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Advertising PR Media


Going all the way



How to create an ongoing relationship with potential clients

By Patrick Mayock


Smart Business Los Angeles | November 2008

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Julia Huang<br /> CEO, interTrend Communications Inc.
Julia Huang
CEO, interTrend Communications Inc.

Julia Huang was getting frustrated.

The CEO of interTrend Communications Inc. was eager to introduce her company to a new client, but she had to do so over and over again because her contact person changed several times over the course of a year. That’s when she realized she needed to establish multiple contacts within the company, so that when one changed, she could still move forward.

Today, this multilevel communication strategy has become the bedrock of the way Huang does business, pushing interTrend — which helps companies target Asian-American audiences — to 2007 revenue of more than $12 million.

Smart Business spoke with Huang about staying in touch with clients consistently, without becoming a pest.

Q. How do you effectively maintain communication with clients?

Phone calls and e-mails are essential, but nothing beats face to face. People just tend to bond when you have face to face.

Clients don’t want to be burdened with the responsibility of having you fly to New York from Seattle, so that very casual call — saying, ‘We are in New York for another business; would you have time for coffee?’ — helps a lot. Most clients will have that 10 or 15 minutes to allow for face to face.

On phones and e-mails, you don’t talk about things that might be offline. When you’re on e-mail, when you’re on the telephone, if you talk about those things ... it just sounds so nebulous. But when you’re face to face, and when you just kind of mention it, you see their face lighten up and you know you’ve made that connection.

Next time you communicate with them on e-mails and telephones, the dynamics really change.

Q. Once you’ve made a connection, how do maintain it?

You have to continue that frequent, systematic communication with a potential client. But there’s that fine line between establishing frequent communication and being a pest.

I appreciate people that conscientiously continue to be in touch with me, even though there is no business immediately. I think we’re lacking a lot of that. You can’t think that the person will make a business decision right there and then.

It’s such an instant gratification process, new business development, that you think, ‘Oh, there is no money to be made in the next five minutes; this is cold,’ but it’s not.

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