Presented by : Robert Sawhney – SRC Associates Ltd
Venue: Hong Kong Institute of CPAs, 27/F., Wu Chung House
Date: 24th Oct 2012




Marketing & Branding a Professional
Services Firm
Disclaimer

 The materials of this seminar / workshop / conference are intended
  to provide general information and guidance on the subject
  concerned. Examples and other materials in this seminar / workshop
  / conference are only for illustrative purposes and should not be
  relied upon for technical answers. The Hong Kong Institute of
  Certified Public Accountants (The Institute), the speaker(s) and the
  firm(s) that the speaker(s) is representing take no responsibility for
  any errors or omissions in, or for the loss incurred by individuals or
  companies due to the use of, the materials of this seminar /
  workshop / conference.


 No claims, action or legal proceedings in connection with this
  seminar/workshop/conference brought by any individuals or
  companies having reference to the materials on this seminar /
  workshop / conference will be entertained by the Institute, the
  speaker(s) and the firm(s) that the speaker(s) is representing.



                                                                           2
State of Play
•   Financial crisis
•   Globalization
•   Demanding clients
•   Dissatisfied professionals (Gen Y)
•   Opening of emerging markets
•   New competitors
•   BPO
•   Technology
•   Challenges of knowledge generation and
    sharing
•   Social media and user generated content




                                              3
How PSFs are different?

• Product resides in the structural, social, and human capital of
  firm (IC)
• Key marketer is the professional who interacts with client
• Differentiation is harder to achieve – „we do better audits‟
• Branding at the individual, practice group, and firm level
• Marketing and BD coupled together – misunderstanding?
• Professionals don‟t take easily to being „managed‟, strategy
  bottom up and involves all or no one (are they interested)?




                                                                    4
The Power of Context

 Experiment at Princeton University in the US
 Good Samaritans (seminarians of The Princeton Theological
  Seminary) were asked to deliver a short talk on the bible at a
  nearby venue
 The Samaritans split into two groups: one told they were late,
  the other told they were a few minutes early
 Variable: „victim‟ outside building
 68% of the early group stopped to help, only 10% of the late
  group?
   (Source: The Tipping Point by Malcolm Gladwell)




                                                                   5
Marketing is dead! – the wrong context




                                         6
The right context!

 What do clients want??
•   Client focus.
•   Commitment to help by suggesting strategies and demonstrating
    interest.
•   Understanding the client‟s business.
•   Providing value
•   Responsiveness and proactiveness
•   Advise on business issues.
•   Unprompted Communication
•   Keeping clients informed.
•   Show skill in expertise, experience and outcomes.
•   Quality work, show attention to detail.
•   Ability to deal with unexpected changes.
•   Handling problems quickly and effectively.
•   Meeting client-imposed scope of work and deadlines.
•   Anticipating client needs..
•   Firms and professionals which are empathetic, reliable, and flexible

                                                                           7
What stops this?
 Hourly billing that does not recognize value and creates
  conflict of interest between client and firm
 Focus on billable time and utilization rates
 Associates trained in technical skills but not in management
 Professionals with high IQ and little EQ
 Firm structure that inhibits cross functional sharing of
  information
 Professionals with little formal business training
 Senior partners with high resistance to alternative ways of
  working
 Fixation on practice areas as opposed to client problems
 Focus on cross selling without understanding client needs
 Lack of understanding/acceptance of marketing techniques
  such as research, segmentation etc


                                                                 8
Quick Case
   Harrex Group, NZ (source: J of Accountancy, 2008)
   Founded in 2007 by Brendan Harrex, first chief value officer at his former firm
   He says focus on time and cost only creates illusion of managing a PSF
   What really matters is value creation
   No more hourly billing, a change of culture
   Key Performance Indicators for Harrex:
                 * Ability to think strategically on behalf of clients
                               * Client Communication
                                      * Delegation
                                  * Turnaround Time
                                   * Client Feedback
                  * Effective Listening and Communication Skills
                          * Knowledge Elicitation/Coaching
                      * Risk Taking, Innovation and Creativity
                                * Continuous Learning
                        * Passion, Attitude and Commitment
                                     * Team Player



                                                                                      9
What Does it Mean to be Market Oriented?

• Marketing is a business philosophy that puts creating and
  delivering customer value at the heart of all that an
  organization does
• It is an organization culture that acquires and disseminates
  information-cross functionally and across hierarchies, and
  acts upon that information
• This sharing and information coordination tolerates no
  functional silos




                                                                 10
Bed rock of firm performance


  Client value, satisfaction and
        firm performance

       Market based strategy and strategy implementation (based
                        around the 17 factors)




                                             Inter-
               Client      Competitor
                                           functional
            orientation    orientation
                                          coordination




                                                                  11
Marketing and client value

• Firstly – what marketing is not:
• Promotion
• Clever logo and new brand name
• Run by the marketing/BD people
• Something that can be turned on and off according to
  prevailing conditions
• In its entirety, something that cannot be measured using ROI




