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Add You - 21 Most Rapid Ways to Maximise Business Growth
Customers on Fire: How Good is My Suit onsider some practical marketing activities for new client acquisition. So that means a whole raft of things here and I am sure many of you are familiar if not operating some of these. So, these are all ways that you can go out and get clients and get new customers. The interesting thing about this process though is that the list is actually in a particular order.Running towards a fire is without a doubt one of the most difficult things to learn to do. Firefighters must train to overcome the natural instinct to move away rather than towards a fire. Running towards a fire is unnatural, especially when it is an especially big and bright one. In my seminars, I stress that the only way to extinguish a fire that is burning brightly is to move towards it rather than away from it.I had the great fortune of learning that lesson early in my career. Let me illustrate what I mean.Our service drive area had a large window in which we could look out and down and see who was pulling in. We had just finished repairing Ms. Ferocious’s vehicle. She had picked it up just a few minutes before, and imagine my surprise when she raced up the service drive to a full tire screeching stop. I noticed that as she had rocketed up the service drive, flames shooting, that the other advisors and dealership personnel scattered to the winds leaving me alone to put out the fire.I had received the “run to the fire” training and remembered how important it was to run out and meet it head on. I grabbed my asbestos suit and flame retardant head gear (training) and ran out into the service drive and the ominous ball of flame.I met Ms. Ferocious at the opening of her driver’s door to screams of “You guy’s just fixed my antenna and it does not work!” “I had to come back here and it is taking time out of my day!”Luckily, I had two things going for me. I speak “Customer talk” and by that time I had the fire resistant gear on. (I had engaged my brain and remembered my training)Translation: “You incompetent boobs! If you can’t even fix this simple problem, why should I even trust you with my car in the future?” “And to top it off, I am losing time out of my day, and now I might be late for my important meetings and other stuff and it is going to cost me money!”Me: “I can see that something is not quite right here. May I take a very quick look at the vehicle and see if it is something simple?”Ferocious: “I certainly hope so!”Me: “Here we are right here” as I then press a button on the dash. The antenna goes up, and the sound I hear is flames What I have done is listed marketing activities in order of the resource to fulfil them. So from the top to the bottom, telesales for example takes little resource – one person and a telephone. In order to perform seminars and workshops however you require a bigger resource requirement. By resource I am talking about the three resources that we all have in our business. They are people resources, they are time resources and they are financial resources. So as we work down that list typically the resource requirement increases. The other interesting factor is the level of influence we have in our market place. This requires us to have an understanding of the external and internal environments that we are operating in. For example, market trends, demographics and the size of the market. As far as our activities are concerned, that is our internal environment and we can control that fully. I think the thing we need to recognise is that we have control over our own internal environment and the marketing activities that we actually perform. But interestingly, the more we go down that list the more they are able to influence potential customers to our business. So therefore by inference they are all equally viable. OK, some may take more resource, some cost more, some take a lot more time, some a lot more planning, but they are more influential so they can attract more customers. So they are all equally viable, it’s just a question of which ones you choose and you have control of this fully. I would like to do to demonstrate this point in action by taking 2 businesses I am working with today among others that I am working with. The situations have lots of similarities. They are both in wholesale distribution, one of them has 3 business owners and has been in business for about 8 years and it markets through a range of marketing activities to get new customers and to also maximise existing customer value which we’ll look at in a minute. But they are quite highly systematic, they have key performance indicators for the staff, they do have job descriptions, they do have clear roles for the people within the business and processes for them to follow. Now the other business is also successful, both businesses are doing well, both are producing profits. The other business however is more established. It operates almost exclusively in the market of a field sales operation. They are good at it and they have refined Marketing - It's All in the Packaging! I’m going to start very quickly by asking you all a question: most of you are business owners, why did you get into business? What was the core reason that you went into business?What is marketing if it isn’t just effective packaging?Confused? Good! It’s the first step to learning something new and exciting.The product doesn’t matter. Everyone else sells it too. The only way to make it different is to change the packaging. The packaging makes all the difference.Instead of trying to sell a product or a service, why not sell the package?But just what is the package? Ahh… good question.The package is the emotion.What do you really sell? It’s not a product, or a service, or a bunch of features, or even benefits. It’s an emotion. Everyone wants to feel better. There isn’t a person on the planet who doesn’t. So start making people feel better and your sales will soar… astronomically!So how do you do that? How do you package up an emotion and sell it?Here are some clues…People in life do more to avoid pain than they do pleasure. It’s a proven psychological principle. So there’s a good start. How can you remove the fear of buying with a risk reversal guarantee? That’s good packaging thinking.How can you remove people’s frustrations? How can you tell people you can get them out of pain? What way can you help them to avoid pain, reduce their fear, eliminate their stress, worry, and apprehension?That’s packaging. That’s the competitive edge.What about the pleasure side?How can you make people feel great? No one wants to be satisfied. Think about sex. Would you like to tell people you had a wonderful weekend with a new friend where you had lots of satisfactory sex?Of course not! No one wants to feel satisfied, unless it’s after another wonderful feeling. :)People want to feel wonderful, excited, passionate, enthused, happy, joyful, contented and peaceful. So how can you package your product to make people feel that? How can you relate what your product is to how they will feel?Then how can you communicate it with colourful words and language so they get a sense of anticipation and joy, even before they buy, so they can’t wait to experience the feeling that can only come from ownership?Now for the million dollar question.How can you combine both?When you combine both Delegates give reasons Forced situations, to gain some improved lifestyle, to gain more financial independence those sorts of Reasons? To gain more control over your destiny and your time. Better quality of life, the link into lifestyle again. In my experience the key reasons, apart from forced situations, the key drivers are wanting financial independence, wanting control and also wanting some fulfilment that is not being achieved already through what you are already doing. Also in my experience, order to achieve those passions and visions of what you want to achieve for the future – that better lifestyle, that more control – then you and your business need to be working for you rather than you working for it. What I want to do in this session is focus on understanding all the dimensions within a business both from an external perspective as well as an internal perspective. Most business owners just get caught up with the internal matters, getting the production of the business working, getting customer acquisition working and getting the actual business done, the technical work. However, not so much time is spent focussing on the other core elements. So, what I would like to do is to share with you a number of principles that will enable you to separate these different dimensions and understand them more clearly. It will give you ways, I’m sure; of helping you to create new customers but also maximising the return that you are getting from your existing customer base. In addition to that, I am a passionate believer in systematisation within a business and I’ll explain what I mean by that, and finally there are important people issues (that we have already discovered today) that impacts dramatically on the effectiveness of your business. There are certain elements that the business experts have identified as survival requirements for business. There are two key factors – Firstly the business needs to produce results for customers. Throughout this I am referring to everyone as customers but you may refer to them depending on whether you provide a product service or treatments, clients or patients. But I am referring to everybody as customers. The key is that word ‘result’. An analogy here, if you were to go and buy a pot of paint, the result is not just buying the pot of paint and happily going home with it and storing it in a cupboard that is not the result. The result is obtained once you actually apply the paint, put it on the walls and you then see the benefit. So that’s what I mean by achieving results. In my view, once you have actually demonstrated to the market place that you can achieve results for customers, then in theory at least (and it should be in practise), your business should be sustainable because you’ve demonstrated that you are able to add value to the market place. Secondly you also need to make a profit if the business is to survive. Of course, all the other issues that we have looked at today, hygiene factors such as, requirements for legislation, compliance, and integrity within the business, all those things apply as well of course. Making a profit and producing results for customers are the key survival factors. If they are the survival factors, what are the success factors to contrast this? Again, I suggest that there are two key factors. One is how you promote your business, the marketing of it. The other is how you find unique solutions to people’s problems, innovation. As we go through, what I want to do is provide some tips, suggestions and ideas that can be used in those two areas to really grow your business. What I would like to do now before we go on further, is just identify three other key elements. Then there is an exercise I’d like you to do. I see a business as a living organism it’s a bit like a representation of the living world, in a smaller form. What typically happens is that most business owner’s focus on today, they focus on the problems and solutions of today and are entwined in the business. In order to complete the circle and understand the full dynamics of a business and to make it work like a Formula 1 car rather than an old model T Ford, it is important to realise that, just like life and just like the world, there is also a past and there is also a future which are all equally as important as the present. So a quick exercise now. What I would like you to do is to close your eyes and open your mind and just think about some of those reasons you mentioned earlier about wanting to get into business, but actually put yourself in the picture of what your life will be like in 2-5 years time on the assumption that you will achieve the business success that you want. So, how are you feeling? What people are around you, what size of organisation do you have? How fulfilled do you feel? How financially independent are you? Imagine all of the wonderful things that you are driving towards. What I want you to do is just momentarily, put yourself into that picture and imagine that situation. So if you would like to close your eyes just for a moment and open your mind and put yourself where you really want to be. Music plays in background….. So if you would open your eyes again, what I would like to do now is very quickly with the person next to you share what that vision looks like. Share what it is you want for yourself and for your business. The second thing I would like you to do is to share the one thing that would make the biggest difference to your success. What one thing do you need to do? So, what is it you want and what’s the one main thing you need to do to achieve it. Just quickly share that with each other please. Maybe in the networking session later we can continue sharing those thoughts. But what I want to do now is accept that our businesses have a future based on what we want it to be, a past, based on what’s happened so far and a present. Lets just spend some time talking about that future for a moment. It’s about thinking big isn’t it? It’s about opening the mind, removing some of the barriers. It’s about cans… they say that success comes in cans and not cannots. And it’s about putting specifics around our goals. So it’s all very well having a vision of what you want to achieve, but you also need to document past results. By having laser-like focus on our desires and the activities we put in on a daily basis we are able to move progressively towards our goals. You need to ensure that all of your goals are congruent with those outcomes that you want. It’s about having SMART objectives. I am sure many of you would have heard that mnemonic before. That is Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Reasonable and Timed objectives - SMART objectives that are documented. If you are going to do one thing about getting nearer to what you really want from your business, I would recommend that is the best place to start. Document what you want. Don’t worry about how you are going to get there, that comes next, that’s another step. We then need to focus on what’s happened up until now with our business or in our previous life if we are just starting out in business. We need to have management systems in place to monitor and track our business performance element by element. This applies not just to the processes within the business; it applies to the people that are operating your business as well, your staff and other workers. It is only by understanding the past and having records of the past that we can manage the refinement process to make the future more of what we want and to make it happen more quickly. Without a recording process in place we never know what we are moving towards and what we need to change. So that gives us guidance. Another key experience that I have had is that some of the best businesses are extremely systematic. The obvious example that everyone always quotes is