For Consultants: Sell Yourself!

By Charles J. Lord, PE

Once you have built up your knowledge and experience, gotten some clients and consulting projects under your belt — then what? In my talks to consulting networks on, Where are My Clients?, I go over a number of ways to grow one’s practice.  I also talk about getting to the enviable position of having more potential work than you have time for. However, building up a consultant’s practice is not always the easiest thing to accomplish, particularly for someone who is new to consulting. After all, most engineers probably didn’t take marketing, or even economics classes, while in engineering school.

Let’s look at some aspects of sales and marketing — two distinct, yet related, skills we need to master.

Understanding your market

The market for most consultants can be a combination of their skills and experiences, along with what needs exist for those. You also need to understand who is in a position to hire you for your services (or at least recommend you to those who can). Once you understand these concepts, then you can tackle the selling process.

Selling Yourself

As an engineering consultant, you can employ several strategies to sell yourself and your services. Here are some tips to help you enhance your marketing and communication efforts:

Any experienced marketing person will tell you who your two best sources of business come from: First and foremost, repeat business from previous clients. A close second is from word-of-mouth, or reputation. Both my best jobs and best consultations came about because somebody already knew me, or knew someone who knew me. But along with all of the items I listed above, you need to find a way to get the word out about yourself — and that you are ready to solve your potential clients’ problems.

Get listed!

Many opportunities exist for you to be part of online listings for consultants. Local IEEE Consultant’s Networks provide online listings for their members (usually for a fee). IEEE-USA has a Consultants Finder that is a bargain for members at only $99 a year, with a growing reputation as a definitive source for finding consultants. An ongoing project in my committee is to improve the IEEE-USA Consultants Finder, to make it even more effective for both consultants and potential clients in need of our services. One part of this project is to look at the results of the searches that clients are making on the site. Are they simply browsing, or are they doing searches for particular skills and locations? Are they clicking on a particular consultant and making contact? We hope to come up with some guidelines for consultants to improve their chances of getting their first contacts, and hopefully getting the new contract. In the meantime, you can help. If you have a listing in the IEEE-USA Consultants Finder, look at your listing: Is it accurate? Does it properly reflect your knowledge, expertise and experience? The IEEE-USA Consultant Finder listings are based on your IEEE profile, so perhaps review and update it often. And while you are at it, look at your other listings and your LinkedIn profile — do they sell you?

An Ongoing Process

Remember, effective communication, a strong personal brand, and a client-centric approach are keys to selling yourself as an engineering consultant. Building a reputation as a trusted and reliable expert in your field will contribute to your success in attracting and retaining clients. It is an ongoing process — you should update your listings regularly, not only to keep them current to changes but also to make them more attractive to search engines. Google and other search engines look for dynamic pages and downgrade static pages.

Listings, social media and networking are all tools — and we should always keep current on the best practices of using all the tools at our disposal. Now get out there and sell yourself!

This article originally appeared in the 2nd Quarter 2023 AICN Newsletter.
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