                                                                 12
Cont‟d

• What it is:
• A business process about creating client value
• A firm culture that has the most significant impact on firm
  performance
• The guiding force for strategy and strategic management
• The bed rock of firm performance (market orientation)




                                                                13
Now You See

 This is what we mean by adopting a marketing culture
 Peter Drucker said years ago that firms have only 2
  functions: marketing and innovation, the rest are costs
 But when he said marketing, this is what he meant. The
  adoption of the marketing concept into the very fabric of a
  firm




                                                                14
Branding PSFs

•   Branding in PSFs is not about logos, advertising, or new stationary,
    it is about the skills, knowledge, and interactions that the human
    assets of the firm have in the market place. Branding in PSFs is
    different because:
•   Professional services are essentially intangible and hence
    differentiating the firm is both different and difficult
•   The professionals in the firm hold all the capital, if they don‟t „buy
    into‟ the brand, there is no purpose in branding at all
•   Clients will not choose a provider due to a new promotional
    campaign based on a new logo or image
•   Clients choose the individual as much as the firm, hence there
    should be a balance between firm brand and individual brand
•   Consumers in Asia are much more critical of professionals
    advertising than those in the west, hence advertising is less effective
•   Branding is about the values, people, and work processes of the
    firm, in this case, branding and marketing are almost synonymous



                                                                              15
Branding and Fees

 A recent research study from RainToday.com and the
  Wellesley Hills Group titled Fees and Pricing Benchmark
  Report: Consulting Industry 2008, finds that while brand
  leaders (27% of responding consulting firms) and “not very
  well-known” firms (73% of responding consulting firms) have
  similar standard / book rates, the hourly rates brand leaders
  actually get were always higher than their counterparts. The
  increase by level of professional is as follows:

  • Highest-level professionals (CEO, Principal): 20% higher
  • Upper-level professionals (VP, New Partner): 11% higher
  • Advanced-level professionals (Directors): 29% higher
  • Mid-level professionals (Managers, Post-MBA): 20%
  higher
  • Entry-level professionals (Associates): 35% higher


                                                                  16
The Branding Process

•   Vision, mission, and business strategy
•   Marketing strategy
•   Firm culture and values
•   Firm history and background
•   Staff perceptions and needs
•   Clients and industries served
•   Client perceptions of firm
•   Services offered
•   Competitive environment




                                             17
CHANGE!!!


Its about a change of
 mind set and
 perception



                         18
Thank You!

 If you want any of the full references for work cited or have
  any questions, please feel free to contact me:
 bob@srchk.com, www.srchk.com
 Blog: www.marketingasia.typepad.com
 Twitter: http://twitter.com/robertsawhney




                                                                  19

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Marketing And Branding A Psf Oct 2012