McDonalds. But it is very true. They’ve got 50,000 branches worldwide and whilst you might not believe that they produce the highest quality in cuisine, one of the things that make them successful is their systemisation, allowing them to achieve consistent results for customers. When customers go along to McDonalds they know what to expect and that’s really the key to their success. I try to avoid fast food, but I have find myself using them because of that known expectation. I went off some time ago to the Bahamas and we were hungry and wanted something to eat. There were many exotic restaurants around and in the distance we saw the familiar M sign and we headed there. Why? Because we knew what to expect, we were in a foreign place and unusual circumstances. Later on we investigated and explored all the local culture, but to begin with it was nice to find something where we knew what to expect. The pricing was very similar (in a different currency, but very similar), chips were still cold, but we managed to fill our tummies at least! So the systemisation process is measuring all the operations within the business and documenting them. That makes the business much more systems reliant rather than people reliant. That’s not to say that people aren’t important they are, people are crucial to a business operation. People need to be recognised and valued, I’m all for that. Having said that, people work better and are more empowered if they have clear boundaries in which to operate and work from - a system. Making them accountable for that system is also a way of refining the process. Not a blaming culture, but a learning culture. And just one quick example here, for this workshop today (this is a very simplified version), it seemed to me, and Jean may agree with me, it involved a lot more activity than just those listed here, but in a simplistic nature, systemisation is about listing in a logical order, the activities that need to take place. Making people accountable for them, maybe even signing them off if they need to, and having them time bound as well is all important. So it’s a combination of those factors that makes the system work. It can be applied to any process. It doesn’t have to be IT based, it can just be written down on a list. I’m very much a believer in having regular lists, linked to priorities. Again, because having laser like focus on your goals is also making sure you are putting in those activities at the right time, in the right way to actually make those goals come to fruition. So it is about having daily tasks that are priorities, its about having weekly tasks that are priorities, its about having monthly tasks that are priorities and ensuring that they are done at the appropriate time. It’s also about recording how much of your time or the time within your business as a whole (this includes all of your employees where appropriate), what time is being spent doing what function? This is having understanding of what the business is actually doing and why, and then using that information as a learning and refining process for the future. What I would like to do now is consider some practical marketing activities for new client acquisition. So that means a whole raft of things here and I am sure many of you are familiar if not operating some of these. So, these are all ways that you can go out and get clients and get new customers. The interesting thing about this process though is that the list is actually in a particular order. What I have done is listed marketing activities in order of the resource to fulfil them. So from the top to the bottom, telesales for example takes little resource – one person and a telephone. In order to perform seminars and workshops however you require a bigger resource requirement. By resource I am talking about the three resources that we all have in our business. They are people resources, they are time resources and they are financial resources. So as we work down that list typically the resource requirement increases. The other interesting factor is the level of influence we have in our market place. This requires us to have an understanding of the external and internal environments that we are operating in. For example, market trends, demographics and the size of the market. As far as our activities are concerned, that is our internal environment and we can control that fully. I think the thing we need to recognise is that we have control over our own internal environment and the marketing activities that we actually perform. But interestingly, the more we go down that list the more they are able to influence potential customers to our business. So therefore by inference they are all equally viable. OK, some may take more resource, some cost more, some take a lot more time, some a lot more planning, but they are more influential so they can attract more customers. So they are all equally viable, it’s just a question of which ones you choose and you have control of this fully. I would like to do to demonstrate this point in action by taking 2 businesses I am working with today among others that I am working with. The situations have lots of similarities. They are both in wholesale distribution, one of them has 3 business owners and has been in business for about 8 years and it markets through a range of marketing activities to get new customers and to also maximise existing customer value which we’ll look at in a minute. But they are quite highly systematic, they have key performance indicators for the staff, they do have job descriptions, they do have clear roles for the people within the business and processes for them to follow. Now the other business is also successful, both businesses are doing well, both are producing profits. The other business however is more established. It operates almost exclusively in the market of a field sales operation. They are good at it and they have refined i Know Your Career Goals that you can achieve results for customers, then in theory at least (and it should be in practise), your business should be sustainable because you’ve demonstrated that you are able to add value to the market place.What are your career goals? This is probably the most important question you can ask and very few people can actually answer it. It's amazing and a bit of a paradox that most of us career people spend so much time with career planning and working toward goals that we hardly can specify.In the starting phase of a career, things don't always seem like a big deal; in fact they are pretty easy. Most people appreciate having a job, and when the job is new, almost any assignment is challenging. Our employees record signs of progress and assume that their employers are on track. Many of us are promoted one or more times. But do we know our ultimate destination?When we grow older and mature, promotions become less frequent, relationships and politics means more while both pressure and expectations escalate both at work and at home and wisdom takes over. Your career or job goals are likely to change more than one time in life. As you grow and develop and learn more about yourself and your jobs, you may change your mind.So how do you go ahead to discover your real career or professional goals? Know what You really want - You need knowledge about yourself as well as information about the career options that fit your skills, values and interests. Interest clarification - You must explore your work interests or preferences. Try to recall what courses or training you really enjoyed and which careers you've considered pursuing. Value assessment - You must find out which of your values are important to you in terms of job and career satisfaction. Determine Your Skills - You must list the skills you currently possess as well as skills you do not have and wish to develop. Skills can originate from education, work experiences as well as from experiences from your life in general. Explore the career options - Do not limit yourself to one but look at various career fields. Find out what each of them entails. Set Preliminary Goals - Summarize the results of your self-assessment in a prioritized list or statement to serve as a reference as you begin to identify and re Secondly you also need to make a profit if the business is to survive. Of course, all the other issues that we have looked at today, hygiene factors such as, requirements for legislation, compliance, and integrity within the business, all those things apply as well of course. Making a profit and producing results for customers are the key survival factors. If they are the survival factors, what are the success factors to contrast this? Again, I suggest that there are two key factors. One is how you promote your business, the marketing of it. The other is how you find unique solutions to people’s problems, innovation. As we go through, what I want to do is provide some tips, suggestions and ideas that can be used in those two areas to really grow your business. What I would like to do now before we go on further, is just identify three other key elements. Then there is an exercise I’d like you to do. I see a business as a living organism it’s a bit like a representation of the living world, in a smaller form. What typically happens is that most business owner’s focus on today, they focus on the problems and solutions of today and are entwined in the business. In order to complete the circle and understand the full dynamics of a business and to make it work like a Formula 1 car rather than an old model T Ford, it is important to realise that, just like life and just like the world, there is also a past and there is also a future which are all equally as important as the present. So a quick exercise now. What I would like you to do is to close your eyes and open your mind and just think about some of those reasons you mentioned earlier about wanting to get into business, but actually put yourself in the picture of what your life will be like in 2-5 years time on the assumption that you will achieve the business success that you want. So, how are you feeling? What people are around you, what size of organisation do you have? How fulfilled do you feel? How financially independent are you? Imagine all of the wonderful things that you are driving towards. What I want you to do is just momentarily, put yourself into that picture and imagine that situation. So if you would like to close your eyes just for a moment and open your mind and put yourself where you really want to be. Music plays in background….. So if you would open your eyes again, what I would like to do now is very quickly with the person next to you share what that vision looks like. Share what it is you want for yourself and for your business. The second thing I would like you to do is to share the one thing that would make the biggest difference to your success. What one thing do you need to do? So, what is it you want and what’s the one main thing you need to do to achieve it. Just quickly share that with each other please. Maybe in the networking session later we can continue sharing those thoughts. But what I want to do now is accept that our businesses have a future based on what we want it to be, a past, based on what’s happened so far and a present. Lets just spend some time talking about that future for a moment. It’s about thinking big isn’t it? It’s about opening the mind, removing some of the barriers. It’s about cans… they say that success comes in cans and not cannots. And it’s about putting specifics around our goals. So it’s all very well having a vision of what you want to achieve, but you also need to document past results. By having laser-like focus on our desires and the activities we put in on a daily basis we are able to move progressively towards our goals. You need to ensure that all of your goals are congruent with those outcomes that you want. It’s about having SMART objectives. I am sure many of you would have heard that mnemonic before. That is Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Reasonable and Timed objectives - SMART objectives that are documented. If you are going to do one thing about getting nearer to what you really want from your business, I would recommend that is the best place to start. Document what you want. Don’t worry about how you are going to get there, that comes next, that’s another step. We then need to focus on what’s happened up until now with our business or in our previous life if we are just starting out in business. We need to have management systems in place to monitor and track our business performance element by element. This applies not just to the processes within the business; it applies to the people that are operating your business as well, your staff and other workers. It is only by understanding the past and having records of the past that we can manage the refinement process to make the future more of what we want and to make it happen more quickly. Without a recording process in place we never know what we are moving towards and what we need to change. So that gives us guidance. Another key experience that I have had is that some of the best businesses are extremely systematic. The obvious example that everyone always quotes is McDonalds. But it is very true. They’ve got 50,000 branches worldwide and whilst you might not believe that they produce the highest quality in cuisine, one of the things that make them successful is their systemisation, allowing them to achieve consistent results for customers. When customers go along to McDonalds they know what to expect and that’s really the key to their success. I try to avoid fast food, but I have find myself using them because of that known expectation. I went off some time ago to the Bahamas and we were hungry and wanted something to eat. There were many exotic restaurants around and in the distance we saw the familiar M sign and we headed there. Why? Because we knew what to expect, we were in a foreign place and unusual circumstances. Later on we investigated and explored all the local culture, but to begin with it was nice to find something where we knew what to expect. The pricing was very similar (in a different currency, but very similar), chips were still cold, but we managed to fill our tummies at least! So the systemisation process is measuring all the operations within the business and documenting them. That makes the business much more systems reliant rather than people reliant. That’s not to say that people aren’t important they are, people are crucial to a business operation. People need to be recognised and valued, I’m all for that. Having said that, people work better and are more empowered if they have clear boundaries in which to operate and work from - a system. Making them accountable for that system is also a way of refining the process. Not a blaming culture, but a learning culture. And just one quick example here, for this workshop today (this is a very simplified version), it seemed to me, and Jean may agree with me, it involved a lot more activity than just those listed here, but in a simplistic nature, systemisation is about listing in a logical order, the activities that need to take place. Making people accountable for them, maybe even signing