All posts by Shari Weiss

I have been writing and teaching most of my life -- and have enjoyed both vocations. However, the advent of the Social Media Revolution has turned my life around in the most exciting fashion. Rather than think about retirement, I want to help change the world -- particularly the business world -- into a "kinder," more ethical, transparent, and authentic place to help solve people's problems.

Make IT Happen in 2011 — Eleven for ’11: Tips, lessons & predictions from end-of-2010 blogs


Just in case you are preparing your New Year’s Resolutions, you might want to check out predictions and suggestions for 2011 in these Eleven blog posts:

1) http://yhoo.it/igHzCA

Predictions for small business: paring down to the essential social media platforms based on proven successes and strong metrics; corporate blogging; more cloud computing

2) http://celestinechua.com/blog/healthy-living

Ok, we’ll do 45 better living tips as well, beginning with: Drink More Water. That certainly works for me! Oh, yes, and while you’re at it, Purge Negativity.

3) http://www.davidhenderson.com/2010/12/24/five-steps-for-organic-social-media-for-2011/

Countless organizations advertise to hire a “social media expert,” generally one entry level person to handle all of the company’s social media outreach. That’s an approach doomed from the start.

4) http://prsay.prsa.org/index.php/2010/12/22/2011-pr-trends

One of the biggest trends for 2011 will be the evolution of location-based apps.

5) http://socialmediatoday.com/joshgordon/253668/content-marketing-lessons-top-10-retweets-2010

Marketing lessons from top 10 retweets: “Each of the top tweets, in their own unique way, captured a universal feeling, moment, idea, or bit of wisdom for many.”

6) http://mashable.com/2010/12/24/mobile-predictons-2011

We WILL see a Verizon iPhone and iPads ARE mobile, despite what Mark Zuckerburg thinks.

7) http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2010/12/zeitgeist-2010-how-world-searched.html

Zeitgist 2010: Here’s Google’s report on most searched for topics: The devastating earthquakes in China, Chile and Haiti as well as the floods in Pakistan and the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico led to a huge spike in all things charitable.

8] http://lsvp.wordpress.com/2010/12/03/2011-consumer-internet-predictions

Brand advertising starts to move online, boosting premium display, video and social media: The key driver of this renewed confidence from brand advertisers is better measurement of brand metrics that can show the impact of online advertising beyond clickthrough.

9) http://money.cnn.com/galleries/2010/news/companies/1012/gallery.business_dumbest_moments_2010.fortune/index.html

Among the dumbest business decisions of the year: Steve Jobs telling iPhone4 users they were holding the phone wrong.

10) http://mediatransparent.com/2010/12/21/8-major-social-commerce-trends-for-2011

Social commerce will become relevant at a local level when online meets offline, creating virtual town squares where communities of local folk congregate.

11) http://online-social-networking.com/3-key-social-media-and-web-marketing-strategies-for-2011

Facebook says GOODBYE to Open Networking.

What’s your Best Guess for 2011? What do you INTEND to make happen?

To YELP or not to YELP? What’s your stance? Maybe you should change your mind . . . or not

How do you feel about Yelp? Inquiring minds want to know.

I asked that question all over the Net — on Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, and even Yelp itself. And I got an earful PLUS a hilarious discussion on the Yelp TALK feature. [Check it out, especially the “goggle” chat. If you are not now a registered Yelper, you’ll have to sign up to read the conversation.]

Yelp is an online city guide with a Web 2.0 mentality, allowing “real people” to write “real reviews” about nearly any type of business — from restaurants to dentists, bars to clothing stores.

— from Wikipedia

Some context:

1. A new acquaintance, a dentist, upon finding out that I was a “Social Media Strategist,” asked me how to remove negative comments on Yelp. I didn’t know for certain, but my suspicion was that an ordinary human being who was not an “insider” [i.e., advertiser or Yelp staffer] had no such powers. I’d heard other unhappy Yelp stories.

