Shattering the Myth: All Clients Are Not Good Ones
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Letâs face it: Entrepreneurs (particularly new ones) can be desperate to get clients.I get it. Youâre dying to get clients, build your portfolio and grow your business.Particularly for service-based businesses where youâre not pushing product but instead selling yourself, many entrepreneurs are great at âwhat they doâ but horrible selling themselves.As a result, they often buy into the myth that every client is a good client, and unfortunately, that type of thinking is not just flawed but potentially quite risky as well.Not only are there clients or client opportunities where youâd be better off taking a pass, some of them can actually be detrimental to your business so you need to beware of these clients and avoid at all costs.
Related: The Psychological Trigger Thatâs Confusing Your Customers
Here are the five types of clients to stay away from:
1. The Stiffer
As the name suggests this is the client that has financial problems or may just be unethical (and intending to stiff you). You might think this is exceptionally rare, but I have to say that I encountered âthe stifferâ during my very first year in business. This particular client was hesitant to sign an agreement before I did the work (first red flag). The person ultimately did sign at the last minute, then proceeded to just not pay me. The client apologized profusely for a few months and ultimately I was forced to take legal actionâŚ.not fun.Just do yourself a favor and avoid any clients who seem to have cash flow problems or seem hesitant to sign contracts.
2. The Abuser
Unfortunately, some clients can sense a hungry entrepreneur and truly take advantage of that.They may request ridiculously low pricing, disrespect you by constantly cancelling meetings at the last minute or showing up late, paying late or trying to change the scope/terms of the agreement without any additional payment. They donât respect you and you want to avoid them.
Related: Becoming Indispensable to Your Customers
3. The Moocher
These clients arenât actually âclients,â because they donât want to pay you at all! Even though youâre running a business, they want you to provide product or services for free. In their mind you should be happy for the opportunity to provide âsamples to their team, speak to their group or conduct a free initial project,â as you are gaining experience, portfolio or what have you.
This one is tricky, because you certainly might choose to offer some pro bono services (e.g. complimentary consultation) as part of your business model to provide a âsampleâ of your product or service, but this should be your offer not their expectation.When clients begin to ask for free services at the outset, beware.
Another variation of the moocher is the clients that wants you to participate in tons of meetings before making a decision about working with you.Often, theyâre seeking free consulting, and you have to be really clear about how many meetings youâll conduct (as part of your business development) before you have a signed agreement in place. Donât be lured into giving it away for free.
4. Mr./Ms. Clueless
These clients have absolutely no clue what they want, but they will hold your feet to the fire when you donât deliver.They change their mind at every meeting or introduce radically different information throughout your interactions with them.They expect you to be a mind reader or magician and somehow donât understand how their indecisiveness and vacillation negatively impact your ability to complete the work successfully. With these people you simply canât win, because their requirements are constantly changing.Avoid them like the plague; youâll be glad you did.
5. Mr./Ms. Unreliable
Although there is certainly a bit of hierarchy inherent in the vendor/client relationship, thereâs also tons of partnership and working together.Most entrepreneurs heavily depend on clients to provide necessary background information, documents, feedback on deliverables, edits and reference data, among other requests, to make the project a success. When clients are unreliable, or worse unresponsive, it makes the entrepreneurâs job next to impossible.
It is frustrating to be dependent on anyone who is not responsive or reliable â itâs like swimming through peanut butter. Itâs possible, but you wouldnât want to try it.
Related: Itâs Not Me, Itâs You: When to End a Toxic Client Relationship
Letâs face it: Entrepreneurs (particularly new ones) can be desperate to get clients.I get it. Youâre dying to get clients, build your portfolio and grow your business.Particularly for service-based businesses where youâre not pushing product but instead selling yourself, many entrepreneurs are great at âwhat they doâ but horrible selling themselves.As a result, they often buy into the myth that every client is a good client, and unfortunately, that type of thinking is not just flawed but potentially quite risky as well.Not only are there clients or client opportunities where youâd be better off taking a pass, some of them can actually be detrimental to your business so you need to beware of these clients and avoid at all costs.
Related: The Psychological Trigger Thatâs Confusing Your Customers
Here are the five types of clients to stay away from: