A client is someone who makes purchases or makes payments for services. Clients might be businesses and other organisations. Clients usually have a relationship or an agreement with the seller, as opposed to customers.
You are a customer, for examples, if you buy a cup of coffee from a cafe stall at a train station. But if there are credit terms, the proprietor of the coffee stand is the supplier’s client.
In other words, because of their arrangement, the proprietor of the coffee stand is a client of the coffee seller.
Video – What is a client?
In this MBN Video Dictionary video, a client is defined as well as the distinctions between clients and customers are addressed.
When paying for physical goods, we use ‘client’ and ‘customer’ interchangeably. Therefore, the stall owner is also the coffee supplier’s customer.
However, only clients pay for the services of a professional. For example, if you pay for the services of a lawyer, you are the client.
Even if you have no business arrangement with the lawyer, you are still the client and not the customer.
Psychologists call the people they treat either clients or patients.
According to the Financial Times Lexicon, a client is:
“Someone who pays for services or advice from a professional person or organization. Someone who buys something from a seller. A computer connected to another computer that controls it, for example in a network.”
Some linguists say that ‘customers buy something from others’, while ‘clients are under the protection of others.’
However, many examples clash with this explanation. The explanation is true when we look at the treatment of clients and customers. The video at the bottom of this page looks at this difference.
Client-centric companies have their clients as the focus of their attention, rather than the product.
Client in computing
In computing, clients are pieces of hardware or software that access a server’s service. The server is usually on a different computer system. In such cases, the client accesses the service through a network. The term applies to the programs’ or devices’ role in the client-server model.
Servers and clients may be computer software run on the same machine and connect via inter-process communication techniques. The servers wait for clients to initiate connections that they may accept.
We first used the term when referring to devices that couldn’t run their stand-alone programs. However, they could interact with remote computers through a network.
In ancient Rome, a client was a plebeian who lived under the patronage of a patrician. A plebeian was a commoner while a patrician was an aristocrat.
We may refer to people who are receiving something from a government bureau as clients.
The word ‘client‘ emerged in the English language in the fourteenth century. It came from Anglo-French ‘clyent.’
Some idioms
While ‘client’ idioms are rare, those using the word ‘customer’ are very common. Here are a few:
- An Ugly Customer is somebody who is likely to become angry or aggressive. For example “Be careful with Harry when he has been drinking, he can be an ugly customer. I’ve seen him punch people for no reason.”
- A Cool Customer is somebody who remains calm, even in very stressful situations.
- An Awkward Customer means a troublemaker. It is somebody who won’t behave in the way you’d expect them to.
- The Customer is Always Right is a phrase sellers use. Happy customers are more likely to buy things and to come back for more. Therefore, if you always accept that they are right, they will be happy.
- A Tough Customer is somebody who is not easy to satisfy. Dealing with them is difficult. We often use the idiom when advising somebody not to approach. For example “John is a tough customer. I’d stay away from him if I were you.”
- A Slippery Customer is a clever, elusive, and deceitful person.