Our client: A well established UK accounting practice providing advice to private clients, not for profit organisations and owner managed businesses. Its reputation had been built on long term client relationships, partner led service delivery and a strong emphasis on discretion, trust and professional judgement. Clients typically worked closely with individual partners over extended periods, with continuity and personal knowledge central to the firm’s value proposition.
As competition within the professional services market increased, senior leadership recognised the importance of gaining a clearer and more structured view of how the firm was perceived externally, while preserving the culture of confidentiality expected by clients and partners alike.
Business need
Historically, the firm had relied on informal conversations and partner experience to gauge client satisfaction. While this provided reassurance, it limited the firm’s ability to identify patterns, test assumptions or compare perceptions across service lines and offices.
The firm wanted to undertake a formal client feedback exercise to better understand where it was performing strongly, where it was vulnerable, and how its service was differentiated in the eyes of clients. Any approach needed to be sensitive, low profile and aligned with the firm’s culture, with strict controls around confidentiality and anonymity.
Approach
A structured client feedback programme was introduced, based on in depth interviews with a representative selection of clients across practice areas and locations. Clients were invited to participate on an opt in basis and given the opportunity to provide feedback anonymously.
The research design focused on both quantitative ratings and detailed qualitative insight, allowing the firm to explore perceptions of relationship quality, responsiveness, technical expertise, value for money and overall experience. Feedback was captured in full, including verbatim comments, and made available through a secure online system to support timely review and discussion.
Outcomes
The feedback confirmed many of the firm’s strengths, particularly in relation to personal relationships, continuity of staff, integrity, professionalism and understanding of client needs. These findings validated the firm’s relationship led model and reinforced the importance of maintaining partner visibility and accountability.
At the same time, the insight gathered challenged internal assumptions in certain areas, highlighting opportunities to improve consistency, communication and aspects of service delivery that were less visible to partners. This external perspective proved valuable in prompting constructive internal discussion and prioritisation.
Insight from the programme began to inform planning, business development, branding and internal service standards. The availability of real time feedback and full interview transcripts enabled rapid assessment of issues and supported a more proactive response to client concerns.
Impact
The programme marked the start of a more systematic approach to listening to clients. There was broad recognition within the firm that ongoing measurement was essential to understanding changing client expectations and maintaining service quality over time.
By reflecting the firm’s external world back to its leadership and partners in a structured and credible way, the feedback programme provided a clearer foundation for future decision making, while remaining aligned with the firm’s values of discretion and professionalism.