them off if they need to, and having them time bound as well is all important. So it’s a combination of those factors that makes the system work. It can be applied to any process. It doesn’t have to be IT based, it can just be written down on a list. I’m very much a believer in having regular lists, linked to priorities. Again, because having laser like focus on your goals is also making sure you are putting in those activities at the right time, in the right way to actually make those goals come to fruition. So it is about having daily tasks that are priorities, its about having weekly tasks that are priorities, its about having monthly tasks that are priorities and ensuring that they are done at the appropriate time. It’s also about recording how much of your time or the time within your business as a whole (this includes all of your employees where appropriate), what time is being spent doing what function? This is having understanding of what the business is actually doing and why, and then using that information as a learning and refining process for the future. What I would like to do now is consider some practical marketing activities for new client acquisition. So that means a whole raft of things here and I am sure many of you are familiar if not operating some of these. So, these are all ways that you can go out and get clients and get new customers. The interesting thing about this process though is that the list is actually in a particular order. What I have done is listed marketing activities in order of the resource to fulfil them. So from the top to the bottom, telesales for example takes little resource – one person and a telephone. In order to perform seminars and workshops however you require a bigger resource requirement. By resource I am talking about the three resources that we all have in our business. They are people resources, they are time resources and they are financial resources. So as we work down that list typically the resource requirement increases. The other interesting factor is the level of influence we have in our market place. This requires us to have an understanding of the external and internal environments that we are operating in. For example, market trends, demographics and the size of the market. As far as our activities are concerned, that is our internal environment and we can control that fully. I think the thing we need to recognise is that we have control over our own internal environment and the marketing activities that we actually perform. But interestingly, the more we go down that list the more they are able to influence potential customers to our business. So therefore by inference they are all equally viable. OK, some may take more resource, some cost more, some take a lot more time, some a lot more planning, but they are more influential so they can attract more customers. So they are all equally viable, it’s just a question of which ones you choose and you have control of this fully. I would like to do to demonstrate this point in action by taking 2 businesses I am working with today among others that I am working with. The situations have lots of similarities. They are both in wholesale distribution, one of them has 3 business owners and has been in business for about 8 years and it markets through a range of marketing activities to get new customers and to also maximise existing customer value which we’ll look at in a minute. But they are quite highly systematic, they have key performance indicators for the staff, they do have job descriptions, they do have clear roles for the people within the business and processes for them to follow. Now the other business is also successful, both businesses are doing well, both are producing profits. The other business however is more established. It operates almost exclusively in the market of a field sales operation. They are good at it and they have refined Managing Your Fleet Is Now Easier Than Ever o do is to share the one thing that would make the biggest difference to your success. What one thing do you need to do? So, what is it you want and what’s the one main thing you need to do to achieve it. Just quickly share that with each other please.Fleet management is the management of a company's vehicle fleet. The primary objective of fleet management is to control the overall cost of operating and maintaining a company's fleet of vehicles and equipment, to maintain vehicles and equipment in a manner that extends their useful life, to control the growth in size of the fleet, to standardize the composition of the fleet and to accurately budget for maintenance and replacement costs. Fleet management includes vehicle tracking, mechanical diagnostics, management of ships and tracking of driver behavior.Fleet tracking has long been used by operators of multiple vehicles to help them function more efficiently. It is a great way for fleet owners and managers to monitor their cars, trucks or vehicles efficiently. Fleet tracking provides management with real-time knowledge of each vehicle's location, allows the monitoring of fuel use and route adherence, creates new operational efficiencies, increases security of vehicles and assets, improves management of vehicles and drivers, encourages better driver behavior by sharing reports and increase security of vehicles and assets.Fleet management software enables people to accomplish a series of specific tasks in the management of any or all aspects relating to a companies fleet of vehicles, like planning and deployment services. Fleet management software provides fleet managers the tools they need to meet the day-to-day demands of managing an in-house fleet maintenance shop. Fleet management software is designed to meet the demanding needs of fleet professionals around the world.Fleet management requires a great deal of organization and management skills. But managing your fleet is now easier than ever. Tracking vehicles, keeping up with maintenance, handling fuel budgeting and logging work are a few examples of what GPS (Global Positing systems)and Fleet management software can handle for your company. Maybe in the networking session later we can continue sharing those thoughts. But what I want to do now is accept that our businesses have a future based on what we want it to be, a past, based on what’s happened so far and a present. Lets just spend some time talking about that future for a moment. It’s about thinking big isn’t it? It’s about opening the mind, removing some of the barriers. It’s about cans… they say that success comes in cans and not cannots. And it’s about putting specifics around our goals. So it’s all very well having a vision of what you want to achieve, but you also need to document past results. By having laser-like focus on our desires and the activities we put in on a daily basis we are able to move progressively towards our goals. You need to ensure that all of your goals are congruent with those outcomes that you want. It’s about having SMART objectives. I am sure many of you would have heard that mnemonic before. That is Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Reasonable and Timed objectives - SMART objectives that are documented. If you are going to do one thing about getting nearer to what you really want from your business, I would recommend that is the best place to start. Document what you want. Don’t worry about how you are going to get there, that comes next, that’s another step. We then need to focus on what’s happened up until now with our business or in our previous life if we are just starting out in business. We need to have management systems in place