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KSA's greatest strength is its “Client-Centric” approach to serving clients. With this understanding,KSA worked to promote a methodology of success we like to call“Best in the World”. This e-book is an exploration of this process andprovides an outline of our approach to achieving it.
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In 2010, KSA Interiors, a small and somewhat anomalous interior
design firm, embarked upon a journey to identify what made their
methodology to project delivery unique. This process of identifying
and reinforcing their strengths would force KSA to evaluate many of
the ingrained cultural behaviors they had adopted as an organization;
some of which needed to be reinforced, others ejected. One
constant, however, would be the centerpiece of their evaluation.
KSA’s greatest strength was its “Client-Centric” approach to serving
clients. With this understanding, KSA worked to promote a
methodology of success they like to call “Best in the World”. This
ebook is an exploration of this process and provides an outline of
their approach to achieving it.
Methodology of Success
Being a service firm and providing said service is not the same as
serving one’s client. A Client-Centric approach establishes service to
the client as the key value proposition and places all other concerns
as secondary to this goal. Solutions must serve the client, interactions
must serve the client, everything in and about your organization must
serve the client. Far too many service firms have cultures that rely on
the opposite approach. They have adopted a value proposition which
places their own proprietary solution as the top priority and asks the
client to sacrifice for the sake of their solution. This represents an
unbalanced equation where the client’s needs are rarely considered
to their full potential.
Client-Centric
Client-Centric
A traditional approach focused on solutions may carry with it a
prescribed agenda which may not align with the client's
needs. While a service focus alone may not bring enough
outside perspective to deliver appropriate solutions.
What the Designer Wants
What the Client Wants
What the Client Actually NEEDS
A Client-Centric approach utilizes empathy to achieve both
personal service and inspire intuitive and appropriate
solutions, forgoing any prescribed or external agendas.
Service should come to mean that your clients have your commitment
to consider every decision from the standpoint of their own
organization. You should encourage your employees to act, feel, and
make decisions as if they were the employees of the organizations
they serve, not as outside consultants. The only caveat to this way of
thinking is that in the end you truly are just that, outside consultants.
The value of which lies in the fact that no matter how much we wish to
think and act like members of our clients organizations, we are the
ones who bear the ultimate responsibility of bringing nonnative
knowledge and outside perspective to every problem we face. Think
of it as a best of both worlds scenario, an objective, outside,
nonnative mindset paired with the respect, accountability, and
understanding of an integral partner.
Nonnative Thinking& Integral Partners
In a Client-Centric approach contractors can possess both native and
nonnative knowledge and thinking skills.
Nonnative Thinking& Integral Partners
Objective Expertise
OrganizationalKnowledge Base
Objective Expertise From anIntegral Perspective & Understanding
In a traditional approach, employees typically possess knowledge and
thinking skills native to their organization. External contractors, by
contrast, utilize nonnative knowledge such as objective outside expertise.
A better description of this approach is not to think in terms of the
“best of both worlds”, as mentioned previously, but rather as the
“Best in the World”. This premise is born out of a bit of insight
gleaned from Seth Godin and his book “The Dip”. Seth explains the
idea of “Best in the World” as being something quite relative. “The
best in the world is a relative thing. It’s a selfish thing. It’s my
definition, not yours”. This premise requires that you take the time to
understand what represents a “Best in the World” solution for each of
your clients as individuals. You must acknowledge that every client
has an entirely different perspective on what they consider best. Most
importantly, you need to understand that “Best in the World” does not
simply apply to solutions, but that it also applies to each and every
aspect of the design process. This ranges from client interaction and
project delivery to communication styles and accountability. This
empathic response to both developing solutions and maintaining
relationships can lead to the true secret of business success: repeat
business from loyal, loving, integral partners.
“Best in the World”
Love sounds like a funny thing to share with your clients, but it is
essential. Love is the root of why your clients should want to do
business with you. Marketing guru Mark Stevens wrote a smart book
with a simple and unambiguous title, “Your Marketing Sucks”. In it he
describes that there are only two reasons to commit to a purchase.
You either buy it because it is cheap, or because you love it and are
passionate about it. A “Best in the World” approach demands that
you choose to be loved and to be passionate about your clients.
What does it mean to be loved, however? How do you convey this
overt emotion in a business setting? Jeanne Bliss states in her book “I
Love You More Than My Dog”, that our decisions and actions tell the
story of who we are. These decisions and actions speak louder than
words and ultimately determine how or if you will be loved. Such
great synergy since our decisions and actions are essentially how we
provide service. It’s about the interactions. It’s about relationships. It
is about what you do every day and you cannot fake it.
