| The Secret To Achieving Success
In Any Business
"Business has only two functions - marketing and innovation."
-Milan Kundera
I meet many people during the course of my work who go into business
for themselves, simply because they are good at what they do. Take
Susan, a physiotherapist who loves what she does. She worked in
a multi-disciplinary clinic for some years before branching out
on her own. Because she was good and she was in demand at the clinic,
she believed the same would be true if she went out on her own.
Once Susan went out on her own, she found it to be quite different.
She brought in a modest amount of business, but could never quite
reach the level she wanted. She felt she couldn't really afford
qualified staff, so she spent her days dealing with patients and
her evenings doing administration. To put it bluntly, she was working
like a dog, but was flat broke.
She began to realize that being good at physiotherapy was a table
stake. If she didn't learn to market she would never break out of
the "busy and broke" mould so many business owners find
themselves in. She felt uncomfortable with marketing because she
comes from a world where marketing is frowned upon. It's almost
a dirty word. Most of her colleagues believe that if you are good
you don't have to hype what you do.
I spent time with her showing that this idealistic view is somewhat
naive. There are simply so many people her patients could go to
to get the same service, she wasn't even on the radar. She had to
understand that her job was to get her message to her patients,
because they certainly weren't going to go looking for her.
Here's what she did:
Her first step was to figure out why she is different. She discovered
that most of her patients were young, athletic executives. They
came to her because she understood sports injuries and the competitive
nature of these people. Her business was different because she specialised
in getting these go-go people back in action quickly.
Her next step was to build her reputation as a specialist in this
field. She started speaking to groups of executives, she wrote articles,
she held special events and she built a content rich web-site to
serve them.
Then came the hard part for her; generating leads. She started
a referral program with her existing patients, she ran a successful
direct mail campaign and developed alliances with two gyms that
have a high number of young executive members. (Before she started
with the direct mail program, she told me she didn't think it would
work. She had tried it previously without success.)
The combination of these simple strategies created a steady stream
of 5-8 new leads per week.
She hired a receptionist/assistant to take some of the administrative
load and Susan had her make calls to follow up all the leads that
were coming in. She resisted this because she didn't think she could
afford it. But when her assistant began to bring in about 30-50%
of the people she followed up with, she realised this wasn't a cost,
but an investment in growing her business. Today she is thinking
of bringing in another physiotherapist into the business and is
also looking at hiring a masseur.
If you are in business for yourself, you must develop a lead machine.
Simply relying on passive referrals from happy clients will bring
in a certain amount of business but you'll never make much that
way. You will most likely join the ranks of the busy and broke.
Don't let this happen to you.
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