My Customer is So Annoying! How to Rationally Decide if the Time Has Come to Sack Them
Colin Shaw
LinkedIn 'Top Voice' & influencer Customer Experience & Marketing | Financial Times Award Leading Consultancy 4 Straight Years | Host of 'The Intuitive Customer' in Top 2% | Best-selling Author x 7 | Conference Speaker
My Customer is So Annoying! How to Rationally Decide if the Time Has Come to Sack Them
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Customer relationships have to be win-win. If they aren't, it's time to end it. However, it shouldn't be a quick decision, nor should it happen in an email or text. There is a process, and today we will look at when and how you should sack a customer.??
This topic came up on a recent podcast. Robert, who works in software development, has a pickle from time to time with annoying customers. Sometimes, Robert says, no matter how much time, effort, and investment you put into improving the customer relationship, it remains dismal from both perspectives. While Robert believes in fixing the relationship, he also wonders if there is a point where it makes more sense to go their separate ways. How should companies decide when and who should make the final decision? Also, Robert wants to know if there are any traps to avoid in the process. Finally, Robert asks how to handle firing a customer in the best possible way?
Now, we have covered this ground a little before on the podcast, with our episode, "Why You Should Be Proactively Firing Customers Without Hesitation." In it, we introduce the idea that complex customer relationships take a toll on your organization in the form of resources and employee experience. In some cases, they can drain the organization to the point that it is no longer worth continuing. So, despite the title, we recommend "hesitating" a bit by trying to resolve the situation first before letting them go.?
So, How Do You Decide to Fire a Customer?
Deciding whether to let a customer go starts with two broad areas of analysis. First, organizations should consider the financial and interpersonal perspectives.?
Once you have looked at these areas from a broader perspective, it is best to take a more detailed approach to the process. First, companies should analyze the long-term value of those customers. Are these customers strategically important? You should take a beat before getting out the ax if they are. Right now, you might not necessarily earn the revenue you want, and they may not make economic sense, but they might down the road. For example, they might be a large brand that reflects positively on you based on your relationship. Maybe they are excellent at adopting new products or services you release. It could be that the company is helpful to your organization in some way. So, sure, they aren't "profitable," but maybe they benefit your company in other ways. This one works the other way, too. You should consider if the company has a bad reputation, and their association as a customer reflects poorly on you.?
Companies should also look closely at the number of resources it takes to service the customer. Of course, some customers need more time and attention than others, and that's normal. But there are limits. Customers should not create work in simple parts of the relationship. For example, if the customer in question doesn't pay their bills on time or asks for extended payment terms, it requires much effort to get your compensation, which is an area that should be simple. Effectively, your company is now subsidizing theirs.?
Who Should Decide?
As many of you know, my experience is working in large telecom with corporations in the business-to-business area. We had demanding customers that took up resources, too. However, in an organization like my former employer, deciding to cut a customer would have been different based on who was making the call (please forgive the pun). The benefits and costs of working with a customer are distributed unevenly across the organization. So, while these decisions affect the entire organization, some people feel them more acutely than others.?
Biases within an organization also cloud the decision. For example, if left to the sales department, firing a customer wouldn't happen. The sales team's compensation and work performance-related metrics are linked to their active accounts. Also, sales teams often have no idea about account management costs, whether the account requires extra effort for timely bill collection, or how those difficult contact center interactions take a toll on the organization. So, these operational factors would not influence the sales team's decision.?
Therefore, the decision to fire a customer needs an independent voice. An outside consultant is a great choice. They can take a hard-nosed perspective an internal person can't.?
In other words, consultants can tell you that your baby is ugly; Bert Scroggins in marketing cannot.
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What Are the Traps to Avoid When Deciding to Fire a Customer?
Robert wanted to know if there was any mistake to avoid in your decision process. There are a couple actually, which include:
How Do You Fire Customers?
Maybe you have taken a challenging and comprehensive look at the customer relationship and determined that it isn't salvageable. Perhaps it is time to cut them loose and make them the competition's problem. If this is the case, Robert wanted to know how to do it best. To that end, I have seven steps of a process for him.?
Balance is critical here. How this decision plays out has implications for your company and your reputation. It would help if you were firm but pleasant. At the same time, it's a good idea to keep the door open to future endeavors.?
Moreover, the decision to fire this customer should also show you the type of customer to avoid in the future. The reality is, no company can serve every account, and you need to know what kind of customer you fit best. Then, target that type of customer in your future customer strategy sessions. The last thing you want to do is endure a repeat performance in a similar, and just as tricky, account.?
There will be times when a customer relationship doesn't work. However, it is essential that you appropriately handle the decision to fire a customer. It should start with an analysis of the relationship from a financial and interpersonal perspective and go from there. People not invested personally in the stakes should handle it, and it should also take a hard look at the causes. Finally, if the relationship isn't salvageable, a customized version of the seven-step process should lead your tactics.?
Generally, when it comes to firing customers, it requires taking a hard look at all the factors contributing to the problem. Should you occasionally break up with a customer? Yes. Should that be the first thing you do at the sign of difficulty? No. Are there other potential solutions here that the organization should investigate first? Always.
I hope that our advice for Robert was helpful to you also. Maybe you have a different pickle in your customer strategy? If so, please tell us about it at?www.beyondphilosophy.com./pickle. Perhaps we can feature you on the podcast and help you, too.
There you have it. No promotions, no gimmicks, just good information.?
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