It’s all about love
Providing unique and tailored approaches to serving clients is quite
difficult. The amount of emotional energy required for genuinely
learning, responding, and reacting to a client and their needs can be
daunting. Why else would so many other companies in just about
every other sector of the business world adopt a model which
responds with a single monotonous customer service voice designed
to be good for most everyone. Good however is not great, much less
the “Best in the World”. Devoting the emotional energy required to
understanding this simple fact and to finding what is the “Best in the
World” for each of your individual clients is the only way you should
wish to be treated and in turn should be your golden rule ethic as you
approach your clients. Interestingly enough, the emotional reward for
a job well done and the recognition for providing an empathic project
delivery can often be the most valuable recharge to you and your
teams emotional systems. Consider it a perpetual energy machine for
charging up your own EQ emotional intelligence. It becomes a lot
easier to share the love when you feel loved in return. Seek the love -
Share the love.
The perpetual emotional energy machine
So how do you develop and reinforce a “Best in the World”
approach? At KSA, we developed a simple outline which describes
what it means to be the “Best in the World” in our approach to our
clients. Before you can embark on this process, however, you have to
acknowledge that for this to be successful you need to be willing to
devote yourself and your team to the process while including each
and every individual partner, team member, client, and vendor with
whom you interact. Remember, what is best for me may not be best
for you. The moment you try to apply one person’s “Best in the World”
to another, you are no longer providing truly individualized service
nor are you likely achieving empathic understanding of that client’s
situation, organization, and or needs.
How do I become“Best in the World” ?
1. The “Best in the World” is a relative thing
2. Being loved is the only way to be
3. We are loved via our actions and decisions (the services we provide)
4. Good is not good enough
5. KSA’s five keys to service are: Elicit-Empathize-Empower-Enthuse-Eject
How to Become“Best in the World”
The first step in our service methodology is to truly understand those
we wish to serve. We have to identify their needs, goals, wants, and
values. You have to think like them and share an identity with them.
Once you are open and receptive to their world, you will then need to
expertly elicit valuable information. At KSA, we have found that our
preferred strategy is to immerse ourselves into our client’s culture.
Our greatest successes have, therefore, come from teams which we
have imbedded into our clients organizations for a variety of long and
short term durations. Of course, full immersion into a client’s
organization is not always possible or practical, so you may need to
rely on other exercises, tools, interactions, or observations to extract
valuable insight. Look for opportunities to gain perspective from your
clients, spend time with them outside of the formality of a meeting.
Schedule interactions designed to get them reacting naturally (or
don’t schedule them…try just showing up). Do not just ask questions
to get rote answers, seek understanding to gain perspective. Practice
the “5 Whats” or develop your own methodology for eliciting an
intimate understanding. (See the additional resources identified at the
end of this book).
KSA’s 5 keys to service:Elicit – Empathize – Empower – Enthuse - Eject
Once you have elicited information from your partners, it is time for
you to take it to heart. When you can place yourself in the shoes of
your client, you are more likely to respond with a heartfelt and
pertinent solution. “Empathy” and the ability to “Elicit” go hand in
hand. This is the thrust of the emotional effort needed to build a
trusting and loving relationship with your client. If this stage is not
engaged with the full passion of your organization, you cannot
proceed beyond this step and achieve desirable results. Similar to
the process of eliciting information, the ability to “Empathize” may
require you to broaden your range of interactions with your team and
clients. Weekly meetings do not beget empathy. Immersions into your
partner’s culture is best, but if not possible, seek other tools to
expand your interactions beyond the meeting room.
KSA’s 5 keys to service:Elicit – Empathize – Empower – Enthuse - Eject
To effectively “Empathize” with your clients you need to “Empower”
your team to take the initiative to truly care for and about them. They
need the willingness and incentive to act in a self-directed and
autonomous manner. This establishes the ability to respond to your
clients requests in an instinctive and “Best in the World” manner.
Empowered, self-directed, autonomous teams drive their own
decision making, collaborate smoothly on behalf of their customers,
and do not need permission to make something happen, especially if
that something will build trust with the client. Your team needs to be
motivated to apply autonomy to decision making and actions in order
to improve client relationships and your ability to meet the client’s
goals. This will not only improve your client relationships, it will also
motivate your team. If you have not already, read Dan Pink’s, “Drive”.
He tells it far better than I can. Just repeat after Dan,: “Autonomy-
Mastery-Purpose!” Extrinsic motivation wins the battle for the creative
mind every day. In the end, empowerment is the reward for all the
emotional capital we are expending to begin with.
KSA’s 5 keys to service:Elicit – Empathize – Empower – Enthuse - Eject
The fourth stage is to make your clients actively love you and to
convert them from customers into proclaimers. Continuous, relentless
customer service, is the key to turning customer satisfaction into
“lasting consumer enthusiasm”. Richard Whiteley and Diane Hessan
write in their book, “Customer Centered Growth”, about establishing
“outstanding” interactions with your customers. They reinforce the
idea that outstanding interactions with your customers make such an
indelible impression that your service can become a brand in and of
itself. Developing the perfect solution for your clients is not enough in
and of itself. Especially if the way the solution was developed and
serviced was not performed in a manner that built a loving, empathic,
enthusiastic relationship. Enthusiasm is only born from the hard
emotional work of building relationships. What good is a client who
receives a great solution but is never interested in working with you
again? What are the odds that a client with whom you do not have an
integral relationship will get an outstanding solution to their problem?
