Growth goals – almost every firm has them. 96% of accounting firms and tax practices plan to grow in the next 3-5 years, according to a 2021 survey performed by Accounting Today for Wolters Kluwer.
According to that survey, the number one way small- and mid-sized firms identified intend to grow is by adding new business clients. But while adding new clients is a great way to grow, it comes with a cost. Adding clients requires increasing capacity, and hiring additional staff is expensive and rather challenging due to accounting pipeline issues and the Great Resignation.
Many firms are so focused on adding new business clients that they are missing a significant growth opportunity right in front of them: increasing the number of services used by existing clients.
Same Clients, More Services
Large and national firms already see the benefit of maximizing your per-client revenue stream rather than spending time chasing down new clients. 67% of large firms plan to grow through increasing cross-selling, making it the number one growth strategy. Cross-selling came in fifth for small firms and sixth for mid-sized firms.
So what do big firms know about cross-selling that smaller firms don’t?
To put it plainly: how to do it.
Many firms assume that cross-selling will happen organically. A satisfied client will automatically want to do more business with you. Unfortunately, cross-selling isn’t an automatic process—and it’s not something taught in most accounting classes either. Combined, these two factors can make it difficult to rely on cross-selling as a growth tactic.
Four Steps to Cross-Selling Success
In addition to some sales training, firms can follow these four steps to cross-sell their services effectively.
Evaluate your services and consider where to expand
Your firm needs to target the right clients with the right services to cross-sell successfully. If you’re only offering basic tax compliance services, you cannot provide much more to existing clients.
Take a look at your firm’s capacity and expertise to evaluate your mix of products and services. Are clients asking for anything additional? Are competitors offering something you don’t? Consider adding those services to your offerings if your staff can take them on without sacrificing customer service.
Advanced data analysis can help you leverage your firm’s current data to inform your cross-sell strategy by identifying service lines gaps and those that have growth potential.