WOW! I read a lot of pent up frustration and anger when I navigate through that "quiz". I thank goodness we do not have any clients like that. I can think of a few that exhibit a couple of those traits now and then - but fortunately we don't have any clients from "The hottest part of hell"
Not to be a shill, but in Maister's latest book, there is considerable attention given to the importance of relationship development - see chapters 6, 7 and 8. It seems that if a service professional has been successful at developing relationships, then the behaviors indicated in the quiz would not be seen. Those behaviors seem to come from a client that sees you as a commodity, not as a valuable resource. It may be that if you have a client like this, it would be instructive to review business development methods.
posted on Wednesday, February 6, 2008
Mark Qualman said
I applied this test to my "internal" client, the different departments in our organization. Boy, was that an eye opener!
Wow, that's brutal. I can't tell if this quiz is a big joke and I'm not getting it or whether it's serious. If it's serious, and you are in all seriousness answering yes to ANY of the questions, I gotta wonder: what's going on that you are allowing/teaching your clients to treat you this way? Check out Charlie Green's (Trusted Advisor co-author) latest article on client service vs. client servility. Some interesting perspectives on what's really going on when we turn ourselves into pretzels/doormats/etc. for our clients. http://www.raintoday.com/pages/3204_the_difference_between_client_service_and_client_servility.cfm
I think it's the sort of quiz that is taken gleefully by the same people who put up passive-aggressive little cartoons on the walls of their cubicle ("you want it when!!??") and who are probably just as guilty of talking behind their clients' backs as are the clients themselves. These are the kinds of things said by people who've been through a very bad divorce.
In my experience, it's just extremely rare to find someone for whom these characteristics are objectively true. They go in pairs, as in "it takes one to know one," and they feed on each other.
Simply put, anyone with a client who treats them like this is--I'd bet--a pretty ineffective professional themselves.
Sutton's book--while there is an undeniable kernel of truth in it--is great fodder for those who want to blame others. At best, it's a guilty pleasure, like gossip and bad-mouthing others.
The "asshole clients" themselves are never the ones reading this material; it's the consultants who are indulging themselves in various forms of "it's not my fault," "if you had my client you'd fail too," and other versions of blamethrowing. It's more about the resentment of the one taking the quiz than it is about the one supposedly being described.
The whole thing reminds me of, "point a finger at someone, and your fist points three fingers back at you."
posted on Thursday, February 7, 2008
Ellen Ostrow said
Speaking
of Bob Sutton, thought you might enjoy this:
As my blog has grown extensively over the past year, I've created a new dynamic blog archive for those of you who may be looking to dig through the earlier discussions.
Due to the ever-expanding nature of the conversation here, I’ve created this indexing system to help those of you that may be looking for earlier conversations. Click on any of the four main topics below to see their subcategories, and click the subcategories to see the relevant blog posts. Click here or on the x in the top corner at any point to return to the main blog page.
This is a beta version of the interface, and we plan to develop a more refined catgorization scheme but thought this early version would be useful.
Buddy Hubbert said
WOW! I read a lot of pent up frustration and anger when I navigate through that "quiz". I thank goodness we do not have any clients like that. I can think of a few that exhibit a couple of those traits now and then - but fortunately we don't have any clients from "The hottest part of hell"
Not to be a shill, but in Maister's latest book, there is considerable attention given to the importance of relationship development - see chapters 6, 7 and 8. It seems that if a service professional has been successful at developing relationships, then the behaviors indicated in the quiz would not be seen. Those behaviors seem to come from a client that sees you as a commodity, not as a valuable resource. It may be that if you have a client like this, it would be instructive to review business development methods.
posted on Wednesday, February 6, 2008