SaatPro
Where Technology Meets Clarity
SaatPro
Where Technology Meets Clarity
Once upon a training session, a wise trainer declared,
“Treat the client like a God.” 🙏
And honestly, many of us nodded in agreement (and a few rolled our eyes). After all, clients pay the bills, drive the projects, and keep us employed, right? 💼💰
We’ve all heard it before:
“Clients are demanding.”
“Clients keep changing specs like outfit choices before a party.”
“Clients don’t know what they want… until it’s late.”
But here’s the plot twist: what if clients are not Gods? Or villains?
What if clients are… children? 👶🎈
Yup, stay with me here. It’s not an insult — it’s actually enlightening.
Just like kids:
Now imagine working with clients like you’re babysitting a toddler:
When clients keep changing their minds or seem difficult, it’s often because they’re:
But — and this is the big BUT 🍑 — if you approach them with patience, genuine intent to help, and a few good examples, magic happens. 🪄
They do listen.
They do understand.
And most importantly — they do respect you.
Remember: Kids want to feel safe and heard. So do clients.
You’re building a sleek AI dashboard for a client who says,
“I want it to be like ChatGPT… but simpler… but also smarter… and colorful like Canva!” 😅
Instead of freaking out (or silently judging them), treat this like your nephew describing his dream LEGO castle. 🧱
👉 Ask good questions.
👉 Show small prototypes.
👉 Keep explaining until the “aha!” moment happens.
You’re not just taking requirements. You’re shaping a vision with someone who’s still figuring out what they really want.
When you stop treating clients as divine or demonic and start seeing them as humans who need your help, your whole approach shifts:
You’re not serving a God.
You’re not wrestling a monster.
You’re guiding a curious, passionate child who just wants their dream built by someone they trust.
So go ahead — pack your empathy, patience, and storytelling toolkit — and build something beautiful. 💪🎨
“Want better clients? Start with better understanding.”