---
title: Relationship Building + Results Delivery
type: article
created: '2025-09-29'
updated: '2025-09-29'
source_docs:
- raw/2025-09-29-sebastian-check-in-90572727.md
tags:
- client-management
- relationship-building
- results-delivery
- retention
- consultative-selling
layer: 2
client_source: null
industry_context: null
transferable: true
---

# Relationship Building + Results Delivery

## Overview

Sustainable client retention requires two things working in tandem: genuine human rapport *and* measurable results. Neither alone is sufficient. Clients who like you but aren't seeing outcomes will eventually face internal pressure to cut the relationship. Clients who get results from someone they find unpleasant will tolerate it — until the first hiccup, at which point goodwill is the only buffer and there is none.

The goal is to make both axes strong enough that neither becomes a single point of failure.

## The Core Tension

> "Nobody's working with you just because they like you... but you've got to deliver, right? So you can have somebody who can deliver but is unpleasant... And then you can have somebody that they really like, but you're not getting the results. And that lasts for a while and somebody's like their boss or somebody goes, why the hell are we still paying these people?"
> — Mark Hope, [[meetings/2025-09-29-sebastian-check-in|2025-09-29 Check-In]]

The failure modes are symmetric:
- **High rapport, low results:** Buys time, but not indefinitely. A boss or budget review will surface the question.
- **High results, low rapport:** Works until the first mistake. Without goodwill, there's no forgiveness margin.

## Rapport-Building Tactics

These are low-cost, high-signal gestures that communicate genuine investment in the client relationship:

- **Send relevant articles.** When you come across something that applies to their business or interests, forward it with a brief note. It signals that you think about them outside of scheduled meetings.
- **Handwritten cards.** Periodically send a note expressing appreciation for the working relationship. Physical mail stands out precisely because it's rare.
- **Personal milestones.** Acknowledge birthdays, promotions, or significant events when you're aware of them (e.g., flowers for a contact's birthday). Small gestures carry disproportionate weight.
- **Be consistently human.** The cumulative effect of small, authentic touches builds a relationship that feels like more than a vendor arrangement.

None of these replace results — they amplify the goodwill that results generate.

## Results Delivery as the Foundation

Rapport tactics only work on top of a foundation of actual delivery. The sequence matters:

1. **Agree on what success looks like.** Define measurable targets upfront so both sides have a shared reference point. (See also: [[knowledge/sales/value-ladder-and-pricing|Value Ladder & Pricing]] — the 90-day guarantee model operationalizes this.)
2. **Deliver consistently.** Results don't have to be dramatic, but they need to be real and visible to the client.
3. **Communicate progress proactively.** Don't wait for clients to ask. Regular updates reinforce that work is happening and that you're accountable.

## Practical Application at Asymmetric

In the context of [[clients/ahs/_index|Advanced Health & Safety]], Sebastian Gant is in an active rapport-building phase — deliberately handling meetings solo to develop a direct relationship. Mark Hope's guidance: this is appropriate and valuable, *as long as results keep pace*. The rapport being built now creates resilience for future challenges, but it doesn't substitute for delivery.

The same principle applies when onboarding new clients through the [[knowledge/sales/value-ladder-and-pricing|value ladder]]: the $950 strategy session and $3,500 growth blueprint are early opportunities to demonstrate competence before the client commits to a retainer. First impressions of delivery quality shape the entire retention arc.

## Warning Signs

- Meetings feel warm but no concrete outcomes are being reviewed
- Client contact is enthusiastic but their internal stakeholders are disengaged
- Rapport is building faster than deliverables are completing
- You're avoiding difficult conversations because the relationship feels fragile

Any of these suggest the rapport-to-results ratio is out of balance.

## Related

- [[knowledge/sales/value-ladder-and-pricing|Value Ladder & Pricing]]
- [[knowledge/sales/consultative-selling|Consultative Selling]]
- [[clients/ahs/_index|Advanced Health & Safety]]
- [[meetings/2025-09-29-sebastian-check-in|2025-09-29 Sebastian Check-In — Sales Strategy & Pima Kickoff Prep]]