When the Event Ends and the Business Doesn’t Begin
A professional firm with over one hundred professionals in Italy and a partner network spanning three quarters of the globe. An organisation with the resources, the reputation and the technical depth to serve complex clients at international scale. Every year, significant investment in institutional events, PR initiatives and knowledge-sharing sessions for clients: conferences with authoritative speakers, frontier-topic webinars, invitation-only roundtables. High attendance, strong satisfaction scores, consolidated visibility.
And yet, at the end of each cycle, the new mandates generated by all of this were disproportionately few relative to the investment.
The problem wasn’t content quality, nor the technical capability of the professionals involved. It was that the event was treated as a destination, not a starting point. When the conference ended, the process ended with it. No structured follow-up, no systematic analysis of emerging needs, no integrated proposal. Every opportunity remained suspended between the moment it appeared and the moment someone — usually the client — might decide to act on it. Often, that moment never came.
This is the recurring paradox in professional services: the firm invests in the relationship, produces content, builds visibility — and then fails to connect any of it to new mandates.
The Core Problem: Clients Don’t Ask for What They Don’t Know Exists
In professional services, clients rarely articulate a precise need they haven’t yet recognised as such.
An entrepreneur might say “I want to expand into a new market.” Behind that statement can lie ten distinct requirements: fiscal structure of the investment, incorporation of a local entity, partner selection, commercial contracts, IP protection, incentive access, supplier due diligence, HR management, acquisition of an existing operator. If the firm only responds to the explicit question, it loses everything else — which often represents more value than the original brief.
Cross-selling fails when it amounts to presenting a catalogue of capabilities. Clients don’t buy professional categories — they buy solutions to specific problems, at the moment they recognise them as problems. The firm’s job — and the advisor’s — is to anticipate that recognition.
A Four-Phase System: Engagement, Analysis, Proposal, Pipeline
Working with that firm, we rebuilt the process from event to mandate. The result was a four-phase system applicable to any structure managing ongoing professional relationships.
1. Structured engagement before and after the event
The starting point is to stop treating the event as a standalone initiative. Every conference, webinar or meeting must be the visible moment of a longer process.
Before the event: segment participants by sector, size, markets already served, services already purchased from the firm and potential unmet needs. A CEO, a CFO and a head of export may attend the same session, but they do not receive the same proposal.
After the event: collect interest signals systematically — a question in the follow-up email, a short survey, a direct call from the relationship partner. The objective isn’t the survey itself: it’s the qualified pretext to open a conversation.
2. Analysis of unexpressed needs
The responses gathered are not used as simple feedback. They are cross-referenced with everything the firm already knows about the client: activity, markets of interest, relationship history, investment capacity, internal decision-makers.
From this reading emerge needs the client had not connected to the firm’s offering — needs they were often already addressing elsewhere, not because they had found a better provider, but because they didn’t know they could address them with someone they already trusted.
3. Integrated proposal, not a services list
Every identified opportunity must become a coherent proposal, not a capabilities inventory. If a manufacturing company wants to enter a foreign market, the answer is not “we also offer internationalisation services.” It is a structured pathway: preliminary market analysis, corporate and fiscal structure, local partner identification, contract drafting, negotiation support, ongoing in-country presence.
The client perceives the value of the whole. They understand why different competencies are required. And they recognise that having a single coordination point has intrinsic value.
To make this work, the relationship partner must be connected to the relevant internal practices and, where necessary, to selected external partners. Every opportunity needs an owner, a qualification stage, a defined next action and a deadline.
4. Monitoring as a commercial pipeline
Without a shared system, opportunities live in individual professionals’ inboxes or in informal post-event conversations. They disappear over time.
The pipeline records: client, originating event, expressed interest, identified need, responsible professional, potentially relevant services, planned follow-up, opportunity status, estimated value, outcome. This is not a sophisticated CRM system — it is process discipline.
Monitoring also reveals which events genuinely generate opportunities and which merely generate attendance — intelligence that shapes decisions about where to concentrate budget and resources in subsequent cycles.
Operational Conclusion
Upselling and cross-selling in professional services do not mean selling more aggressively. They mean knowing the client better, identifying needs that are rarely expressed, and building a coordinated response across different competencies.
A conference, a webinar, a questionnaire become effective only when embedded in a process that connects them to a mandate: engagement, analysis, integrated proposal, pipeline monitoring. Without this connection, the firm continues producing informational value while the client purchases elsewhere the services it could have provided.
With a structured process, the existing relationship becomes the starting point for new mandates, stronger retention and a progressively deeper understanding of the client over time.
Facing a similar situation? Contact us for a strategic consultation.