to monitor and track our business performance element by element. This applies not just to the processes within the business; it applies to the people that are operating your business as well, your staff and other workers. It is only by understanding the past and having records of the past that we can manage the refinement process to make the future more of what we want and to make it happen more quickly. Without a recording process in place we never know what we are moving towards and what we need to change. So that gives us guidance. Another key experience that I have had is that some of the best businesses are extremely systematic. The obvious example that everyone always quotes is McDonalds. But it is very true. They’ve got 50,000 branches worldwide and whilst you might not believe that they produce the highest quality in cuisine, one of the things that make them successful is their systemisation, allowing them to achieve consistent results for customers. When customers go along to McDonalds they know what to expect and that’s really the key to their success. I try to avoid fast food, but I have find myself using them because of that known expectation. I went off some time ago to the Bahamas and we were hungry and wanted something to eat. There were many exotic restaurants around and in the distance we saw the familiar M sign and we headed there. Why? Because we knew what to expect, we were in a foreign place and unusual circumstances. Later on we investigated and explored all the local culture, but to begin with it was nice to find something where we knew what to expect. The pricing was very similar (in a different currency, but very similar), chips were still cold, but we managed to fill our tummies at least! So the systemisation process is measuring all the operations within the business and documenting them. That makes the business much more systems reliant rather than people reliant. That’s not to say that people aren’t important they are, people are crucial to a business operation. People need to be recognised and valued, I’m all for that. Having said that, people work better and are more empowered if they have clear boundaries in which to operate and work from - a system. Making them accountable for that system is also a way of refining the process. Not a blaming culture, but a learning culture. And just one quick example here, for this workshop today (this is a very simplified version), it seemed to me, and Jean may agree with me, it involved a lot more activity than just those listed here, but in a simplistic nature, systemisation is about listing in a logical order, the activities that need to take place. Making people accountable for them, maybe even signing them off if they need to, and having them time bound as well is all important. So it’s a combination of those factors that makes the system work. It can be applied to any process. It doesn’t have to be IT based, it can just be written down on a list. I’m very much a believer in having regular lists, linked to priorities. Again, because having laser like focus on your goals is also making sure you are putting in those activities at the right time, in the right way to actually make those goals come to fruition. So it is about having daily tasks that are priorities, its about having weekly tasks that are priorities, its about having monthly tasks that are priorities and ensuring that they are done at the appropriate time. It’s also about recording how much of your time or the time within your business as a whole (this includes all of your employees where appropriate), what time is being spent doing what function? This is having understanding of what the business is actually doing and why, and then using that information as a learning and refining process for the future. What I would like to do now is consider some practical marketing activities for new client acquisition. So that means a whole raft of things here and I am sure many of you are familiar if not operating some of these. So, these are all ways that you can go out and get clients and get new customers. The interesting thing about this process though is that the list is actually in a particular order. What I have done is listed marketing activities in order of the resource to fulfil them. So from the top to the bottom, telesales for example takes little resource – one person and a telephone. In order to perform seminars and workshops however you require a bigger resource requirement. By resource I am talking about the three resources that we all have in our business. They are people resources, they are time resources and they are financial resources. So as we work down that list typically the resource requirement increases. The other interesting factor is the level of influence we have in our market place. This requires us to have an understanding of the external and internal environments that we are operating in. For example, market trends, demographics and the size of the market. As far as our activities are concerned, that is our internal environment and we can control that fully. I think the thing we need to recognise is that we have control over our own internal environment and the marketing activities that we actually perform. But interestingly, the more we go down that list the more they are able to influence potential customers to our business. So therefore by inference they are all equally viable. OK, some may take more resource, some cost more, some take a lot more time, some a lot more planning, but they are more influential so they can attract more customers. So they are all equally viable, it’s just a question of which ones you choose and you have control of this fully. I would like to do to demonstrate this point in action by taking 2 businesses I am working with today among others that I am working with. The situations have lots of similarities. They are both in wholesale distribution, one of them has 3 business owners and has been in business for about 8 years and it markets through a range of marketing activities to get new customers and to also maximise existing customer value which we’ll look at in a minute. But they are quite highly systematic, they have key performance indicators for the staff, they do have job descriptions, they do have clear roles for the people within the business and processes for them to follow. Now the other business is also successful, both businesses are doing well, both are producing profits. The other business however is more established. It operates almost exclusively in the market of a field sales operation. They are good at it and they have refined Strategic Aspects of Business Intelligence pect and that’s really the key to their success. I try to avoid fast food, but I have find myself using them because of that known expectation. I went off some time ago to the Bahamas and we were hungry and wanted something to eat.Business intelligence infrastructures reduce the time needed to analyse situations and take actionable decisions. In a competitive environment, a Business may apply two alternative strategies, in order to build advantage:Attempting to prevail by applying a long term brute-force approach, expressed either through production-capacity building or through financial superiority. Attempting to move with speed and flexibility, in order to occupy competitive market positions and exploit opportunities which appear in the market, even if these positions may not build a sustainable long–term competitive advantage. The brute-force approach often causes major damages, entails a high cost (e.g. in case of ‘price wars’) and bears a high risk since it requires large