conference that before his company sends anything at all to a client or a prospective client they ask themselves four questions.  Is it:

    • Different and better?
    • High impact and timely?

    And does it:

    • Have a long shelf life?
    • Help establish the business as a credible source in the clients’ eyes?’

    “We want it to be timely and to personally connect during this time of social distancing. High- touch ideas in a high tech world that captialise on the ever-increasing need for human interaction that is slowly eroding.”

    Morrow says his business takes photos of clients and makes them into 500-piece jigsaw puzzles which he says means the business gets to be looked at in a very positive manner over the four to six hours it takes the client to do the puzzle of themselves.

    In addition, once or twice a year they provide a care package for their best clients.

    He says they want the wow factor that shows they are paying attention to detail, that they genuinely care and appreciate doing business with their clients.

    … when you look at the cost as a percentage of revenue it is really a small number – this is an investment in our business …

    “We do all this stuff because we made a business decision and when you look at the cost as a percentage of revenue it is really a small number – this is an investment in our business.”

    For a care package during lockdown they included things like locally made hand sanitiser, puzzles, crosswords, calendars, face masks, preserves and perhaps a bottle of wine and local cheeses to show they support local businesses. In turn they personalise each parcel, depending on the client’s interest or the time of year.

    “We try to connect personally with our clients while we are social distancing and to make sure that that everything we do reflects quality.”

    He says if he moved into another town or city, and wanted to work in the high net worth market he would investigate the 20 most influential people in the area; source their date of birth through LinkedIn and then purchase an original newspaper printed on the day they were born. He says these are not reprints, but the actual newspaper, and can be sourced online. They give them to clients for major birthdays  and other major life events.

    “You can’t play small with your decisions and big with your income. When you consider the life-time value of a client the cost of this stuff is insignificant and the value is huge.

    “Do these simple ideas and your clients will like you, trust you and think you are smart, and you get to show that you pay attention to detail and enhance the human connection,” he told the conference.

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    2 COMMENTS

    1. Sounds like he went to the Famous Wayne Cotton school of selling? Anyone who remembers Wayne Cotton and his tour of Australia in the early 80’s will know what i am talking about. Every door opening scheme in the book!. Not sure how he went once he got in the door though ? He never got that far in his presentations and it cost MLC and AMP a fortune to get him out here from of all places Canada ?

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