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What Makes an Extraordinary Business Consultant?

Guest post by: Clive Miller

Article Overview: So many now seek to serve in the capacity of an independent contributor to business success. 'Business Consultant' is a generic title. Most specialise and tighten their title to reflect their specialisation, yet there are some common skills essential to all consultants who set out to make something better.

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What Makes an Extraordinary Business Consultant?

Just like beauty, we know a good consultant when we meet one. Your perfect consultant may not be mine. Personalities and needs do come into it so perhaps the main things that universally good sales or business consultants need are a highly tuned sales sense, extraordinary interpersonal communication skills, and the right face.

Being Credible as an Expert

If I had to identify one thing as a prerequisite of a good consultant, it would be credibility. Clearly, credibility is fundamental for selling a consulting service. It is also essential in delivery. If clients are to act on a business consultant's advice, they need absolute confidence that the proposed solution will lead to the desired results. Responsibility for demonstrating credibility continues throughout an engagement. Once lost, it is very hard to regain. A lot of consultants have the necessary knowledge, experience, and technical skills yet fail to pass on a sense of unshakable certainty that makes clients feel entirely at ease.

Ability to Read Minds

Mind reading is probably the second most valuable asset for a sales or business consultant. Success depends on ability to persuade clients to take the right course of action.

Quite often, consultants are engaged simply to rubber stamp or add credibility to a plan that the client has already decided to implement. Sometimes the consultant's role is merely to be the fall guy if things go wrong.

Consultants can make a living by doing the clients bidding, regardless of their better judgement yet this ‘don't rock the boat' approach doesn't lead to bankable reputation.

Good consultants are able to see through attempts to miss use their credibility and then use their understanding to make things better, or bow out gracefully and avoid the fallout.

Interpersonal Communication Skills



Mind reading skills aren't much use without very good interpersonal communication skills to match them. People do things for their own reasons. It is always better to make it their idea, a feat that is eminently achievable with a little patience, subtlety, good questioning skills, and above all persuasive listening skills.

Business Writing Skills



Less is more yet too little leaves people confused. There is art in business writing. Apart from observing the grammar and spelling rules, business writing needs to be just long enough to make a message clear, just colourful enough to maintain interest, and always compelling. Writers should use facts instead of superlatives, explain benefits rather than list features, and always allow the reader the latitude to draw his or her own conclusions.

Problem Solving Skills

Having prior experience of dealing with particular problems is both an advantage and a curse. It spawns confidence in ability to solve the problem and sows the seeds of an assumption that what worked previously will work now. Good problem solvers apply an effective problem solving methodology to avoid falling foul of the ‘assumption' pitfall.

Presentation Skills

There is something about presenting to groups that makes it a more effective than winning over individuals. It's more than simple efficiency. Everyone wants to be with the group.

Imagine perfection. Sway with knowledge and understanding, captivate with personality and vigour, hold attention with enthusiasm and creativity, entertain with humour and spirit, motivate with sincerity and persuasiveness, and end with resolution and certainty.

A powerful speaker can pacify naysayers, strengthen the resolve of supporters, and win consensus in a single presentation.

I have said little about know-how. There are some circumstances where extraordinary brilliance alone is enough, where superior thinking is automatically recognised and any communication shortcomings are tolerated or even ignored. Where such consultants lack comparable interpersonal skills, they do better if they have a buddy, protector, or interpreter who provides an interface with the world.

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Home > Sales > Clive Miller > What Makes an Extraordinary Business Consultant >
Article Tags: business consultant, business development, communication skills, interpersonal communication skills, sales consultant

About the Author: Clive Miller
RSS for Clive's articles - Visit Clive's website

Communicating ideas and achieving sales targets has been the focus of Clive’s working life for thirty years. During his time in sales, he sold a wide range of products, solutions, and services in the IT industry. As Managing Partner of SalesSense, he continues training and consulting services. In addition, he is the author of most SalesSense training material and writes about selling for magazines and newsletters. More information is available at www.salessense.co.uk and www.clivemiller.com

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