What to do with difficult PR clients
Client relationships, like any type of business or personal relationships, require nurturing, regular communication, time and effort. Every relationship will have the occasional bump in the road, but most issues can be ironed out with a phone call or a friendly (virtual) coffee/beer.
Yet, despite you and your team investing similar amounts of effort across all your accounts, you may find the odd client being persistently difficult, causing stress and demanding significant amounts of time to keep the relationship afloat.
What are the root causes for this issue and how do you best address them? Let’s look at some of the most common examples.
Avoid the original sin
Some client relationships suffer from the ‘original sin’ syndrome. I know you know about it. You take your CEO to the pitch, they promise the client the front page of the FT, and then you and the team need to deliver. Or rather, you are destined to under-deliver and disappoint.
This may be a rather extreme case, but shiny slide decks, spectacular presentations, account teams that clients will never see again etc. often portray an image that isn’t rooted in reality or presents a campaign which can’t be delivered with certainty.
Make sure your PR campaign pitch is polished and convincing, but don’t promise something you can’t guarantee to deliver, and do make sure the client buys into the people that will become their main point of contact. It will make everyone’s lives so much easier in the long term.
Avoid the original sin
Some client relationships suffer from the ‘original sin’ syndrome. I know you know about it. You take your CEO to the pitch, they promise the client the front page of the FT, and then you and the team need to deliver. Or rather, you are destined to under-deliver and disappoint.
This may be a rather extreme case, but shiny slide decks, spectacular presentations, account teams that clients will never see again etc. often portray an image that isn’t rooted in reality or presents a campaign which can’t be delivered with certainty.
Make sure your PR campaign pitch is polished and convincing, but don’t promise something you can’t guarantee to deliver, and do make sure the client buys into the people that will become their main point of contact. It will make everyone’s lives so much easier in the long term.
READ: 8 things to consider when choosing a PR Agency
Manage expectations
In my experience, the majority of difficult situations stem from poor expectation management. A client may send across a request that isn’t clear, doesn’t specify a deadline, or is outside the current scope of work. If the account lead doesn’t ask for further clarification or fails to manage expectations, a simple request can develop into a major issue that undermines trust and causes tension.
Some difficult clients will tend to test the boundaries often and see how far they can push the account teams. That’s not necessarily a bad thing, but the onus is on PR agency leads and managers to immediately clarify any vague requests, request missing information, agree on deadlines, and flag any activities that need to be costed out separately.
Get under their skin
Let’s be fair, difficult clients aren’t difficult because they want to make your life miserable, but because they want their business to do well and achieve their objectives. As PR practitioners, we’re often guilty of not asking that simple yet very important question: “What does success look like?”
The definition of PR success may mean very different things to different clients. Some just want new and fresh ideas, others are looking for a select number of articles in tier one publications. Some are looking for PR with a direct impact on sales. And yes, there are clients, who just want a friend! While we can’t be everything to all people, it’s important to listen and understand what good looks like from their perspective, and adjust our approach accordingly. By doing this, we’ll avoid many frustrating meetings or passive-aggressive emails.
Make them look good
If you feel that you’re being put under a lot of pressure despite delivering great results, or that your client just isn’t being ‘fair’, chances are rather high that this isn’t about you at all, but about your client being caught up in a difficult situation internally.
Take time to understand the internal dynamics of their business, the organisational structure and decision-making processes. Such insights will enable you to help your client navigate their internal corridors and strengthen their personal reputation. They will be forever grateful.
Sack them
Sometimes (and very rarely) things may get out of hand, with clients causing persistent and unnecessary stress, acting like bullies and even causing your colleagues to resign. No client is worth risking the stability and cohesion of your team. Apart from the emotional cost, such clients also have a negative impact on efficiency and profitability that can damage the business.
I tend to agree with Chris Merrington that occasionally, it may be necessary to fire a client that’s not a good fit and is preventing you from growing as a business. In such a highly competitive industry, this may feel like an unnatural move, but it may open up capacity for developing a more profitable client relationship that’s built on solid foundations of trust and mutual respect.
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