Making Referrals Happen

February 01, 2011 at 07:00 PM
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Among the enduring myths in this industry is the idea: to increase referrals, all you have to do is ask.
Generations of sales managers have harangued you on it. You have felt guilty because you didn't do it. You have included it in countless business plans. And either you never did it, or if you tried, it didn't work. In any case, you felt guilty for not living up to one of the commandments of sales.

I have long tried to send this tired old notion to the elephant graveyard. Some of my writings on the subject, plus a vital new spreadsheet for a better strategy, may be downloaded at my site here. As with the other best things in life, these are free.

Referral Defined

For years I have taught that "a referral is a name volunteered." Obviously, you cannot solicit something that must, by its nature, be volunteered. If you ask, you will NOT receive a referral. You are handed a name. These names (a) are just names and (b) rarely become clients. Further, the process puts the client on the spot and makes you look unprofessional. (Imagine the dentist who says, "Who do you know with similar gingivitis I could call?")

These are conclusions I came to from experience. Now, I have hard data from the only study I know ever done of referrals.

The Facts Speak

In December 2010, Julie Littlechild, president of Advisor Impact, released a study of investors, "Anatomy of the Referral." Sponsored by Schwab Advisor Services and conducted by Advisor Impact, the study gathered data on 1,034 advisory clients. The data was gathered in May 2010. Every FA should make this study required reading. You can get a complimentary copy of the survey at www.advisorimpact.com.

One of the questions on the survey is: "What were the circumstances of providing the last referral?"
Ms. Littlechild commented: "What's striking is that in only 2 percent of the cases did clients say that they referred because their advisor asked them for the name of her friend. If motivation to help an advisor was the only driver of referrals, then asking for a referral should work. The irony is that one of the most popular tactical approaches to increasing referrals among advisors has been to ask clients for the name of a friend. Our data suggests that this tactic is unlikely to work."

Her data, and your own experience, suggest a stronger conclusion: Asking for referrals does not work.

You should feel better, starting now, knowing you don't have to engage in this fruitless, self-abasing procedure.
 
Who Refers?

"Anatomy of a Referral" is an in-depth study of numerous service dimensions and their impact on client referrals. Based on responses to a variety of these dimensions, Ms. Littlechild classified clients into four tiers: Disgruntled (12 percent), Complacent (39 percent), Content (25 percent) and Engaged (24 percent).

By the author's definition, the Engaged Client provides a referral. Specifically, the Engaged Client is defined as: "one who meets three key criteria — a client who is satisfied, loyal, AND actively providing referrals."

I have a serious issue with the number of "Engaged Clients" she found. No one I have spoken to reports anything close to receiving referrals from 24 percent of their clients. I emailed my concerns to the author.

With her kind permission, I am quoting from the email she sent: "The bigger issue is likely to be that they felt they provided a referral — which could have been a mention to a friend, but the introduction may never have happened, which may be a different issue." She further stated, "So I don't feel the issue is the numbers — they are what they are, and they are accurately reported. That said, we can rightly question if the clients have the same definition of referrals as we do."

That should keep you up at night. Let's say you have 300 clients. What if 75 of them are mentioning you to friends or colleagues, but you only learn about 10-20 of them? We are not then talking about referrals slipping through the hated cracks. We are talking about whooshing through gaping holes in the floor.

Why Clients Refer

The Engaged Client is very satisfied (ranks the primary advisor 8 out of 10 on a scale of satisfaction) and is extremely loyal. However, those characteristics do not automatically translate into referrals. Doing a better job does not guarantee more referrals.

Ms. Littlefield refers to a "motivation gap" and a "referral gap." Far more clients say they're motivated to refer in order to thank their advisor than actually do it. Far more clients say they're somewhat or very comfortable providing a referral than actually provide one.

It is these gaps that have prompted countless generations of sales managers to conclude, "All we have to do is ask for referrals."But it does not work that way.

Ms. Littlefield: "Advisors are often taught to ask for referrals, and ask often. The data suggest that a better approach is to help clients to spot a good referral opportunity so that they recognize the opportunity to share your name. That opportunity is not likely to be as obvious as a client being asked for the name of a good financial advisor. Rather, the opportunity might involve a client speaking with a friend who has lost a spouse, a colleague who is selling a business, or a family member who is hoping for early retirement. The need triggers the opportunity for a referral; your clients need to recognize that need." Emphasis added.

How do you do this? For years, I've called it "Promote Referrals." I have defined this as "the art of gently and persistently reminding your clients you value and accept referrals." Consistently reminding clients you value and accept their referrals, does in fact increase referral business. Based on Ms. Littlechild's research, I'm now abandoning the term, "Promote Referrals" and incorporating it into a new term: "Induce Referrals."

The new sales commandment is: Continually educate clients to recognize referral opportunities and gently and persistently remind them their referrals are valued and accepted.

The word "induce" is a near- perfect word to describe this process. Per the American Heritage online dictionary, "To induce is to lead, as to a course of action, by means of influence or persuasion."

A Plan to Increase Referrals

  1. Read "Anatomy of a Referral." Take very good notes of service dimensions rated highly by Engaged Clients, but which are sore points in your practice.
  2. Evaluate the "goodness" of your clientele. This requires a bit of explanation on my part, and work on your part. Keep reading.
  3. Review various combinations of "A" clients, Engaged Clients and wealthy clients, and correct any sore points found.
  4. Have a referral conversation with every client at review time. Educate them on referral opportunities.

Client Goodness Explained

In my October 2010 Research magazine article, "Evaluating Client Goodness," I directed you to a spreadsheet we had developed, which showed how to evaluate your clients on the basis of "responsiveness" and "wealth."An "A" client is someone who has complete trust in your recommendations. Since you do not know how your clients rate you on satisfaction and loyalty, we have to rely on something you do know: responsiveness.

"Induce Referrals" is a recipe. It has many ingredients. Properly prepared and baked, you get a beautiful referral cake. 

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