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Six essential PR tips to help attract new clients

Are potential clients aware that your practice exists? Architectural PR specialist Rob Fiehn shares essential tips for reaching out to find new work. Communication is not about showing off, he explains, it is about your practice鈥檚 future.

30 June 2022

鈥淧R is a tool for new business,鈥 states Rob Fiehn. 鈥淚t is about finding potential clients and potential collaborators.鈥

Some people might dismiss PR as an ego trip, but it is not about showing off: it is about making the practice healthier and more successful.鈥

Now is a good time to enhance your practice鈥檚 profile to increase your visibility to new prospects and bolster your resilience should the UK鈥檚 economic downturn turn into a full blown recession.

Putting together a communications strategy can achieve that. Fiehn often finds that once architects are introduced to the basic principles of a communications strategy, they realise that it is not a 'dark art'. Marketing your practice to bring in new work is essentially based on common sense.

Are there 鈥榪uick wins鈥 to bring in new clients?

While setting up a communications strategy takes time, there are some basic, grassroots level activities that practices can do if they really need some quick wins 鈥 if finding new clients was an urgent imperative.

鈥淚n terms of quick wins, there is nothing quicker than direct marketing,鈥 states Fiehn. 鈥淒o you have a contact database - a record of people that you have worked with or want to work with? Then use it.鈥

Your contact database should not just include previous and potential clients. If you have contacts in larger practices, they should be on the list too. Not all large practices want to scour the internet looking for collaborators.

An effective communications strategy should be grounded in what the practice's identity is and what it wishes to achieve. It is very instructive to see what your peers are doing: what presence does a comparable practice have online, in social media, and in the architectural press?

Let a newsletter do the hard work

The newsletter is a very powerful tool, he points out. It slips directly into a client鈥檚 inbox, reminding them who you are and what you do without the hard sell of a cold call.

鈥淚t communicates exactly what you want people to see and can definitely lead to inquiries. Perhaps the recipient does not need the service it discusses right now, but they remember that their friend does. It can prompt an opening discussion.鈥

鈥淗aving just completed this project, here are our top five tips for winning planning in a conservation area,鈥 is one example Fiehn suggests as something that might chime with a potential client.

The humble newsletter is a way of 鈥榤aking your own luck鈥. If you can make the topic interesting and, Fiehn suggests, not too self-referential then it stands a better chance of being opened and read.

Direct marketing at its most direct

Direct marketing can be even simpler. It might be as direct as calling people that you want to work with and suggesting coming in to show them your portfolio.

鈥淎 lot of architects are scared to do that. But the worst response might be 'not right now' whereas the best might be that they are looking for a practice just like yours right now.鈥

Make the most of social media

鈥淢any architects have designed fantastic projects but never told anyone: they have not put them anywhere,鈥 Fiehn chastens. 鈥淭his is a fundamental problem.鈥

鈥淭hey might not be on social media at all. The projects might be on their website, but they have not sent them in a press release to anyone.鈥

Social media is certainly nothing new, yet it is clear that many practices are not even making the bare minimum use of it.

鈥淚f you are a small practice carrying a lot of residential work, then a platform like Instagram is ideal. That is where your clients are, looking for ideas. A social media expert could advise on ways to tag and interconnect your posts, but it is easy enough to look around and work out how to make more of it yourself.鈥

Together with fellow architectural communications specialists Bobby Jewell and Luke Neve, Fiehn has set up , a service that provides a boot camp of sorts for practices: assessing the current state of their communications strategy and providing suggestions on where to go next.

What are your peers doing?

It can be very instructive to look at fellow practices: your competitors and peers.

鈥淲hile everyone likes to think they are unique, there are usually huge overlaps in who you are and what you are doing,鈥 Fiehn notes.

鈥淭hink about which practices you might be compared to, or who you are competing with for work. What is their communication strategy like? What are they doing that you could learn from?"

Ask yourself whether there is a disconnect between your public face and those you consider to be your peers. He urges practices to ask themselves which practices they aspire to be like.

Think like a journalist

One common misconception is that the architectural press is only read by architects, Fiehn suggests. But being featured in architectural and design media does not just put you in front of other architects: developers, local authorities, housing associations, and landowners are among the readers, as well as individual clients.

There are also, of course, other practices that may require junior partners for collaboration. You know people there will be reading that kind of stuff as well. To give your projects the best chance of being featured, you need to think like a journalist, Fiehn proposes.

鈥淲hat is the angle? Who normally publishes this kind of story? Do you have any personal connections to journalists or editors? These are the questions to ask yourself.鈥

鈥淎 story that merely states that practice X has recently completed project Y is unlikely to garner attention. But a hook that identifies something unique 鈥 perhaps your project is the first instance of something in a particular place 鈥 piques the reader鈥檚 curiosity. Try to communicate an exciting aspect of the project.鈥

Thanks to Rob Fiehn, Founder, Robert Fiehn Ltd.

Text by Neal Morris. This is a Professional Feature edited by the 澳门王中王 Practice team. Send us your feedback and ideas.

澳门王中王 Core Curriculum topic: Business, clients and services.

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Updated: 30 August 2022

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