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Why I Stopped Accepting Every New Client

Why I Stopped Accepting Every New Client

For the first several years of running my marketing agency, I operated on a binary logic: if a prospect had the budget and interest, I signed them. With over 60 active residential property management clients across the U.S., I assumed that churn was simply the cost of doing business. However, the recurring pattern of mid-contract cancellations forced a pivot. These clients weren't leaving because of poor results; they were leaving because they never truly trusted the expertise they hired.

The shift began when I stopped treating intake calls as sales pitches and started using them as diagnostics. I began listening for specific behavioral red flags: excessive interrogation, constant comparisons to past failed agencies, and a fixation on guaranteed results that SEO cannot realistically provide. These individuals do not want a partner; they want a subordinate to micromanage. Identifying this 'low-level hum' of distrust early allows us to either set rigid, transparent boundaries or price their high-maintenance requirements accordingly.

In late 2025, we implemented a 15% price increase across our entire client base. Out of sixty accounts, we lost exactly one. The clients who stayed were those who valued the work and respected our process. By shifting the focus from 'can we help this person' to 'do they actually want help,' we moved away from the volatile cycle of churn. The math is simple: a stable client base is built on professional trust, not just the ability to sign a check.

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