2. My BNI friends were advising our entrepreneurial members to Set Up Profiles on Yelp. I had my doubts, but kept my mouth shut — at the time.

3. One of my BNI colleagues suggested I become an “Expert” on Yelp, so I could advise him and others. Of course the label “Expert” is anathema to anyone studying social media since Social Media changes by the minute — thank you Mark Zuckerburg, Jack Dorsey, etc.

4. So I started my research by posting the aforementioned question . . . and offered to do a Guest Post for a friend’s blog. It appears that I have opened Pandora’s Box.

5. An Aside: CROWDSOURCING: The realization that readers often know more than writers.

I’ll be writing my Guest Post tomorrow, but I plan a series on the subject for SHARISAX IS OUT THERE and would love your help. I have a few posts already planned to highlight experiences from some of the LinkedIn and Yelp responders, but I’m also looking for Guest Posters to write a post for this blog series.

So have at it. Whether you are a Small Business or a Consumer, please comment below or email me at sharisax@aol.com.

  • Have Yelp reviews brought you business?
  • Have Yelp reviews lost you business?
  • Are you a Yelp reviewer? An “Elite” reviewer?
  • Do you use Yelp to find local businesses? What kind? Were the reviews accurate?
  • Do you advertise on Yelp? Is it working for you/
  • Have you been hounded by Yelp ad salespeople?
  • How do YOU feel about Yelp?

Let the “games” begin . . . or as many Yelp-ers contend, let the Mafia Wars continue.


Twitter is like a Text Message to the World, Free Social Media Monitoring Tools & other SM Marketing insights [Briefly stated]

STATS on Social Media Marketing — from Hubspot slide show

  • 90 Trillion emails sent in 2009
  • 500 million active Facebook users
  • 126 million blogs
  • 10+ billion Tweets sent on Twitter since 2006
  • 2 billion videos are streamed each day on YouTube

Social Media Marketing: enables others to advocate for your business through compelling content

Social Media is like a Cocktail Party: Listen then Respond

Company blogs are digital publications that allow public responses and improve lead generation.

Facebook is a social network that connects people personally and professionally through connections, messages, photos, and videos.

Facebook Fan Pages let businesses interact with customers and prospects

Twitter is like a Text Message with a BCC – TO THE WORLD: Businesses use Twitter to converse with prospects, provide customer service, and drive website traffic.

Links are the Currency of the social web

Social Media Monitoring collects online mentions for measurement and response

Free social media monitoring tools:

BoardTracker Discussion Search

Social Mention Alerts

CoTweet

Google alerts

Co.mments

Paid social media monitoring tools:

Hubspot, Techrigy, radian6, crimson hexagon, scoutlabs

Download the Hubspot slides

FURTHER READING:

Hubspot: Inbound Marketing for mutual gain

Social Media Monitoring: Critical to Business Success

Simple Answers to Six Basic Social Media Questions

Do you want to be an A-List Influencer?

A year and a half ago I met Steve Rubel at a panel discussion I blogged about: Beyond the Hype – Roadmap for Social Media’s Future. Steve is the Director of Insights for Edelman Digital, a division of Edelman, the world’s largest independent PR firm — Steve is very, very influential.

He was considered an A-List Blogger at the time. I told him that he was my role model, and I, too, wanted to be an A-List Blogger. Steve suggested that, instead, I should aim to be an A-List INFLUENCER.

So I’ve started to study “influence.”

Here’s a definition from the Free Online Dictionary:

in·flu·ence  (nflns) n.

1. A power affecting a person, thing, or course of events, especially one that operates without any direct or apparent effort: relaxed under the influence of the music; the influence of television on modern life.

2. Power to sway or affect based on prestige, wealth, ability, or position: used her parent’s influence to get the job.

3.

a. A person who exerts influence: My parents considered my friend to be a bad influence on me.

b. An effect or change produced by influence.

4.

a. A determining factor believed by some to affect individual tendencies and characteristics understood to be caused by the positions of the stars and planets at the time of one’s birth.

b. Factors believed to be caused by the changing positions of the stars and planets in relation to their positions at the time of one’s birth.

