Dealing with Difficult Clients

Beverly Flaxington is a practice management consultant. She answers questions from advisors facing human resource issues. To submit yours, email us here.

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This week I will share some tips on how to deal effectively with difficult clients. I receive a number of inquiries every week on this topic and it is one of my favorite ones!

The one universal experience in life is encountering difficult people. They are everywhere. For financial advisors, a client who is difficult is costly in a number of ways. They might be brusque and aggressive with your staff, not respond to your follow-ups and hence never get anything accomplished, not listen or be indifferent.

It would be nice to eliminate them, but another one always takes their place.

Rather than reject, or try to avoid, difficult people, find ways to work with them with the objective of changing the interactions to something positive. In some cases, a client may be so abusive that it makes sense to politely ask them to leave, but in many cases there are turning points you are missing and the situation could correct with the right steps. Let’s look at some steps to take to be more efficient and effective at dealing with the difficult ones, and see if you can’t at least minimize their numbers!

I talk about the process of dealing with difficult clients going to “ARTICA” because it is an acronym for steps you need to take.

Start by Acknowledging the other person’s viewpoint. When someone is difficult it is the natural tendency to shut them down and stop them from being difficult. But, most clients are difficult because they are reacting to something. They are typically fearful (“what if I lose everything and have to live on cat food the rest of my life?”) or experiencing resistance to change or dealing with other negative reactions. Depending on someone’s style this could either make them shut down or act out. Instead of reacting, which is the natural response for most advisors, seek to understand and acknowledge they have a right to their experience. It isn’t about you.