5. Availability is crucial
Remember that a big business consists of many people acting simultaneously and they are often required to respond quickly to changes. When working with big companies you will need to focus on business solutions – providing them not ‘just’ a service but a solution that fits their business culture and needs.
In most cases, big clients will look for a Premium service, which means constant availability on your end. This is opposed to the ‘standard’ communication that is necessary when working with a small business. With big clients, your communication must be stable and frequent: Weekly meetings, news calls, and a direct contact person, combined with on-demand support and handling delicate business service crises.
Assaf’s story
Take, for instance, a situation we had a couple of months ago. Prior to an important meeting at our offices, the computer in the meetings room unexpectedly crashed, and we had to replace it. We called Assaf, a business owner who sells computers and accessories. Assaf immediately took control over the situation, explained to us what happened, assisted us, and supplied a new computer within less than 8 hours. In this case, shipping time was crucial and Assaf knew how to provide our business with the relevant solution. Needless to say, we will continue working with him for years to come.
6. You are a partner – not a service provider
A PPC service provider will create campaigns, optimize them, and send a report. He can initiate another campaign or wait until someone asks for it. If the campaigns perform well, but the sales are slow, it isn’t really his problem.
A partner knows that everything is his problem – high pricing, weak sales team, bad service – everything that damages the partner’s chances of showing growth is his problem. This makes him much more involved in the business and an integral part of it. I have never met a manager that decides to leave a partner – only clients that leave service providers.
7. How to shout “big”?
Every interaction says something about you. Think about how your clients feel when they read your emails, schedule a call with you, look at your website, review your contract, and so on.
Let us take a small test: Search for a business solution on Google, go to some websites, and try to guess what the company’s size is. Now, go to LinkedIn and check whether you were right or wrong.
Surprisingly or not, you can instantly guess who’s big and who’s not.
Think about the things that made you assume that the company is big (or small) and try asking yourself: What can you improve in your business that shouts out “big”? It can be ‘small indicators’ such as your email signature. Or it can be your contract structure or looks, website design, copy, social presence, and so on.
Client stories are great to scale indicators as well. Try gathering 3-4 case studies that tell a story about how big and successful your business is. Use these case studies on your website and remove all others. No matter what, do not mention stories such as “how you helped your local grocery stores to increase their revenue by 20%”.