[from the FreeOnlineDictionary]

I wrote two articles on the topic: What’s wrong with the LIKE buttons? for my own blog and Popularity and Influence as they are Manifested in Social Media for CompuKol Communications.

Here’s the conclusion for the CompuKol post:

In the discussion or controversy or strategic planning around the concepts of popularity and influence, especially in this new world of business and marketing, one factor needs to be abundantly clear, and that stems from the intention to offer people products and services that can truly help them lead better lives as well as enhancing their business lives.

How can you improve your influence?

The main reason for this post is an article I just read by Chris Brogan, a very popular, productive, and influential blogger and strategist. Chris discussed five ways to improve your influence. Here is the list in brief:

1 – Start with a Solid Platform — Be Helpful

2 – Get Seen — Connect and Communicate

3 – Share the Spotlight — Talk about other people

4 – Working the Numbers — Encourage subscribers

5 – Influence isn’t Handed Over — Leverage new opportunities

Chris’s Conclusion:

Work on learning how to be most helpful to those in your segment of the universe that will grow your reach.

Click here to read Chris’s entire post

Are there subject areas where you believe you are an influencer? Please share your expertise and maybe we’ll be able to help you increase your reach.

Ask 14 Questions for Success in 2011 [Briefly stated]

Here’s some help to start planning for 2011 — from an article by Social Media Consultant Pam Moore, who regularly publishes great information on her Marketing Nut blog.

Pam defines a Business Model:

A business model describes the rationale of how an organization creates, delivers, and captures value – economic, social, or other forms of value.

She lists 10 ways that a properly designed business model will help you make decisions to build your profits. But the thrust of the article are 14 questions you can use to structure and describe your business model:

1. What is my core value I offer customers?

2. What is my zoom facto; how are my services unique?

3. What intellectual capital do I need to protect?

4. What is my sales model?

5. What is my service model?

6. Should I sell my products online, offline or both?

7. Who should I partner with to develop and deliver services?

8. What type of clients should I target and serve?

9. What type of clients should I not serve?

10. What is an ideal partner for me to collaborate with?

11. What should I outsource versus do in-house?

12. What type of pricing models should I implement?

13. What infrastructure is required to support my business?

14. What mediums should I use to market and advertise my products and services? How should I use social media to market my business?

For more information about these questions AND the list of What a Business Model Can Do For You,  read Pam’s entire article HERE

How Twitter has changed from 2009 to 2010 [Briefly stated]

I joined Twitter just about when my grandbaby was born . . . and that was a few weeks before Oprah, early in 2009. Back then there were somewhere around 10 million Tweeple. Now there are more than 145 million.

Jack Dorsey’s visit to my San Francisco State marketing class convinced me that Twitter was NOT a fad. And now it’s my job to convince my many Baby Boomer friends and business colleagues that they need to get on Twitter sooner rather than later.

Here’s how Twitter has grown — and changed — since 2009

[from a post in ReadWriteweb]

1. People who created a Twitter profile before January 2009 now account for just 4.7% of the total Twitter population. [Love to think I started the UP trend :-)]

2. 82% of Twitter users now provide a name, compared with only 33% in 2009.

3. 73% provide location information, compared to 44% in 2009.

4. Having a profile on Twitter is becoming increasingly important.

5. The vast majority of Twitter users – 95.8% – follow less than 500 people.

6. What Sysomos calls “a small hard-core group” – 2.2% of Twitter users – have accounted for 58.3% of all tweets, while 22.5% of Twitter users have accounted for about 90% of all activity in 2010.  In 2009, Sysomos reported that 5% of users accounted for 75% of all activity, 10% account for 86% of activity, and the top 30% account for 97.4%.

Are you on Twitter yet? If so, how do you fit into those stats?

If not, WHY NOT!!


