| Vision is the art of seeing the invisible.
Jonathon Swift
“Leverage is like Star Wars' ‘The Force’: It's what entrepreneurs
do to become successful, it's all around us, but we don't recognize
it as such. But if you understand it and learn its power, then you
are able to make much more consistent, strategic and proactive use
of it.”
Rick Spence, former editor of Profit Magazine and
now a consultant to business owners wrote those words in an e-mail
to me after receiving the last issue of StreetSmart Marketer.
Rick is right, we don’t recognize it, but it is what
successful entrepreneurs do. Almost every time they do something,
they find ways to turn a small amount of input into a large output.
They find opportunities where most people don’t think to look.
So where do we begin to look for leverage opportunities?
Every asset we have is leverageable. In the last issue
of StreetSmart Marketer, I mentioned time as being the scarcest
and most important for entrepreneurs to master (# 43, Leveraging
Time; How To Avoid Being Busy And Broke).
But what else can we leverage?
Under-utilized assets like intellectual property.
What are all the ways you can re-use or re-purpose your intellectual
property? Re-purposing your intellectual property so that you can
offer it as educational material for prospects or products for sales
are examples.
Richard Branson has leveraged the Virgin brand to
the point where he literally has hundreds of businesses using the
Virgin name and every one of them generates cash for him, whenever
a Virgin branded product is sold.
How about trade secrets? If you own some unique know
how, can you license it to people who don’t compete with you?
What about your client base? Are you only selling
customers one thing, or only selling them what you can make? What
else can you sell them that is complimentary to what you do? Are
there people who would like to sell products to your customer base?
Referrals are also a way of leveraging your client
base and the good will of your customers.
If you have unconverted leads that you know you will
not buy what you sell, why not sell them to someone else who might
be able to close them? Or you might consider a joint venture and
do it on a profit sharing basis.
Your marketing is highly leverageable. It often costs
nothing to take a modestly performing marketing activity and turn
it into a winner. Most of us accept whatever result we get, but
the key to success is to constantly ratchet up performance with
continuous testing of small incremental improvements.
What about other people’s assets, how can you leverage
those? One of the easiest is the investment they have in their customer
base. How many thousands or hundreds of thousands of dollars have
they spent in building their client base? If you can do a joint
venture with people who are successful in your target market, you
can tap into that investment immediately without anything like the
expense it would take to build it on your own. What’s more you are
tapping into a customer base that is pre-disposed to buying, as
they are already buying from your joint venture partner.
Many businesses have intellectual property they don’t
sell, but would be happy to give away in order to promote themselves.
How can you access this information to provide something of value
to your own customers?
As you see the list is endless.
Begin to look around for opportunities to multiply
the effect of what you do. Don’t settle for anything just because
most of the people in your industry do it that way. Find a new way
to do it that provides you with leverage.
The Search for a Silver Bullet for Business Growth
“I don’t think there are any silver bullets
when it comes to business advice. The main thing I advocate is to
be contemplative about your business. Wake up early every day and
go to bed late. Spend the time in between thinking about what’s
going on in your business and what you can do to improve it. Create
an organization that’s contemplative as well, that thinks about
how to do things better and takes the initiative to implement the
improvement.”
Ben Bradley, Growingco.com
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