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Ep 2: Why You Need To Take Client Onboarding More Seriously

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Manage episode 474825400 series 3655807
Content provided by Sean Lang. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Sean Lang or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://staging.podcastplayer.com/legal.

🔑 Key Takeaways:

  • Most agency owners are underestimating the importance of client onboarding.
  • First impressions set the tone for the entire client relationship.
  • Onboarding is where expectations, roles, responsibilities, and timelines must be clearly defined.
  • If you don’t set expectations, clients will fill in the gaps with their own—often unrealistic—assumptions.
  • A strong onboarding process builds momentum and trust early on.
  • Don’t let onboarding delay visible progress—clients expect results, not just setup tasks.
  • "Speed to value" is key: show traction and insights fast, even during onboarding.
  • Pre-onboarding matters—clients should know what to expect before they sign.
  • Use a visual roadmap to outline the onboarding process (week-by-week is best).
  • Repeat key onboarding info multiple times—think “Rule of 7” for message retention.
  • Sales and account management handoff must be smooth and intentional.
  • Create continuity of care—even in growing teams—to maintain trust.
  • Introduce a “blow-off valve” (i.e. sales or leadership check-ins) to catch issues clients won’t share with their account manager.
  • Weekly check-ins are essential—book them at the kickoff call to avoid drop-offs.
  • Be proactive at every stage: pre-sale, onboarding, and beyond.
  • Look for early wins, even outside the scope—surprise and delight goes a long way.

🛠️ Tools or Concepts Mentioned:

  • “Rule of 7” – marketing rule that people need to hear something multiple times before it sticks
  • “Blow-off valve” – a check-in mechanism with someone outside the day-to-day to catch hidden client concerns
  • Client onboarding roadmap – a week-by-week visual of what the client can expect
  • “Speed to value” – getting visible results quickly to reinforce buying decisions

https://www.agencyuplift.co/vault

Agency Uplift - Skool Group
Scale your agency. Frameworks from an owner who grew to 35+ team members and 10-fig clients.
Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.
Sean’s Links:

🔗 Sean Lang on LinkedIn
🌐 Agency Uplift Skool Group
🛒 Social Commerce Club

  continue reading

18 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 474825400 series 3655807
Content provided by Sean Lang. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Sean Lang or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://staging.podcastplayer.com/legal.

🔑 Key Takeaways:

  • Most agency owners are underestimating the importance of client onboarding.
  • First impressions set the tone for the entire client relationship.
  • Onboarding is where expectations, roles, responsibilities, and timelines must be clearly defined.
  • If you don’t set expectations, clients will fill in the gaps with their own—often unrealistic—assumptions.
  • A strong onboarding process builds momentum and trust early on.
  • Don’t let onboarding delay visible progress—clients expect results, not just setup tasks.
  • "Speed to value" is key: show traction and insights fast, even during onboarding.
  • Pre-onboarding matters—clients should know what to expect before they sign.
  • Use a visual roadmap to outline the onboarding process (week-by-week is best).
  • Repeat key onboarding info multiple times—think “Rule of 7” for message retention.
  • Sales and account management handoff must be smooth and intentional.
  • Create continuity of care—even in growing teams—to maintain trust.
  • Introduce a “blow-off valve” (i.e. sales or leadership check-ins) to catch issues clients won’t share with their account manager.
  • Weekly check-ins are essential—book them at the kickoff call to avoid drop-offs.
  • Be proactive at every stage: pre-sale, onboarding, and beyond.
  • Look for early wins, even outside the scope—surprise and delight goes a long way.

🛠️ Tools or Concepts Mentioned:

  • “Rule of 7” – marketing rule that people need to hear something multiple times before it sticks
  • “Blow-off valve” – a check-in mechanism with someone outside the day-to-day to catch hidden client concerns
  • Client onboarding roadmap – a week-by-week visual of what the client can expect
  • “Speed to value” – getting visible results quickly to reinforce buying decisions

https://www.agencyuplift.co/vault

Agency Uplift - Skool Group
Scale your agency. Frameworks from an owner who grew to 35+ team members and 10-fig clients.
Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.
Sean’s Links:

🔗 Sean Lang on LinkedIn
🌐 Agency Uplift Skool Group
🛒 Social Commerce Club

  continue reading

18 episodes

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