Brands are “failing” to engage properly online . . . and you should forget about geo-location: LeWeb conference highlights

When Parisian student Cyril Renaud spent a year “abroad,” we at San Francisco State University were fortunate that he enrolled in one of my marketing classes early in 2009 —  both he and I were just beginning our immersion into All Things Social Media.

Cyril is now an international business student at  The American Business School of Paris and has a personal website where he recently posted a report on the seventh annual meeting of LeWeb, a noteworthy social media conference that attracted more than 3,000 participants on December 8 & 9, 2010.

TRENDS and HIGHLIGHTS from Cyril’s report:

1. LeWeb is the Number One Internet event in Europe according to its founders and organizers Geraldine and Loic Le Meur. Loic is a blogger and entrepreneur who also established the popular Twitter client Seesmic.

2. The two-day conference featured  keynote speakers, panel discussions, and a variety of workshops organized by Facebook, Google, LinkedIn, RIM, and PayPal among others.

3.  Two significant themes impressed Cyril: First, brands are failing to engage properly on social media. Second, the web is moving towards a web of context, and the new trend in social media is social curation — forget about geo-location!

4.  Carlos Goshn, CEO of Renault, opened the conference, explaining how Renault, employing over 2 million people, is struggling to find more social marketers and community managers to develop their presence online. It is interesting to see how brands are trying to cope with a “medium that is evolving faster than we can understand it,” according to Brian Solis.

5. Most brands nowadays have a website, a facebook page, a twitter feed, a Flickr gallery and/or a YouTube channel, but many misuse those means of communication. They fail to engage with customers who take time to comment, and fail to plan content relevant to their audience.

Here is the main thing to understand:

Brands finally have the opportunity to listen to their consumers.

6.  The 4Ps of the marketing mix have added the 5th one — PEOPLE. And the smart brands are increasing their social interactions. They retweet and mention on Twitter, add Facebook LIKE button on their websites, and most important share relevant content with their fans.

7.  It goes beyond sharing a status, it’s fcommerce. Brands should not forget the notion of continuum: You need to cut through absences. “Business should be listening 24/7” said the influential Gary Vaynerchuk.

So we have seen the Web is about people. It is also about content. We share statuses, links, photos, videos and more. But the Web is shifting toward a Web of context. Think for a second of the number of friends and followers you have (almost) never met. Still, you do have a relationship with those people based on a common theme, a shared topic.

In my case, I barely know the people I follow or those following me on Twitter, but we contribute to the same topics (media, tech. or photo in my case). And that shift toward a contextual relationship is setting up a new trend in social networks. Social curation. We are now gathering links, articles, or lists of what matters to us. [Cyril’s quote]

Social Curation

  • A first step leading the way to curation was Twitter’s use of lists (in addition to the existing retweets or favorites).
  • Paper.li offers you your twitter feed in the form of a newspaper. Daily, weekly, that is up to you; you are the chief editor. They won the virality prize for start-ups at LeWeb.
  • Storify allows you to collect posts, tweets, links or photos of a common theme, and to embed them into a story.
  • Scoop.it Same concept for this French start-up. You collect, you share. Simple and easy concept for those social networks.

Cyril’s Conclusion

What was also interesting at LeWeb is the entrepreneurial aspect of the conference. Many people went there to find investors and business angels. It’s incredible to see how many venture capitalists are willing to invest in start-ups.

To conclude, if you work as a PR person, focus on being relevant. As a simple user, monitor social curation. And finally, as a entrepreneur, not only should you believe in what you do, but don’t forget to concentrate on your business plan.

If you found this link because you know Cyril, please say HI. If you found it because you were at LeWeb, please offer us your takeaways. and if you found us via some other means, please tell us that as well.

Why do people read blogs? To find personal opinions and insights on topics they care about

When deciding if you, too, should become a blogger, then tons of questions come to mind — and one of the first should be “Why do people read blogs?”

After all, if you are going to spend time and energy writing on the Global Whiteboard, you do want readers. So your blog plan needs to aim at a specific types of readers and give them what they want. That’s both Common Sense and Smart Marketing, i.e., define your target market and listen to what it is asking for.