investments (e.g. in capacity building infrastructures). The approach to move with speed and flexibility in the market, aims to damage the ability of competition to react promptly. Evasion of costly and damaging ‘confrontations’ is also aimed. A transformation of international competition, from all-out confrontations to ‘maneuver movements’, is witnessed. In order to achieve successful business maneuvers in the market, prompt awareness and understanding of emerging opportunities is required. Business intelligence is therefore required.Business intelligence is developed via infrastructures which supply promptly and accessibly market intelligence information, customer behavior information, cost structure information and emerging trends. The transformation of a Business from a slowly moving organization which is involved in long confrontations, to a flexible and fast organization, involves the development of Business intelligence. Since strategy aims at developing competitive advantage, the advantage in modern market economy is based on superior information which allows effective business ‘maneuver movements’. At the information age, business intelligence infrastructures are a strategic weapon.Copyright 2006 – Kostis Panayotakis There were many exotic restaurants around and in the distance we saw the familiar M sign and we headed there. Why? Because we knew what to expect, we were in a foreign place and unusual circumstances. Later on we investigated and explored all the local culture, but to begin with it was nice to find something where we knew what to expect. The pricing was very similar (in a different currency, but very similar), chips were still cold, but we managed to fill our tummies at least! So the systemisation process is measuring all the operations within the business and documenting them. That makes the business much more systems reliant rather than people reliant. That’s not to say that people aren’t important they are, people are crucial to a business operation. People need to be recognised and valued, I’m all for that. Having said that, people work better and are more empowered if they have clear boundaries in which to operate and work from - a system. Making them accountable for that system is also a way of refining the process. Not a blaming culture, but a learning culture. And just one quick example here, for this workshop today (this is a very simplified version), it seemed to me, and Jean may agree with me, it involved a lot more activity than just those listed here, but in a simplistic nature, systemisation is about listing in a logical order, the activities that need to take place. Making people accountable for them, maybe even signing them off if they need to, and having them time bound as well is all important. So it’s a combination of those factors that makes the system work. It can be applied to any process. It doesn’t have to be IT based, it can just be written down on a list. I’m very much a believer in having regular lists, linked to priorities. Again, because having laser like focus on your goals is also making sure you are putting in those activities at the right time, in the right way to actually make those goals come to fruition. So it is about having daily tasks that are priorities, its about having weekly tasks that are priorities, its about having monthly tasks that are priorities and ensuring that they are done at the appropriate time. It’s also about recording how much of your time or the time within your business as a whole (this includes all of your employees where appropriate), what time is being spent doing what function? This is having understanding of what the business is actually doing and why, and then using that information as a learning and refining process for the future. What I would like to do now is consider some practical marketing activities for new client acquisition. So that means a whole raft of things here and I am sure many of you are familiar if not operating some of these. So, these are all ways that you can go out and get clients and get new customers. The interesting thing about this process though is that the list is actually in a particular order. What I have done is listed marketing activities in order of the resource to fulfil them. So from the top to the bottom, telesales for example takes little resource – one person and a telephone. In order to perform seminars and workshops however you require a bigger resource requirement. By resource I am talking about the three resources that we all have in our business. They are people resources, they are time resources and they are financial resources. So as we work down that list typically the resource requirement increases. The other interesting factor is the level of influence we have in our market place. This requires us to have an understanding of the external and internal environments that we are operating in. For example, market trends, demographics and the size of the market. As far as our activities are concerned, that is our internal environment and we can control that fully. I think the thing we need to recognise is that we have control over our own internal environment and the marketing activities that we actually perform. But interestingly, the more we go down that list the more they are able to influence potential customers to our business. So therefore by inference they are all equally viable. OK, some may take more resource, some cost more, some take a lot more time, some a lot more planning, but they are more influential so they can attract more customers. So they are all equally viable, it’s just a question of which ones you choose and you have control of this fully. I would like to do to demonstrate this point in action by taking 2 businesses I am working with today among others that I am working with. The situations have lots of similarities. They are both in wholesale distribution, one of them has 3 business owners and has been in business for about 8 years and it markets through a range of marketing activities to get new customers and to also maximise existing customer value which we’ll look at in a minute. But they are quite highly systematic, they have key performance indicators for the staff, they do have job descriptions, they do have clear roles for the people within the business and processes for them to follow. Now the other business is also successful, both businesses are doing well, both are producing profits. The other business however is more established. It operates almost exclusively in the market of a field sales operation. They are good at it and they have refined Looking For Great Ideas For What Business Gifts To Give To Bosses Or Co-workers? onsider some practical marketing activities for new client acquisition. So that means a whole raft of things here and I am sure many of you are familiar if not operating some of these. So, these are all ways that you can go out and get clients and get new customers. The interesting thing about this process though is that the list is actually in a particular order.When you come up with great ideas for business gifts by looking at all of the wonderful possibilities available on the market today, you will be very pleased. Merchandise like nice office supplies that serve a practical purpose as well as looking great, or office items that are strictly for use as elegant office d?cor, there are many types of business gifts. Search for great business gifts that no one else will think of. You can come up with the very best business gifts of all when you reach out to find the perfect merchandise for your office or business location. Business gifts can be virtually