| Do You Remember The Great Vision You Had When You Started Your
Business?
"Paying attention to simple little things that most men neglect,
makes a few men rich."
-Henry Ford-
At this time of the year, when we are making New Year’s resolutions
and setting goals, it is useful to look back at that great vision
and reflect. Not from a glass half-empty perspective, that serves
no one. But from a perspective that says “Whatever I can conceive,
I can achieve!” This means you are making progress towards your
goals, but still have things you want to achieve. I am not going
to talk to you about goal setting. If you own your own business,
you are probably already pretty good at that.
The difference between those entrepreneurs who shatter the glass
ceiling and make gobs of profit and those that simply make a living
from their business is quite simple. Those that break through this
ceiling are those that are constantly learning, always searching
and finding ideas that give them greater knowledge, insight and
skill that will take them further, higher and faster.
In that spirit, today I want to show you a key secret to getting
what you want. I can almost hear you saying “This guy is really
full of BS, that’s just marketing speak!”
The truth is, I wish I had understood what I am going to share
with you today more clearly years ago. Unfortunately, it has taken
me many years to really internalize this concept and make it my
own, even though I have known it for some time. This secret is so
fundamental and so important that if you learn it, truly understand
it and consistently apply it, I can guarantee that you will become
rich.
What is it that you wanted when you started out?
- A better income
- A business that someone will want to buy
- More time to do the things you enjoy
- The freedom to do the kind of work you like, when
you like
- Two or three vacations a year
- No financial worries
My guess is that whatever you wanted when you started out, you
probably still want it now. You may be closer to it, but in all
likelihood you still want it.
When I talk to business owners, many of them tell me they are stressed,
wear too many hats and are always time pressured. More importantly
they complain that they work too hard for the money they make, but
can see no way out.
Today and over the next few issues of Street Smart Marketer, I
will share with you some of the things you can do to lead the kind
of life you desire and build your business to run the way you want
it to. You can create a business that generates huge profits, while
enabling you to take a few months off every year.
There is a lot of ground to cover and there are many issues, so
I will deal with each over a period and give you the information
in installments. These tips will be far more strategic than what
you have been getting, but each has the potential to truly leverage
your business to much higher levels than you believe are possible
right now.
For most people, the answers to growing a successful business are
sitting right there in front of them, but they are so busy earning
a living they don’t see them and consequently do not make any real
money.
I want to help you identify and mine untapped profit centres and
assets in your business. I also want to show you how to get more
time for yourself to do the things you want to do.
We all want to achieve this, so how do we get started?
The key is in figuring out the way to grow your business that produces
the best levels of success and that requires the least amount of
investment and effort. This is not as difficult as it sounds. There
are only a few sources of growth. So, the first step is in identifying
them and then understanding how you can take advantage of each of
them to produce the result you want.
If you ask 10 business owners how they intend to grow their businesses
this year, 9 of them will tell you by bringing in new customers.
Let’s examine a typical business. It doesn’t really matter what
kind of business since these principles work in every industry.
Let’s say you are a quick print firm and you did about $300,000
in revenue last year. This year you want to grow by 25%. So you
plan to bring in 25% more customers. This sounds simple enough,
but unless you have a strategy that’s already yielding that kind
of growth it might be a lot more difficult than you imagine. Bringing
in new customers is the most expensive and riskiest strategy you
can employ. You definitely need new customers. Any business that
doesn’t get new customers eventually shrivels up and dies.
So what else can you do? Well let’s look at your options for growth:
- You can increase your number of new prospects.
- You can increase the conversion rates for new prospects.
- You could increase the number of transactions
each customer does with you each year.
- You can increase the dollars they spend each time
they buy.
- You can increase your margins.
This gives you 5 choices instead of one. Did you know that if you
decided to increase each of these by 10% you could increase your
sales revenues by more than 45%? How much easier and cheaper would
it be to increase each of these by 10%, than to increase new customers
by 25%. For each there are many tactics to achieve this. I teach
more than 30 of them in my Rapid Growth Mentoring Program. All you
need is one or two effective tactics at work leveraging each of
these strategies to achieve geometric growth in your business.
Even if you could easily increase your customers by 25%, what would
the impact be if you increased each of these areas by 5 or 10% at
the same time? Do the math, you’ll be astounded! Most of us never
think of our business this way.
These five strategies combine to create the StreetSmart Revenue
Growth Formula.
So, if you are generating a 100 new prospects each year or each
month and your conversion rate is 20%, you generate 20 new clients,
but if you increase your conversion rate to 25% by reversing the
risk, you now generate 25 new clients. No extra cost, no extra effort,
just extra sales and extra profit. It is a simple matter of multiplying
each figure by the next.
This is a perfect example of leverage; multiplying the effect of
each strategy by the power of the other strategies. This is the
difference between linear growth which is 2 + 2 + 2 + 2 + 2 = 10
and geometric growth which is 2 x 2 x 2 x 2 x 2 = 32. If you are
running your business with a linear growth model, what are you leaving
on the table? Geometric growth takes a little bit more work to set
up, but once it’s operating the results are staggering.
It doesn’t matter what business you are in, there are ways to apply
this formula even in businesses where you only have one thing to
sell and customers only buy it once.
Make it one of your objectives this year to learn how to grow you
business geometrically instead of linearly.
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