| "Employ your time in improving yourself
by other men's writings, so that you shall gain easily what others
have labored hard for."
Socrates
The primary job of a business owner is to continually
look for ways to increase the rate of return on the equity in their
business. This is true if you are a sole practitioner or the head
of a large multi-national.
As owners of small businesses we don't always
realize this. Many of us think our primary job is to bring
in new business, and in some cases your earning ability is your
only equity. But even when our only equity is our earning ability,
we still have to decide how to allocate our resources. On whom do
we spend our time? On which products do we focus? Which of our skills
do we use most? etc.
In a recent article by renowned speaker, author and
consultant Brian Tracy, he suggested this equity is your
ability to think and act in ways that generate results. So to improve
your return on your equity (i.e. everything you have invested
in the business, not only money), you have to invest your resources
in those areas with higher potential returns.
Resources are scarce in every business, none of us
has enough time, money or good people to do everything we need to
do.
What this means to owners of small businesses is
that you have to be constantly finding ways to maximize your
returns on every activity, so that you increase your earning ability
or produce the same result with less effort.
StreetSmart Marketers make sure that every activity they
undertake is the highest and best use of their time. They know
time spent on any activity that does not yield maximum results is
gone for ever. They continually find ways of producing better
results from the same or fewer resources.
As a business owner you owe it to yourself to
ensure that every marketing activity yields the maximum output.
As you've heard me say before, it costs the same to run a marketing
program that yields one or two sales as it does to run one that
produces constant sales.
I was talking recently to Allan, a contact management
software consultant, about his marketing activities. He said he
had tried a number of marketing activities, including direct mail,
that yielded poor to modest results and did not believe that anything
but referrals worked in his business. He said he realized he needed
better marketing but was frustrated by his results and needed
help.
After discussing his advertising and direct mail activities,
it became clear that his poor results were not that these strategies
don't work in his business but more a function of his
lack of knowledge, than their ineffectiveness. The question for
him was; "As an allocator of resources, should he be focussing
on what works, i.e. referrals or should he learn how to do other
forms of marketing that generate greater results from the meagre
resources available?" I believe the answer identifies both.
Do more of what works, and learn additional ways to bring
in new prospects.
I showed him how by simply improving the headline
of his ads and letters he could create greater response. We also
discussed making a more compelling offer that would encourage people
to respond. He called me back a few weeks later to excitedly
tell me that the changes we had made had resulted in a
45% increase in response rate and a 38% increase in new
business. No additional cost, no additional effort. He is not finished
yet. He is now working on ways to increase both the response
rate and the gross dollars he gets from each new customer.
This is a perfect example of the impact of leverage;
you take what's working modestly, or even poorly, and make it better.
You never accept any level of response as the ceiling.
Anything less than that and you are failing your stakeholders.
i.e. yourself, your family and your customers. Why?
Because you have to work harder than you need to,
to produce the results you are producing. This increases your costs,
reduces your free time, reduces your return on the time you do invest and
limits the time available for creative thinking about your business.
Business owners often tell me "Direct Mail
doesn't work in my business!" or "Advertising doesn't
work in my business!" They don't realize that these tools take
skill and experience, and that these skills can be relatively
easily learned. Just because you can write a letter, does not mean
you understand the rules of successful direct mail.
Once they understand leverage, they don't accept low
results any longer, they begin to learn, to re-think and
to find ways to improve the results. They also are no longer prepared
to accept the default of referrals and networking. There is no question
that these techniques work, but at some point they become a limiting
factor in your growth.
If you feel that referrals and networking are the
only marketing tools that really work in your business, what impact
is it having on your ability to grow or to have more time off?
If you want to learn more about leverage follow the
link to Leverage: The Science of Growing Your
Business, While Working Less.
|