  • 1. Presented by : Robert Sawhney – SRC Associates Ltd Venue: Hong Kong Institute of CPAs, 27/F., Wu Chung House Date: 24th Oct 2012 Marketing & Branding a Professional Services Firm
  • 2. Disclaimer  The materials of this seminar / workshop / conference are intended to provide general information and guidance on the subject concerned. Examples and other materials in this seminar / workshop / conference are only for illustrative purposes and should not be relied upon for technical answers. The Hong Kong Institute of Certified Public Accountants (The Institute), the speaker(s) and the firm(s) that the speaker(s) is representing take no responsibility for any errors or omissions in, or for the loss incurred by individuals or companies due to the use of, the materials of this seminar / workshop / conference.  No claims, action or legal proceedings in connection with this seminar/workshop/conference brought by any individuals or companies having reference to the materials on this seminar / workshop / conference will be entertained by the Institute, the speaker(s) and the firm(s) that the speaker(s) is representing. 2
  • 3. State of Play • Financial crisis • Globalization • Demanding clients • Dissatisfied professionals (Gen Y) • Opening of emerging markets • New competitors • BPO • Technology • Challenges of knowledge generation and sharing • Social media and user generated content 3
  • 4. How PSFs are different? • Product resides in the structural, social, and human capital of firm (IC) • Key marketer is the professional who interacts with client • Differentiation is harder to achieve – „we do better audits‟ • Branding at the individual, practice group, and firm level • Marketing and BD coupled together – misunderstanding? • Professionals don‟t take easily to being „managed‟, strategy bottom up and involves all or no one (are they interested)? 4
  • 5. The Power of Context  Experiment at Princeton University in the US  Good Samaritans (seminarians of The Princeton Theological Seminary) were asked to deliver a short talk on the bible at a nearby venue  The Samaritans split into two groups: one told they were late, the other told they were a few minutes early  Variable: „victim‟ outside building  68% of the early group stopped to help, only 10% of the late group?  (Source: The Tipping Point by Malcolm Gladwell) 5
  • 6. Marketing is dead! – the wrong context 6
  • 7. The right context!  What do clients want?? • Client focus. • Commitment to help by suggesting strategies and demonstrating interest. • Understanding the client‟s business. • Providing value • Responsiveness and proactiveness • Advise on business issues. • Unprompted Communication • Keeping clients informed. • Show skill in expertise, experience and outcomes. • Quality work, show attention to detail. • Ability to deal with unexpected changes. • Handling problems quickly and effectively. • Meeting client-imposed scope of work and deadlines. • Anticipating client needs.. • Firms and professionals which are empathetic, reliable, and flexible 7
  • 8. What stops this?  Hourly billing that does not recognize value and creates conflict of interest between client and firm  Focus on billable time and utilization rates  Associates trained in technical skills but not in management  Professionals with high IQ and little EQ  Firm structure that inhibits cross functional sharing of information  Professionals with little formal business training  Senior partners with high resistance to alternative ways of working  Fixation on practice areas as opposed to client problems  Focus on cross selling without understanding client needs  Lack of understanding/acceptance of marketing techniques such as research, segmentation etc 8
  • 9. Quick Case  Harrex Group, NZ (source: J of Accountancy, 2008)  Founded in 2007 by Brendan Harrex, first chief value officer at his former firm  He says focus on time and cost only creates illusion of managing a PSF  What really matters is value creation  No more hourly billing, a change of culture  Key Performance Indicators for Harrex: * Ability to think strategically on behalf of clients * Client Communication * Delegation * Turnaround Time * Client Feedback * Effective Listening and Communication Skills * Knowledge Elicitation/Coaching * Risk Taking, Innovation and Creativity * Continuous Learning * Passion, Attitude and Commitment * Team Player 9
  • 10. What Does it Mean to be Market Oriented? • Marketing is a business philosophy that puts creating and delivering customer value at the heart of all that an organization does • It is an organization culture that acquires and disseminates information-cross functionally and across hierarchies, and acts upon that information • This sharing and information coordination tolerates no functional silos 10
  • 11. Bed rock of firm performance Client value, satisfaction and firm performance Market based strategy and strategy implementation (based around the 17 factors) Inter- Client Competitor functional orientation orientation coordination 11
  • 12. Marketing and client value • Firstly – what marketing is not: • Promotion • Clever logo and new brand name • Run by the marketing/BD people • Something that can be turned on and off according to prevailing conditions • In its entirety, something that cannot be measured using ROI 12
  • 13. Cont‟d • What it is: • A business process about creating client value • A firm culture that has the most significant impact on firm performance • The guiding force for strategy and strategic management • The bed rock of firm performance (market orientation) 13
  • 14. Now You See  This is what we mean by adopting a marketing culture  Peter Drucker said years ago that firms have only 2 functions: marketing and innovation, the rest are costs  But when he said marketing, this is what he meant. The adoption of the marketing concept into the very fabric of a firm 14
  • 15. Branding PSFs • Branding in PSFs is not about logos, advertising, or new stationary, it is about the skills, knowledge, and interactions that the human assets of the firm have in the market place. Branding in PSFs is different because: • Professional services are essentially intangible and hence differentiating the firm is both different and difficult • The professionals in the firm hold all the capital, if they don‟t „buy into‟ the brand, there is no purpose in branding at all • Clients will not choose a provider due to a new promotional campaign based on a new logo or image • Clients choose the individual as much as the firm, hence there should be a balance between firm brand and individual brand • Consumers in Asia are much more critical of professionals advertising than those in the west, hence advertising is less effective • Branding is about the values, people, and work processes of the firm, in this case, branding and marketing are almost synonymous 15
  • 16. Branding and Fees  A recent research study from RainToday.com and the Wellesley Hills Group titled Fees and Pricing Benchmark Report: Consulting Industry 2008, finds that while brand leaders (27% of responding consulting firms) and “not very well-known” firms (73% of responding consulting firms) have similar standard / book rates, the hourly rates brand leaders actually get were always higher than their counterparts. The increase by level of professional is as follows: • Highest-level professionals (CEO, Principal): 20% higher • Upper-level professionals (VP, New Partner): 11% higher • Advanced-level professionals (Directors): 29% higher • Mid-level professionals (Managers, Post-MBA): 20% higher • Entry-level professionals (Associates): 35% higher 16
  • 17. The Branding Process • Vision, mission, and business strategy • Marketing strategy • Firm culture and values • Firm history and background • Staff perceptions and needs • Clients and industries served • Client perceptions of firm • Services offered • Competitive environment 17
  • 18. CHANGE!!! Its about a change of mind set and perception 18
  • 19. Thank You!  If you want any of the full references for work cited or have any questions, please feel free to contact me:  bob@srchk.com, www.srchk.com  Blog: www.marketingasia.typepad.com  Twitter: http://twitter.com/robertsawhney 19