anything, depending in the situation that warrants the purchase of top-of-the-line business gifts.For example:Say you have a real knack for picking out office d?cor, and furthermore, you have really been able to get a feel for the type of office d?cor that best suits your boss’s personal taste, if the business gift you need is for your boss, you may want to select a nice clock, a sculpture or even a painting as a business gift. Not your typical business gift, right. No matter, let your business gifts be original and unique ideas that no one else in the office will duplicate.Find something ideal for that office party on any occasion. If you are looking for a business gift for an office party, whether it is a Christmas party, or a birthday party for a co-worker, or a celebration of the company’s recent success, you will have the very best business gift for the circumstances if you browse around for the perfect business gifts you can find.Not only are there the standard fruit baskets that seem to go over so well, but also you can find business gifts with chocolate assortments, office supplies and accessories, fine wines and expensive cheeses and much, much more—and at very reasonable prices too! You can even have them delivered right to your office!Find the perfect business gifts you can, and maybe you will be the brown nose of the year. Or perhaps you will just leave a great impression on your company by proving to them all how creative you can be even when it comes to business gifts—and thus they will assume that your creativity can be applied elsewhere in the company. Yep What I have done is listed marketing activities in order of the resource to fulfil them. So from the top to the bottom, telesales for example takes little resource – one person and a telephone. In order to perform seminars and workshops however you require a bigger resource requirement. By resource I am talking about the three resources that we all have in our business. They are people resources, they are time resources and they are financial resources. So as we work down that list typically the resource requirement increases. The other interesting factor is the level of influence we have in our market place. This requires us to have an understanding of the external and internal environments that we are operating in. For example, market trends, demographics and the size of the market. As far as our activities are concerned, that is our internal environment and we can control that fully. I think the thing we need to recognise is that we have control over our own internal environment and the marketing activities that we actually perform. But interestingly, the more we go down that list the more they are able to influence potential customers to our business. So therefore by inference they are all equally viable. OK, some may take more resource, some cost more, some take a lot more time, some a lot more planning, but they are more influential so they can attract more customers. So they are all equally viable, it’s just a question of which ones you choose and you have control of this fully. I would like to do to demonstrate this point in action by taking 2 businesses I am working with today among others that I am working with. The situations have lots of similarities. They are both in wholesale distribution, one of them has 3 business owners and has been in business for about 8 years and it markets through a range of marketing activities to get new customers and to also maximise existing customer value which we’ll look at in a minute. But they are quite highly systematic, they have key performance indicators for the staff, they do have job descriptions, they do have clear roles for the people within the business and processes for them to follow. Now the other business is also successful, both businesses are doing well, both are producing profits. The other business however is more established. It operates almost exclusively in the market of a field sales operation. They are good at it and they have refined it, however, it’s not particularly systematic because the individual sales people operate, apart from the territories they’ve been given, with a lot of autonomy, they don’t really have a systemised way of working. In addition to that they do some direct mail on a limited basis but they have very little systems. OK so that’s just a general overview of the businesses. Now let’s look at some of the financials. The first business has a 1 million turnover the second business has a 10 million turnover. Interestingly though, on first sight you might think business 1 may be turning over less but is more profitable. Look at the profit, 20% profitability, can’t be bad. But the acid test, going back to what it is that you want to achieve from your business, is what the business owners are generating from this in absolute cash terms. Ultimately it is only cash that creates a better lifestyle for them to enjoy having more control over their time. Well business 2 produces over 3 times more cash than business 1. So I am working with business 1 to encourage them to operate other marketing methods outside the one they practice already. It will grow them faster and will still create profit and even though the profitability levels percentage wise may drop, the business owners will end up with more money in their pocket and that’s what it’s about at the end of the day. That’s what creates lifestyle, equity and capital. Let’s spend a minute or two talking about getting value from your existing customers. There are a number of techniques we can use here, a number of processes and a number of activities. I don’t intend to go into this in detail but I do when I’m working individually with clients. Firstly it requires recognising the ultimate value of your customers. A lot of businesses ignore this principle. Just to give you an example, let’s say that each customer is worth ?1,000 to you in a year, to keep things simple. Well the true recognition of the value of that customer is not just the ?1,000 in that year. If they are a loyal customer then they are going to come back to you again and again to buy. Over say a five year period, if that’s how long you are likely to keep that customer, amount to ?5,000. It is only by understanding the real ultimate lifetime value that you are then prepared to invest in that customer to maximise their true potential longer term. The customer acquisition element is always more costly. Experts’ estimate it costs 8-10 times more in resource to get new customers as it does to manage existing ones. So it’s far more effective to maximise the value and return from our existing customers. We also acknowledge that we always need to continue to grow our customer base because of natural customer attrition. In the longer term we can add profitable activities to our marketing, for example up selling. Up selling is simply having an add-on, possibly discounted sale along with the first purchase. It works extremely well in the retail market. Cross selling is offering other products or services which align with the product or service that they are already buying. So it’s complementary purchase, and may include offerings that your business may not fulfil directly. Fulfilment may be through an alliance with another business. Back end selling is generating more regular contact, more regular business over time. So from that ?1,000 example in the first year, over five years it’s ?2,000 in the second year and growing thereafter. That’s where the profit is, the profit is in the back end not in the customer acquisition activity...
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