The Science of Blogging: research for your blog’s strategic plan

The link in the subtitle above points to a data-rich webinar on blogging presented by Dan Zarrella, author of The Social Media Marketing Book and one of the Web’s online Go-To people for facts & figures on social media behavior. Currently a marketing product owner at HubSpot, Dan presented his latest research in a 60-minute Blogging webinar and slideshow. An hour listening to the webinar would be well worth your time; in the meantime however, you can read my Top Ten Takeaways from Dan’s research:

1. Relevance: People find blogs for the personal opinions and insights on topics they are particularly interested in — from people they have grown to trust.

2. Authority: Bloggers need to establish their credibility by delivering sound content and showing relevant background, education, and experience: however, calling oneself an “expert” or a “guru” is pretentious — and often sneered at.

3. SEO: Blogs offer great search engine optimization opportunities, particularly in helping consumers make purchasing decisions. Growing numbers of people are checking online and reading blogs to find information on items they want to buy.

4. Positivity: People do not go online to be brought down; they prefer the positive to the negative.

5. Avoid self-reference: Best practice is to talk AS yourself, not ABOUT yourself. People want to read your opinions, insights and unique point of view — not your minute-to-minute activities.

6. KISS: [Keep It Simple Stupid]: Avoid technical jargon; simplify, simplify, simply (as Thoreau) advises.

7. Novelty: Do not be boring, especially by regurgitating what others keep talking out. Try to provide content that is uniquely yours.

8. Social Proof: Use words like you, how, why, giveaway, money, etc. that are most often LIKED, SHARED, and ReTWEETED. You can find Dan’s lists of these words in the slides accompanying the webinar.

9. Frequency: The more often you post, the more readers you are likely to attract. Publishing once a day — or more — is the fastest way to become the Go-To Source for your area of expertise.

10. Know your audience: Are they mostly male? female? What are their schedules? How can you best serve their needs?

For further information about WHY and HOW to blog, check out some of my past articles:

To Blog . . . or Not To Blog . . . that is a good First Question

How to start a blog — Step by Step

How to write your first blog post on WordPress.com

What should your first blog post be about?

Use your blog to become the Go-To Source for information in your area of expertise

Avoid these NINE Blogging Errors

Beginning Bloggers Workshop: what should you blog about?

Will a blog help  you build your business and other typical blog questions

10 Lessons I learned about blogging from my first 6-part series

Any more questions? Perhaps I’ll do a blog to answer.



10 Lessons I learned about blogging from writing my first 6-part series: Saying NO to New Business

Writing my first 6-part series on this blog was like doing lab work for a college class.

Post #1: Saying NO to a prospective client may be the Best Business Move

Post #2: Avoid future problems by saying NO Now

Post #3: Investigate client/project before saying Yes — or making it a NO.

Post #4: Three main reasons to say NO to new client

Post #5: Saying NO is easy

Post #6: How to use LinkedIn to say NO to new business

It was a lot of work, but it wasn’t too difficult because I was following a plan decided upon ahead of time, and that plan was based on much of what I’ve learned blogging these 20 months.

So here goes:


10 blogging lessons from 20 months as a blogger

1. Success: Nothing is more inspirational than Success. How you define “success” is key. So just Doing It was “success” enough to keep Doing It.

2. Crowdsource: It is easier to come up with opinions of your own when you ask others for theirs first. That’s how I got a lot of content for the series from posting questions on LinkedIn and on my Facebook page.

3. Guest Posting: When you are assigned a topic by someone whom you respect, you feel responsible to do the best job you can do. I’ve been guest posting for Michael Cohn’s CompuKol blog for a few months now, and he wanted the story on How to Say NO to New Business. I admire his work and so I take his assignments very seriously.

