---
title: "About goodbyes: the client offboarding protocol"
canonical: "https://filipsardi.com/client-offboarding-protocol/"
pubDate: "2025-10-27T00:00:00+00:00"
author: Filip Sardi
description: "Most coaches obsess over onboarding and ignore the goodbye. The way you end a client relationship says as much about your values as how you begin it - and most founders haven't built the protocol yet."
---

---

Last week I had to say goodbye.

Not to a client, but a person I grew to like a lot.

Our moment was chaos, it was silence, it was beauty - and it ran its course.

That's why thinking about it now brings a strange kind of tightness in my throat and a smile at the same time.

Without going into too many details, think of Santiago from *[The Alchemist](https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/18144590-the-alchemist)*, where the road starts calling and you just know you have to follow.

> "You will never be able to escape from your heart. So it's better to listen to what it has to say."

And my heart calls for the road.

**While I might share that story one day, today I want to be avoidant and slide into my safe space - business.**

---

## A different kind of goodbye

Let's talk about the goodbyes you say (or don't say) to your clients.

People mostly talk about the "honeymoon period" - the almighty onboarding.

But the final part of the client flow?

The goodbye?

**Only rare manage to make that part of your client relationship intentional.**

That's why I love working with my clients - because they get it.

One of them said it perfectly during our last workshop:

> "If we get our client renewal strategy piece in place - in the next few months we could make 60% of our entire 2025 revenue, by simply taking care of people who already trust us."

No big launch.

Or complicated funnel.

Just making it easy for the right clients to stay.

And yet… **8 out of 10 people I talk to don't have even the basic offboarding protocol in place.**

---

## Yes, no, or maybe so

Offboarding protocol isn't about fancy automation diagrams or some CRM automation wizardry.

It's about one thing:

**What actually happens when your client reaches the end of your program or engagement?**

Do you know what to do if they say:

* **Yes**: I'm in, let's continue

* **No**: I'm complete, thank you

* **Maybe**: I'm unsure right now, but not closed

A few months ago, I almost messed this up myself.

A client had to ask me:

> "So, Filip… what are the next steps? Are we continuing or what?"

That should never be their job.

Even in the best case, when all you have to do is send a renewal link - you still need a plan.

Otherwise, you're always reacting instead of leading.

And for those who don't continue, I bet they'd gladly give you a testimonial or refer someone - *if you just asked.*

**And the maybe's?**

They're not lost.

They're just waiting for the right time to jump back in.

So, you need a way to keep them close.

---

## The fourth option

There's also one more scenario that no one likes to talk about.

When the client you're currently working with is no longer a fit.

Maybe your focus changed.

Maybe their needs evolved.

Or it was never quite aligned, but you tried to make it work.

I've been on the receiving end of that.

I could feel I wasn't their ideal fit anymore after more than a year of working together.

But instead of a real conversation and a graceful exit - I got a half-assed excuse that shut the door.

And instead of sending people their way, I quietly took them off my list.

Not out of spite, just because the energy was off.

---

## Build it once

The beautiful thing about an offboarding protocol?

You don't need to update it often.

It's a one-time build that keeps serving you, and your clients, every single cycle.

But for some reason, most of you haven't built it yet.

And maybe that's why this has been on my mind today.

Saying goodbye, whether to a person or a client - is never just a logistical moment.

It's also emotional.

Sometimes even identity-shifting.

**And just like in life, the way you end a client relationship says just as much about your values as how you begin it.**

So maybe this is my way of staying close to something I had to let go of.

And maybe this is also my quiet thank-you to someone who reminded me what it means to feel safe, seen, and strong - all at once.

By choosing to stay present with the goodbyes that are still mine to shape.

### **Because sometimes, all it takes for your clients to stay is to feel seen and taken care of while they walk their journey.**

---

**If this landed deeply, you're probably part of the 4%, a Client-First Entrepreneur.**

Someone who knows that real growth doesn't come from louder funnels, but from taking even better care of clients you already have.

I'll soon be opening a few spots for the next round of my **Client Flow Mentorship**.

If you've been wanting to simplify and deepen your client experience (without having to make changes to your offer) - send me a message.

Message Filip Sardi 🌊

Let's see if what you're building is a good fit for where I can help.

\-Filip
