The other day, one of my readers wanted to know:
“Have you ever fired a client, and why? I have one customer who is driving me nuts, but I can’t afford to lose his business.”
First of all, that’s a horrible position to be in. Many freelancers choose to run their own business because they don’t want to depend on someone or something else. Having big spenders as clients may seem fantastic, but if you’re not careful, you end up being in their pocket, and they start pulling all the shots.
David Ogilvy, the famous advertising guru, took great care in selecting his clients. That concept alone was revolutionary. If you’re a service provider, don’t clients choose you? Isn’t that how the game is played? Not in Ogilvy’s world.
Ogilvy and his partner would turn down about sixty clients every year, and this was one of their rules:
“Never work for a client so big you can’t afford to lose them.”
They once turned down Ford because the iconic motor company would represent half of their total billing.
So, to get back to my reader’s question: be selective in whom you want to work with, even if you’re just starting out. Don’t put all your eggs in one or two baskets. It makes you overly dependent, and very vulnerable. If that one big client pulls out, you’re toast.
Have I ever fired a client? I sure have, and I’m happy I did. It wasn’t all about money. In fact, in many cases money had little to do with it.
Here are a few clients I gladly gave the sack:
THE DICTATOR
Here’s the client who thinks he owns you twenty-four seven. He always knows best; he’s overly demanding, disrespectful, and never satisfied. These people are impossible to please. The more you try, the less you succeed.
Working for dictators made me hate myself and my job. I did everything I could to avoid contact with them because it was emotionally draining. No money in the world could make up for how lousy I felt working for these bullies.
THE VIOLATOR
Some clients act as if the rules don’t apply to them. Even with a written agreement in place, they try to bend and break it as fast as they can: “Sorry, we can’t pay you within thirty days. We’ll cut a check as soon as the end-client pays us.”
“Did the agreement say that we have to pay you even if we don’t use your recording? Well, that’s just too bad. We have switched gears, and don’t need your voice-over anymore.”
When you continue working for a client who is not paying your bill, you are sending the message that you are not worth the fee you charge.
THE CHEAPSKATE
Stay away from clients with great ideas and no budget, and the ones that try to nickel-and-dime you from the get-go. I once fired a long-time client of mine that was locked into old rates. When I increased my fees across the board, she insisted I make an exception “for old times sake.”
While it may seem like a “nice” gesture, deals like that hold your business back. Time spent on these small-budget clients prevents you from spending that time working for a client who respects your rate. Ogilvy was right when he said:
“Only work for clients who want you to make a profit.”
THE UNETHICAL
When thinking of your clients, ask yourself these two questions:
“Do they sell a product or service I can be proud of?”
“Will I be able to do my very best work?”
Whether you’re a copywriter, a graphic designer, or a voice-over, you will be professionally associated with a product or service you helped promote. Your reputation is always on the line.
An advertising agency I had worked with in the past, asked me to voice a commercial for one of the world’s worst weed killers. I politely declined, and they understood. My voice is for hire, but my integrity is not for sale.
It’s up to you where you draw the line, but I would never want to be involved in something illegal, or help sell something I’m morally against.
THE UNPROFESSIONAL
Some clients are completely unorganized and in over their heads. One day they want one thing. The next day all has changed. It’s something you find out once you start working with them. As a freelancer, you’re used to juggling many plates, but you’re not getting paid to help your clients juggle theirs.
Sometimes clients become overly friendly. They start calling at night with some lame excuse. It turns out: they just want to talk about a personal issue, or they start gossiping about a colleague they’ve worked with. Before you know it, they’ll be asking you favors because of the perceived friendship.
Take my word: keep things clean, and have clear boundaries. It’s painful to have to fire these clients, because you know they’ll start gossiping about you to the next professional they cling to. But if you give in because you want to be nice, they’ll suck up your time and tire you out.
THE HIDDEN MESSAGE
All the clients I just described have a few things in common: They keep you from growing your business. They drag you away from your goals. They also appear on your path as your teachers.
People who don’t respect you, are giving you a chance to learn to respect yourself.
People who distract you, are showing you the importance of being focused.
People who don’t pay you, are testing what you think of the value of your work.
People who are trying to manipulate your feelings, are helping you grow a pair.
Now, if you are bound by a contract I’m not suggesting you break your word and fire these clients. Rather than cutting them loose, you’ve got to cut your losses, fulfill your obligation, and learn from the situation.
But should these clients contact you again for a project, respectfully decline their offer. All they would do is take the fun out of your job. And as Ogilvy said:
“Where people aren’t having any fun, they seldom produce good work.”
Paul Strikwerda ©nethervoice
PS Next week I’ll have an interview with J. Michael Collins about the upcoming virtual One Voice Conference USA (August 13-16). Tickets are available NOW!
Joshua Alexander says
Beautiful, honest, spot-on and riveting as always, my friend! AND – you actually motivated me to include a new clause I hadn’t remembered to put in my contract: that they must pay me even if they ultimately decide to use a different voice talent. THANK YOU! A great and necessary addition to my contract. Bless ya bruddaman!
Paul Strikwerda says
It’s sad that we have to think of all the ways we can get stiffed and turn that into a contract. But better safe than you know what…
Clear and sensible advice as always Paul. It is hard to say no to a prospective client but the statement “a good client should want you to be profitable” is gold!
Great advice, sir! Everything’s a tiny bit relative though depending on how good business is. If you’re starting out or business is slow, I feel like it’s OK to take some of the smaller jobs. But dealing with difficult clients or ones that string you along is NEVER fun. Like some friends I’ve let go in the past… sometimes the lack of respect isn’t worth hanging on.
We all have our own boundaries and things we’re willing to put up with. But especially when times are tough, we get tested on our principles.