4. Blog Length: People will read longer content if you break it up in some way. That can be with subtitles, lists, and quotes OR you can simply divide it up into six daily posts. [If you post a series with too many days in between, i.e., not daily, a regular reader may lose interest. That being said, how many of your readers are “regular” readers and how many just find you on any particular day because they used the “right” keywords to find your article.

5. Independence: “That” being said, when writing a series, each article needs to be able to stand alone . . . because it just may “stand alone” in someone’s visit to your blog.

6. Persistence: Writing is compulsory thought: stick with it and the words will come.

7. Education: You really learn something. As a teacher I came to realize early on that I never learned as much or as “deeply” until I taught a topic or skill. Same with blogging. When you write something, you come to know it better than if you simply read or talk about something.

8. Mastery: It’s easy to become something of an expert. A friend just blogged the definition of expertise from Wikipedia:  ” … a person with extensive knowledge or ability based on research, experience, or occupation and in a particular area of study.” Works for me.

9. Flexibility: The best laid plans may need to make room for better ideas if you are lucky enough for them to come along. I started with the idea of only doing three posts in the series, but new ideas and new content kept cropping up.

10. Sometimes Less is More: Any series with more than six posts — or list with more than 10 items — may get short shrift;. either the writer runs out of steam or the reader gets bored.

What’s your experience writing or reading a series of posts? Do you like them? Why or why not?

How to use LinkedIn to help you say NO to “problem” client – Final post in series

“Call me insane, but I’ve always assumed that like myself, clients are human and therefore capable of ‘occasionally’ being confused, misinformed, or simply WRONG.

With this mindset I believe that saying ‘No’ to the client is perfectly acceptable just as long as you’re considerate about how you go about it.”

— from one of 49 LinkedIn Answers

For the final installment of my 6-part series on How to Say NO to new clients, I am featuring a half dozen of the 49 responses submitted in response to my LinkedIn question:


[if you click on the image above, you will be able to read all 49 responses]

We’ll get to those answers momentarily, but first I’d like to list the steps in using this LinkedIn feature:

  1. Click on the MORE tab at the top of the LinkedIn Menu Line.
  2. The Drop Down box lists ANSWERS as the second option; click on it.
  3. The next screen will give you a box to write in a question. Keep it short and interesting.
  4. After you press “Next,” you can add details below the question.
  5. On this same screen, you will pick a category and post your question.

People actually scour LinkedIn for questions to answer: This strategy builds their Online Expertise. I know people who answer 50 questions a day! And you can do the same.

Or, you can get lots of your own questions answered by lots of experts — and then connect with anyone’s response that you like, start building a relationship, and even hire them [or vice versa]. LinkedIn allows you to ask 10 questions every month.

And now six of the 49 answers to my question: “How do you say NO to a client or customer?”

Chris Gaudreau

Hello Shari,

For as long as I can remember, I’ve been bombarded with the idea that “the client is always right” and to be honest, it never quite sat right with me.

Call me insane, but I’ve always assumed that like myself, clients are human and therefore capable of “occasionally” being confused, misinformed, or simply WRONG. With this mindset I believe that saying “No” to the client is perfectly acceptable just as long as you’re considerate about how you go about it.

While “every client is different and unique”, here’s what I believe to be the best strategy for saying “No” to a client. (Your Mileage May Vary)

1) Educate
Nobody likes getting shot down without a reason, so explain why you need to say “No” By providing insight into your decision making process you can help the client feel more informed.Customer service is key here, but when it’s done right this can also help remind them that you’re the expert and they came to you for a reason. Besides…if you can’t explain why you’re saying “No” how can you ensure you’re not the one who’s wrong?

2) Give them Options
Now that you’ve educated your client on why you’ve said “No”, they might be left feeling a little foolish or maybe even frustrated. To help overcome this and get your project back on track, you need to restore their confidence and feeling of control. Provide the client with a short list of carefully researched recommendations so that they can make a “controlled decision” and you’re not left saying “No” again.

While I admit that this is over simplified version, and it’s often a lot more work than it sounds like when done right, education and options are a solid defense for saying no while still keeping the client (somewhat) happy.

