avatarBen Guttmann

Summary

The secret to not failing in a client-based business is to be a pleasure to work with, even if you occasionally miss deadlines or produce less-than-perfect work.

Abstract

The author reflects on the success of their agency and shares the secret to their client relationships: being a pleasure to work with. Drawing from a Neil Gaiman commencement speech, the author highlights the importance of doing great work, being on-time, and being a pleasure to work with in a client-based business. While acknowledging that their agency sometimes missed deadlines or produced less-than-perfect work, the author emphasizes that their genuine liking of their clients and the human relationships they built were crucial to their success.

Opinions

  • Business relationships are also human relationships, and people want to work with those they enjoy the company of.
  • It's essential to do great work and be on-time, but being a pleasure to work with is equally important.
  • Genuinely liking clients and building strong human relationships can be an insurance against failure.
  • Missing deadlines or producing less-than-perfect work can be forgiven if clients enjoy working with you.
  • The author's agency prioritized kindness and human relationships in their journey, which contributed to their success.
  • The author references Neil Gaiman's commencement speech, emphasizing the importance of being easy to work with in a freelance or client-based business.
  • The author encourages readers to share their thoughts and connect with them on Twitter for more insights.

The secret to not failing in a client-based business

People will put up with a lot of mistakes if you’re a good person

Credit: Berkay Gumustekin on Unsplash

Over the past few months as I’ve told people about our journey building and now selling our agency, a number of curious entrepreneurs have asked something along the lines of, “What was your secret? Why did clients work with you?”

Honestly, there isn’t a great answer. Every client had their own reason, and most of them are probably subconscious. And like every service business, we also lost more things than we won by at least two or three multitudes.

But that being said, I find myself referencing this one little quip that I heard back during our first year in business. It’s from a truly delightful commencement speech delivered by author and artist Neil Gaiman at Philadelphia’s University of the Arts in May of 2012:

People keep working, in a freelance world, and more and more of today’s world is freelance, because their work is good, and because they are easy to get along with, and because they deliver the work on time. And you don’t even need all three. Two out of three is fine. People will tolerate how unpleasant you are if your work is good and you deliver it on time. They’ll forgive the lateness of the work if it’s good, and if they like you. And you don’t have to be as good as the others if you’re on time and it’s always a pleasure to hear from you.

The whole address is wonderful, you should give it a read/watch/listen if you have a few minutes and want to smile.

As Gaiman says above, in business you can do three things:

  1. Do great work
  2. Be on-time
  3. Be a pleasure to work with

If you can check all three of the boxes, great. You’re going to be successful. But as he says in the speech, you can get away with two of them.

At various points in our run, we’d screw up. A deadline might be missed. Sometimes work might not have been up to the standards wish we hoped for. We always felt miserable when these things happened.

But the one thing that was always true was #3. We were always a pleasure to work with. We genuinely liked our clients and our clients genuinely liked us. It’s easy to forget in the beginning that business relationships are also always human relationships, and that people want to work with folks that they enjoy the company of.

As we matured, we nailed #1 and #2 more and more. But we never forgot the importance of kindness in our journey. That was our insurance against failure.

Let me know what you think below, I would love to hear your thoughts. And then keep in touch with me on Twitter for more!

Clients
Advice
Pleasure
Marketing
Work
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