noelward
Well-known member
What? Fire a Customer?!
By Noel Ward, Editor@Large
Sooner or later the moment of reckoning arrives for every business-owner. There are always customers that cost you money, are too aggravating to work with or simply not worth the revenue they bring in. So what do you do?
If the customer were an employee you might provide more training or shift their responsibilities in lieu of letting them go. But customers are different, so you can be faced with a tactical or strategic business decision. Do you proactively suggest they go elsewhere, or would a more subtle approach be better? Either way, the result can improve the life of your business and that of your employees.
There are numerous reasons why a customer may become less than welcome. Printers tell me these include things like the customer is….
Run the numbers
For example, you probably add up the costs of prepress, production, in-office work, shop floor, and shipping to measure customers’ total cost against how much you bill, to see the profit. You may find that the 80/20 rule applies in that about 20% of your customers account for around 80% of your gross revenue. You hopefully do this anyway and doing so for all customers on a regular basis shows which ones are profitable. Still, there are probably jobs and customers that you sometimes lose money on. Customers that regularly lose you money need to pay more or be shown the door.
Still, care must be taken when deciding which customers you might be better without. Where do you draw the line? It is not always obvious and drives other questions:
Time to Say Goodbye
It’s always best to let a customer down easy and provide a soft landing because you never know if you will need them again, even if it is in a different relationship. In some cases it may be useful to explain the issues that concern you, such as if your strategic direction has become labels and packaging while a customer’s needs are brochures and marketing collateral. In this case, the fit is may no longer be there and customers usually understand this. This can work well if the focus of your work is indeed changing. If your strategic focus isn’t changing, you may be able to…
There is usually no best time to “fire” a customer but making it easier makes the process less stressful for all involved.
By Noel Ward, Editor@Large
Sooner or later the moment of reckoning arrives for every business-owner. There are always customers that cost you money, are too aggravating to work with or simply not worth the revenue they bring in. So what do you do?
If the customer were an employee you might provide more training or shift their responsibilities in lieu of letting them go. But customers are different, so you can be faced with a tactical or strategic business decision. Do you proactively suggest they go elsewhere, or would a more subtle approach be better? Either way, the result can improve the life of your business and that of your employees.
There are numerous reasons why a customer may become less than welcome. Printers tell me these include things like the customer is….
- not profitable (various reasons are in play here)
- not aligned with the strategic direction of your company
- abusive or contemptuous towards your employees or processes
- consistently understating scope of work required
- not learning from past errors they made that increase the cost of jobs
- continually changing the specs of jobs in process, adding work or increasing turnaround time
- arguing about agreed upon pricing when job is complete
- slow to pay invoices
Run the numbers
For example, you probably add up the costs of prepress, production, in-office work, shop floor, and shipping to measure customers’ total cost against how much you bill, to see the profit. You may find that the 80/20 rule applies in that about 20% of your customers account for around 80% of your gross revenue. You hopefully do this anyway and doing so for all customers on a regular basis shows which ones are profitable. Still, there are probably jobs and customers that you sometimes lose money on. Customers that regularly lose you money need to pay more or be shown the door.
Still, care must be taken when deciding which customers you might be better without. Where do you draw the line? It is not always obvious and drives other questions:
- Which are most and least demanding of customer service team?
- Which generate most and least revenue?
- Do any become a kind of cost center or are simply more trouble than they are worth?
Time to Say Goodbye
It’s always best to let a customer down easy and provide a soft landing because you never know if you will need them again, even if it is in a different relationship. In some cases it may be useful to explain the issues that concern you, such as if your strategic direction has become labels and packaging while a customer’s needs are brochures and marketing collateral. In this case, the fit is may no longer be there and customers usually understand this. This can work well if the focus of your work is indeed changing. If your strategic focus isn’t changing, you may be able to…
- offer a schedule, such as 30 to 60 days before new changes, policies and procedures take effect so both you and the customer can step away from each other more gracefully
- increase specification requirements for incoming jobs that help enforce your expectations
- insist that all jobs arrive electronically and go through an automated quoting process
- raise prices that may “push” an unprofitable customer away
There is usually no best time to “fire” a customer but making it easier makes the process less stressful for all involved.