It is a self-perpetuating relationship. Enthused clients are not only
more likely to work with you again because your solutions were
empathic; they are also more likely to get empathic solutions
because your relationship is so strong.
KSA’s 5 keys to service:Elicit – Empathize – Empower – Enthuse - Eject
This is the simplest of the keys, yet probably the hardest to enforce
and employ effectively. Simply put, once you place your focus on
your client you need to eject those things which stand in the way of
meeting their needs. Sometimes this means putting the client before
your own organization and your internal needs. Sometimes this
means determining what your client values most and abandoning
other pursuits which could potentially be fruitful but not necessarily
best for the client, or worse, at the expense of the client. How many
beautiful structures exist in this world fail to serve the primary
functions of their end users? They are “monuments unto themselves,
in spite of themselves”. The difficulty in the “Eject” methodology lies
in developing a proper balance. Throwing out everything to achieve
your focus is as much a recipe for disaster as being inflexible and
arrogant in your approach to your client’s needs. To ensure that you
are on the right path, you must constantly verify that you are working
towards “Best in the World” solutions and processes, while
consistently ejecting the various inevitable missteps all along the
way. Do not be afraid to ask your clients what it is they value in your
services. Regularly debrief them. Be willing to uncover ugly truths or
mistakes. Eject the processes that led to them and build a stronger
more understanding relationship.
KSA’s 5 keys to service:Elicit – Empathize – Empower – Enthuse - Eject
“Best in the World” is a relative thing. It is a mindset, not a process. It
is an attitude, not a policy. KSA chooses to employ a client-centric
“Best in the World” approach, partially because this is our own best
in the world and because being loved is the only reason to do
business.
Christopher M. Good, CID, ASID, LEED AP
Chris is an Associate Principal at KSA Interiors, an award winning interior
design firm located in Glen Allen Virginia.
To learn more about KSA Interiors - visit their website:
http://www.ksainteriors.com
The relative mind
Check out these resources, books, and other ideas to help you adopt the 5 key’s to “Best in the World”:
Hasso Plattner Institute of Design at Stanford. aka. “The D-School”
Check out the bootleg-bootcamp for great ideas, thought starters and other tools and Design Thinking methodologies to allow you to elicit great
info from your team, partners, and clients.
http://dschool.typepad.com/news/2010/12/2010-bootcamp-bootleg-is-here.html
IDEO
Try the IDEO Method Cards, a 51 card deck designed to inspire you to think from a variety of perspectives and approaches.
http://www.ideo.com/work/method-cards/
Also available as an iphone app
http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/ideo-method-cards/id340233007?mt=8
Resources:
Trouble eliciting?
Practice asking “the 5 Whats”
To get to the root cause of an issue you should practice asking “What” no less than 5 times.
For example: ask a question and respond by asking “What do you mean by….” and continue at least 5 times until you reach the root cause at
hand.
Need to check your focus and prepare to “Eject”:
Ask Yourself:
“Who is our customer?”
“What are we selling?”
“What are our customers buying?”
Be prepared to learn that what your customers are buying is not necessarily what you thought you were selling.
For more on these ideas & thought starters check out the book “Customer Centered Growth” by Richard Whiteley and Diane Hessan.
“Blink” by Malcolm Gladwell.
Read this book! The chapter titled “The locked door” provides great insight on interpreting the meaning of the things people say and do.
Sometimes the explanations and rationale we apply to thinking which occurs within our subconscious can be misleading.
Resources:
Need some more reading? Of course you do… try these great books
referenced either directly or indirectly in the development of this methodology
“Whole New Mind” & “Drive” by Dan Pink http://www.danpink.com/
“The Dip” & “Linchpin” by Seth Godin http://www.sethgodin.com/sg/
“I love you more than my dog” by Jeanne Bliss http://www.customerbliss.com/index.php
“Your Marketing Sucks” by Mark Stephens http://msco.com/blog/
“Customer Centered Growth” by Richard Whiteley and Diane Hessan http://books.google.com
“Change by Design” by Tim Brown http://www.ideo.com/by-ideo/change-by-design/
“The Design of Business” by Roger Martin http://rogerlmartin.com/
“Emotional Intelligence” by Daniel Goleman http://danielgoleman.info/
“Blink” and “Outliers” by Malcolm Gladwell http://www.gladwell.com/
Resources:
This methodology could not have been developed without the support the leadership and business development staff at KSA Interiors:
Kim Schoenadel, CID, ASID
Cameron Stiles, CID, FASID, LEED AP
Lorri Finn, CID, IIDA, LEED AP
Tamera Sharpe
Sara Lowery Anderson
Thanks