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Four Customer Experience Tips for Accounting Firms

Post by
September 3, 2024
5 min read

Customer experience (CX) strategist and ClearlyRated co-founder, Eric Gregg recently spoke with two CMOs from top-performing accounting firms. Each has successfully implemented CX initiatives with transformative results. Eric was joined by Sarah Cirelli, CMO at Grassi, and Suzanne Reed, CMO at LBMC. A four-time winner of ClearlyRated’s Best of Accounting Client Satisfaction award, Grassi has earned an overall client rating of 4.8 stars. Newer to using ClearlyRated, LBMC already has 180 verified ratings, 40 client testimonials, and a 4.6-star client rating.

<< Watch the webinar | Peer Insights: Driving Accounting Firm Growth Through CX Excellence >>

Expert Guidance from our Accounting CX Panelists

Their conversation was packed with insights for everyone, from the customer experience beginner to firms with well-oiled CX machines. As always, we won’t gate-keep! ICYMI, here are four key tips from our panelists.

1. Suzanne Reed on how to make a business case for your customer experience program

When selling the idea of investing in a CX initiative within her firm, Suzanne touched on these three points to explain how it would deliver high returns on investment (ROI). Here they are in her words:

✅ It helps drive growth

“Retaining and expanding our current client accounts is a hugely important part of our growth strategy. A CX initiative will help us make sure that we've got the right client experience and understand what our clients are looking for from us.”

✅ It helps maintain a consistently positive experience as organizations evolve.

“As a firm, we are going to go through changes, including leadership succession planning. Putting a formal client experience program in place is a proactive step toward maintaining consistency in our CX and provides a channel for open communication with our clients.”

✅ It helps stay ahead of client needs.

“Not only can we pinpoint where we may be falling short and even prevent accounts from moving to our competitors, but we can also ask our clients what they’re worried about or wanting for the future. Their answers help us plan for those needs so we can best help our clients. Now instead of clients having to come to us and ask for things, we can proactively help them and cross-sell by saying: ‘We believe these other services would be beneficial to you.’”

2. Sarah Cirelli on how to prepare and maintain client data

Sarah will be the first to say that cleaning up client data isn’t the most fun experience but she adds, “Thank goodness we did it, because once we were done, we were in a much better place.” 

After Grassi’s very first survey, her team learned what many do: The majority of the client contact information they had was for billing contacts, not the people who interacted with their services and should get the survey. 

Their solution: After pulling the list of clients they wanted to survey, Cirelli’s team segmented them by partner and, over the course of three days, they ran what they called a “data clinic.”

“We cycled partners in and out the door,” she explains. “Sitting with them hip to hip, we went through their list. I don't even want to tell you a scary percentage of client contacts we identified who had never received any information or thought leadership from the firm.”

Despite the potential tedium of a project like this, Sarah says that it ended up being a wholesome experience between her team and the partners: “It was actually a great project for us—we bonded over it.” She continues:

A graphic pull quote that reads, "By the time we were done, we were happy we did it because we learned a lot from it and were in a good place to move forward.”

Her ultimate advice, echoed by Eric: Just do it. The first time is the hardest, but it’s a simple matter of regular data hygiene to maintain it from there.

3. Suzanne Reed on identifying and winning over unhappy clients

“It can be hard to say something to somebody’s face. That's why it’s helpful to have a third party asking the questions. People feel they can be more honest,” Suzanne says. She goes on:

We all make mistakes, she notes, but when we recover well we create a memorable positive experience. Not only do we have a better chance of retaining those clients, but even creating more vocal brand ambassadors. 

“I’ve actually seen some detractors – clients who were initially dissatisfied – end up becoming more loyal to us after a service recovery than some of our promoters,” Suzanne says. “So, I like to jump on those detractors immediately when they come up in our survey responses.”

4. Sarah Cirelli on how to use surveys for account expansion

Sarah shared one of the most impactful questions her team has asked in their customer satisfaction survey: Is there any service that Grassi doesn’t currently provide that you wish we did? 

“Maybe they’re already getting those services from another firm and would like to move them to us, or maybe it would just help them if they could tack something new onto their services with us,” Sarah says. Either way, she didn't expect to generate such obvious new business from their survey—but they did.

“We ended up getting about 30 new opportunities the first time we asked, and that was just from our current clients. It was mind blowing. Our managing partner, of course, loved it.”

Watch the full webinar for more insights

Learn how Sarah nurtures top-to-bottom positivity around Grassi’s CX surveys. Hear Eric’s advice on how to make the most of “shout outs.” And get the goods on how and why Suzanne’s team at LBMC has begun surveying multiple times a year.

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