I hope this gives you something to think about.

Paul Oldfield

I get the customer to put everything he asks for in one list, and order it by priority. Then I say how far down the list we can get, for a certain amount of money or by a certain date. If the customer wants more, or different, then we talk about it. This works for most things the customer asks for, and it means that it is the customer who says yes or no.

The difficult bit is to get the flexibility to be able to respond to the customer when he makes a decision on scope or priority, and if one can’t respond well, to time that discussion so that you can respond to the decisions, but the customer already knows enough to make good decisions. Work on being able to respond effectively later; and where these possibilities are severely limited work on being able to bring the customer to a better understanding earlier.

Rakesh Ojha

Hi Shari,

I do have come across many instance where as a company we had no option but to say “No” to prospects/clients due to many different reasons.

In such circumstances, I’d say- As much as we would like to work with you however due to limiting circumstances such as limited budget that you have, our tight staff schedule or lack of expertise in your technology preference, we are very sorry for not being able to work on this project.

We thank you for giving us an opportunity to work with you and look forward to similar opportunities soon.

Andy Cawston

When I say “no” to a Client, I try to always find a graceful way for him to save face and, if possible, to help point him in the direction of somebody who can say “yes.”

There are ways of saying “no”, and there are usually ways of saying it that won’t come across as outright rejection. You always want to avoid leaving your Client feeling rejected, or that you are unwilling to help him solve his problems: that is what causes Clients to go find somebody who can.

Avoid using trite Bad News phrases like “We regret to inform you that…” because nobody likes to receive a ‘Dear John’ letter. Much better to say “I can’t do it this time, tho’ I’d really like to: thanks for thinking of me. Why not call Joe Blogs? He’s very good at this sort of thing, and I’ve got his number right here…”

This achieves several things: it acknowledges the compliment your Client has paid you by asking you to do something. You’ve politely declined. You’ve still been helpful by sending him to Joe Bloggs, and with any luck Joe Bloggs will appreciate the referral and return the favor one day. Nobody loses face, everybody remains happy.

One silly reason to say “no” is you have been asked to do more than what you contracted for. Instead, you need to politely identify the change in scope with your Client, and ask for more time and more money. Most people are reasonable about paying for extra work. If your Client isn’t one of those people, tho’, and if they refuse your reasonable request outright, it’s time to say “no” — however, you still need to allow him to save face and have his problems solved somehow.

“I wish I could do this extra work for free, I can see you really need it. If I did it would be unfair to my other Clients, who need my time and are willing to pay for it. Why not try Joe Bloggs? He might be willing to do a “pro bono pro gratis”, to help you out. I’ve got his number right here…”

This too achieves a few things. It acknowledges the compliment of being asked to do more: he must be happy with your work, else he wouldn’t have asked. It reinforces that the work needs to be done. It gives a perfectly valid reason why you can’t do the work for free. And best of all, it provides a way that he can ask someone else — if he has the bold-face effrontery — to do it for nothing. Businesses aren’t charities, your Client knows that, and chances are he’ll come around to see reason. If he doesn’t, that might be a good time to do some Client Re-Qualification.

Marcy Hoffman

The 3 primary reasons that any business owner is forced to say ‘no’ to a customers are a) the request is out of the scope of the services provided or they can’t provide the goods or services in the time frame or price requested b) they are backlogged and don’t have the time or manpower or c) the customer isn’t clear about what they want, when they want it or how much they wish to spend.
The last one relates more to the service sector rather than companies that sell products but anyone who has worked as a consultant or in the design/technology sector can relate to the angst we go through when a client doesn’t understand clearly what they want to achieve, doesn’t understand the costs and/or time involved or even worse, thinks that they do. These are the kind of customers that require a simple ‘no’, however you want to spin it.
Shari, perhaps the follow up should be How and When to fire a customer/client.

Robert Gaynor

I think the answers that recommended saying “no” with an explanation, and referring the customer to others who might do the job, is usually the best way to do it. Very professional.

