Get Lots More Unsolicited Referrals

Someone shopping for wine.

What You Need to Know

Most engaged clients provide referrals.
Accessibility helps promote engagement.
You could start with wine.

Most advisors have had the occasional experience of receiving an unsolicited referral from a client or another professional.

And any advisor would want to make that happen more often, but it appears random.

It happened, but you don’t think you did anything special to make it happen.

What if there was something special you could do that would drive many more of these to you?

In a 2022 survey supervised by Julie Littlechild of Absolute Engagement, her team determined that 98% of “engaged” clients had referred at least one new prospect to their advisor during the course of the previous year.

To get results like this from your clients, you need to understand how to turn them into “engaged” clients.

Whether or not a client is engaged depends on how happy he or she is with your service, but, more importantly, how they feel about their experience as a client.

That experience is the one factor that moves them from being merely satisfied to being raving fans.

There are several factors that go into that experience, which starts with hearing about you and learning about you online and continues through onboarding, and all their interactions with you over a span of years.

It includes:

How you communicate with them.
How they’re treated.
How accessible you and your team are.
How they are treated by your team.
Whether or not they’re being “wowed.”
Whether you have a great story to share with them.
Whether they have great stories to share with others about you.
What’s special about your service.

See also  3 Things Jackson Is Saying About the Annuity Market Now

Imagine This

Your clients come to your office for an appointment and there’s a Welcome sign at the desk with their name on it.

Your assistant greets them by name and tells them that you’re expecting them and will be with them in a few minutes.

She asks if they’d like some coffee and brings them the coffee on a silver tray with china cups.

You then come out, greet them warmly, and walk them into the conference room.

Your assistant carries the tray to the conference table and asks them if they need anything else.

How does that compare to the experience you offer to your best clients?