Firing difficult clients is not only OK, it's downright smart, says Jeffrey Pawlow, the founder of the Growth Partnership, a consultancy aimed at accounting firms. "Business [is about] professionals selling their time, and there's only so much time to bill or sell," he says. "Firing clients is addition by subtraction."
An erstwhile marketing officer for several accounting firms and Norwest Bancorp, Pawlow opened his own St. Louis-based shop in 1999. His 20 consultants advise accounting firms, from solo practitioners to high-profile shops.
Pawlow recommends dumping three general types of clients. The first group, not surprisingly, includes late payers and bona fide deadbeats. Even first-time offenders should be eyed with suspicion, warns Pawlow, because they often cause more trouble in the future. "Small businesses don't have the luxury or the resources to chase bad debt all the time," he says.
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Next on the chopping block are clients you may have outgrown and who are now just a bad fit. Or perhaps your business model has changed and continuing to provide that old menu of services is more hassle than it's worth, even for devoted clients who pay on time.
Then there are those giant pains in the neck. You know the kind: The incessant complainers who try to milk more service for less, sucking entrepreneurs' precious resources and exacerbating their ulcers.
In many cases, when entrepreneurs do drum up the fortitude to dump a client, they've already torched too much money, time and perhaps even part of their reputation. "After it's done, all our clients say: 'Why didn't we do it sooner?' " said Pawlow. "It's always harder to pull the trigger than live with the result."
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