Download this must-have guide to start your marketing automation journey.

Blog
the first factor of success is the client
2 min read

the first factor of success is the client

You only do good work with intelligent clients. That’s the observation I made last week, when Nathalie, a client, called me to thank me for the work accomplished and the results achieved.

Getting to the point

The intelligent client gets to the point. They are interested first and foremost in results and keep value judgments to themselves. When they go from 15 quote requests in 6 months to 15 per day on their website, they don’t come and nag you about the color of the banner font. They call you to say thank you (they don’t have to, they pay for that), and you immediately want to find them 5 more contacts per day.

Others would tell you that their website generates contacts because their company is becoming increasingly well known, and that your role in that is very marginal.

Knowing how to anticipate

When told that it is never too early to start a customer relationship management (CRM) approach, the intelligent client immediately understands why. A year later, they have a structured database and thousands of qualified prospects in reserve. They can distribute them to their business partners in three clicks, while retaining control of their sales process. They can manage their campaigns themselves without necessarily always buying lists. They know how to find the history of all exchanges with customers, and they have a tool to provide quality customer service.

Others will tell you that they don’t have time or money to waste on tools as complicated as they are useless, that Excel and Access are perfect for managing a customer database, and that we’ll see in a few years whether success is there (spot the mistake in this reasoning).

Keeping an open mind

When offered the idea of taking photos at trade fairs to publish on Twitter, the intelligent client wants to know more: what does it bring them, how does it work, is it time-consuming? When they understand the benefit for them, they surprise you with their creativity and sometimes become a social media star (when we tell you to never hire social media experts).

Others tell you that Twitter and Facebook are for children, that they are serious people and that they have much more important things to do.

One question remains: how do you make sure you work only with intelligent clients?

Continue exploring articles

EMAIL-TRACKING-RGPD

GUIDE: Marketing email tracking and CNIL compliance (GDPR)

Understand everything about email tracking and the CNIL's new recommendations to remain GDPR compliant while continuing to effectively manage your campaigns.

GDPR

Strategic guide: master Lead Nurturing for conversion

Lead nurturing is not just a sequence of automated emails. It’s the art of keeping a relevant conversation with your prospects until they’re ready to buy. This guide gives you the keys to structure campaigns that turn interest into revenue. 1. The diagnostic phase: lay the foundations Before writing a single line, you must define […]

How to track the performance of your marketing messages?

Introduction  You’re already well established in your market. Your target is clearly defined, your marketing channels are in place, and you may have even carried out an audit of your past activities. But one question remains essential: are your marketing messages truly performing? Whether it’s email, WhatsApp messages, SEA campaigns, social ads, or SMS, every […]

Why email statistics are essential to your strategy?

Let’s be honest: when we talk about email marketing, we often think about the subject line, design, the header, or even the famous CTA. But statistics? They’re sometimes pushed into the background… until the moment you ask, “But did someone really read this email?” This is where an analysis of open rates, clicks, bounce rates, […]

Statistics

CRM and marketing automation: how to (finally) align Sales and Marketing teams?

The opportunity nobody was asking for In 2025, the crisis of trust persists in our economies. This crisis of trust makes acquiring new customers a long, complex, and uncertain process. As in every crisis cycle of a system based on the continuous growth of sales of goods and services. In too many French companies, the […]

How to increase your ARR with marketing automation?

In an ultra-competitive SaaS environment, growing ARR (Annual Recurring Revenue) is more than an objective: it’s a matter of survival. Yet most efforts are focused either on sales teams or on paid acquisition. What if your ARR also depended on your ability to automate and intelligently orchestrate the customer journey? Marketing automation is not limited […]