Whether you are a seasoned entrepreneur, or the proud owner of a shiny new MBA, I have compiled a short list of tips for your consideration. While you might be tempted to think that some of these are pretty obvious (and, yes, they very well may be), I would counter with the fact that knowing something, and being able to execute that something are two very different things. So read this first, and make sure you are doing (not thinking about doing, but doing!) the things on this list. Then come talk to me about the more complicated stuff.
1. Set Your Priorities
This is especially important for those who are starting a new business, but it is also something that older businesses need to be reminded of periodically. Cash flow is the lifeblood of any business. Sure, you can get a business going with loans, grants, investors, even your credit cards, but you will, at some point, need to pay the piper. And until the piper has been paid, you have that hovering over your head, and factoring into every business decision you must make.
Customers are what you need. Not “satisfied” customers. You need ecstatically happy customers. They will not only bring you repeat business, but they will tell their friends, family, and colleagues about you. Landing several of these kind of customers, and doing everything in your power to keep them loyal to you, is your Number One priority. Without customers, you don’t have a business; you have a hobby.
2. What Are You Selling?
There is a school of thought that says being the first to market with a new product or technology is the way to success and riches. And to the handful of businesses over the years that have been able to score on something new, that would seem to be the case. But upon closer view, there are thousands of struggling businesses, or former businesses, who thought for sure that their new brainchild was something that everyone needed and would buy. But they either over-estimated or misunderstood the public’s needs, or else they simply did not know how to introduce a new product or concept into the public’s imagination.
You need to offer what people want to buy, not necessarily what you want to sell. Having a small slice of a proven market is preferable to having a huge slice of nothing. You want to innovate? Great! Innovate from the vantage point of a sound market where the product is already an established item. Then, make it better. Bundle it with other things to create more value. Make it bigger, make it smaller, make it faster, change its color. Do what you can do to keep it fresh and exciting to people, but with the knowledge that the heart and soul of your product is already established.
3. How Are You Selling?
The “power trio” of business is Marketing, Sales, and Customer Service. Having one or two of these things covered is not going to make it. These three disparate functions need to play nicely together, and to provide the same message to the customer. If one flounders, the other two can rarely save the day. If two of these flounder, pack up the business and try something else. It doesn't matter what your business is. Marketing will put the idea into the customer’s head, Sales will make the promise of filling the customer’s need, and Customer Service keeps the promise with every single interaction. These three functions are your business’ foundation, not your product or your technology.
4. Know Your Customers
Don’t assume you know what customers want. And don’t guess what they want! It is your job to know what they want. Be certain. Have confidence in that knowledge… because YOU SPEAK TO YOUR CUSTOMERS. You ask them questions about what they like and don’t like about your product and your company. Then you give them MORE of what they like, and LESS of what they don’t like. This is not rocket science here, people. But it is amazing how few businesses really do this with any kind of intent. Oftentimes, companies send out surveys that are completely self-serving. What kills me is the companies that ask you to take surveys, and in the next breath, have the audacity to ask you to rate them as all “10’s” or whatever the highest score is. They are not using the survey results to better their company; they are using it to better themselves.
The better way of knowing your customers is to talk with them at every opportunity. Every time they come to your shop. Every time they call. Every time they keep an appointment with your salesperson. Just ask a few questions to get them talking. “What can we do for you that we’re not doing?” “What are we doing that you wish we weren’t?” “What’s coming down the pike for you in the next few years, and is there any way we can help you with that?” Simple little questions that show that you care. This is how you get to know your customers.
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Next week, we will discuss four more tips for running a successful small business. Until then, work on the points listed above, and set your business up for success. Remember, it's more than just doing the right things; it's doing the right things right!
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