One thing I have not seen so far, if the job is actually one you can do well but there is something about the customer or the job that you would like to avoid, is to say “yes” with a price that is so high that the customer will inevitably choose another vendor. For example, if the customer is a chronic late payer and you have tried to address the problem with no success, this might be the best solution. If for some reason the customer chooses you anyway, the high price can be thought of as a built-in late payment fee.

Previous Series Posts:

Post #1: Saying NO to a prospective client may be the Best Business Move

Post #2: Avoid future problems by saying NO Now

Post #3: Investigate client/project before saying Yes — or making it a NO.

Post #4: Three main reasons to say NO to new client

Post #5: Saying NO is easy

Did this “series” work for you? If you are a blogger, have you done a series or two? What have you learned?

Saying NO is easy in “cultivated” relationships — 5th in series

The final two “chapters” in my Saying NO series will be based on input from LinkedIn members who helpfully contributed responses to my question:

How do you say NO to a client or customer?

I’m writing a blog post on Saying NO to Customers/Clients.
Do you have any tips or experiences on WHEN to say “No” and HOW to say “No”?

The question closed with 49 ANSWERS! Several of them will be included in my final chapter, but this post features one of the early responses I liked a lot — and hope you will as well.

Saying “No” is easy

Saying “No” in an effective and constructive manner is a function of a cultivated client relationship

Guest Post by Kenneth Larson: SCORE Volunteer Counselor and Founder, “Small to Feds”

Below are two examples of frameworks for “cultivated client” relationships.

Saying “No” is addressed in Step 3 of EXAMPLE A.

It is addressed again at Step 6 of EXAMPLE B.

EXAMPLE A – CONSULTANT AND CLIENT

1. Do not promise what you cannot deliver

2. Do not overextend your resources and get a reputation for poor performance.

3. Do not tell the customer what he or she wants to hear. Tell them what they need to know. They will respect you for it.

4. Network constantly on professional sites such as Linked In. Hit the “Answers” feature and accumulate an “Expert” rating from your peers in your field.

5. Blog like there is no tomorrow. A blog is quite different than a web site. Provide good, solid information free of charge and use blog searches for synergistic businesses to team with. Teaming is an absolute necessity these days.

6. Be prepared to provide information, samples and valuable service gratis as a marketing tool. Introduce yourself and then immediately engage the client with your presentation tools available to bring your expertise to whatever topic they are interested in. Let them take you where they want to go with their concerns and their needs. Apply your presentation tools and expertise dynamically on the fly in a sincere manner to those concerns and needs and you will be in demand for follow up business.

7. Quote and bill what the client can afford and grow with him (in content and resources).

8. Be dedicated to working yourself out of a job with a specific customer and having your client take over by training him. He will remember you and recommend you to 10 others.

9. Remember growth is a function of persistence and foresight. Know where your market is headed and get their first – then write and speak about your success indirectly by helping others. Demonstrate humility and a satisfaction in helping others succeed. They will find ways to give you credit. There are ways of tooting your horn without making peoples’ lights go out.

10. Word of mouth advertising from pleased clients is a sure ticket to success.

EXAMPLE B SMALL BUSINESS AND GOVERNMENT AGENCY

1. KNOW – The contract value and its ceiling amount

2. KNOW – The incurred cost to date and commitments

3. KNOW – The scope of work and whether or not your current efforts are supporting it or some other objectives

4. KNOW – The estimated cost at completion based on where you are at today

5. KNOW – Your customer and who among the customer population is prone to direct out of scope effort.

6. KNOW – WHEN TO SAY “NO” to “Scope Creep” and say it officially in writing to the contracting officer specified in your contract.

Ken’s Link:

Previous Series Posts:

Post #1: Saying NO to a prospective client may be the Best Business Move

Post #2: Avoid future problems by saying NO Now

Post #3: Investigate client/project before saying Yes — or making it a NO.

Post #4: Three main reasons to say NO to new client