The Hidden Cost of Targeting Non-Ideal Clients

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Here’s a problem marketing experts can’t solve:

Allowing non-ideal clients into your sales process forces you to spend more money to attract more non-ideal clients.

A non-ideal client is someone who sees you as similar to other advisors they have on their “shopping list.”

They’re also interested in what you can do for them, forcing you to put your best foot forward (selling yourself) to see if you can provide more value than the next advisor with whom they speak.Then at the end of the conversation you hear: “I’d like to think about it and will get back to you.”Here’s what happens when you allow non-ideal clients into your sales and marketing process:

  • You try to raise their awareness by educating them, sharing stories of how you helped other clients in the past and providing free advice.
  • At the end of the sales conversation, they want to speak with someone else before talking to you again.
  • You end up chasing them for either a “yes” or a “no” through repeated follow-up calls and emails (or you just give up and assume they weren’t a “fit”).
  • They don’t respond, and they take the valuable information you provided for free and use it to shop around for other advisors.