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success Category

What Succeeds?

Business, Output, Starting, success No Comments »

Nothing succeeds like a budgie with no teeth.

I have had a few meetings recently with people looking to start a business. Some of the businesses were start-ups, some were buy-outs.

As a freelance FD, I was asked if the idea stood a chance of succeeding financially.

What we very quickly got down to was not CAN they make a success of the idea, but do they WANT to make a success of the idea.

Without the will to succeed, it’s very unlikely you will succeed.

With a determination to succeed, even average ideas stand a good chance of making money.


April 27th, 2009 |

Tags: Business, success




Sales or Customer Service?

Advertising, Business, success 2 Comments »

I was told a story over the weekend about someone who said they worked in shoe shop. It sparked a debate about whether the person was in sales, or in customer service.

Unless you are confused, I would think that if you walk into a shoe shop, the chances are that you already want to buy shoes – and that what you want is excellent customer service.

A good salesman will sell you something you didn’t want. A good customer service person will make sure you are happy buying what you already wanted.


March 30th, 2009 |

Tags: customer, deal, sales, service




Are you certain?

Business, Cashflow, Finance, Output, success No Comments »

Cashflow is the heartbeat of every business. Books have been written on the subject – but what lies at the heart of the topic? Talking to a client today, we discussed cashflow in terms of certainty, which seemed to strike a chord, which made me want to share the conversation.

We saw two models of cashflow; the first is usually called the budget, and includes everything you hope will happen. The second (and possibly more important) is the real cashflow, and should only include figures where certainty is close to 10 out of 10.

Certainty of expenditure is pretty easy to plot, wages, rent, telephone bills, they all fall due with depressing regularity.

Certainty of income is far less simple. Not only should the value of the income be certain, so also should its timing. You may know you are expecting a cheque for £5,000, but when exactly will the funds clear your bank account?

When it comes to your cashflow, make sure you are dealing with certainty, not hope.


March 25th, 2009 |

Tags: Cash, certain, sure




Social Media and your Business

Blog, Business, Input, Output, success 1 Comment »

I gave a presentation to a business-networking group this week on the subject of Social Media and Business.

Realising the audience was at best sceptical (with a couple of exceptions!), and at worst cynical, I used the following images.

  • Plain website = shop window, hopefully directing you to the door in.
  • Blogging on your website = shop front glass now removed, allowing you to talk to potential customers, and for them to talk back (for example by leaving comments).
  • Social Media (such as Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn) = you have left your shop and are walking about sharing your ideas, and encouraging others to talk about them as well (not always with you present).

It is a bit blunt, but seemed to get the key messages over:

  1. Social Media is not something that only happens online – it’s a mesh of physical meetings and online activities.
  2. Ideas that are spread through groups of people are far more powerful than ideas delivered to individuals.
  3. Real engagement is when people do things for you that you didn’t ask them to.
  4. Learn to lose some control – in return for greater reach.

With thanks to Steve Bridger (http://www.stevebridger.com/) for his insights…


February 20th, 2009 |

Tags: Business, Finance, media, profit, social




What do you know?

Business, Cashflow, Chaos, Economy, Finance, Output, Starting, success, Time No Comments »

We have much to thank Donald Rumsfeld for. Although mocked for his listing of “what he knew he knew”, “what he knew he didn’t know”, etc, this analysis of your situation can often distinguish perception from reality.

Compiling a list of things that you know you know about your business might seem like a waste of time, but put it beside a list of things you don’t know about your business, and you might surprise yourself just how many things you suspect, but aren’t sure about.

If you aren’t sure about it, then you don’t know it.

And then ask yourself, what are you doing to find out?


February 13th, 2009 |

Tags: business finance, Crisis, financial, perception, reality, support




If you were a nightclub, would you go to it?

Advertising, Business, Chaos, Finance, leader, leadership, Starting, success 1 Comment »

Financial Business Support
Many years ago I interviewed a bunch of characters for the post of Nightclub Manager. Failing to make a decision, the panel asked itself the following question, “If the interviewee was a nightclub, would I go to it?”. Suddenly the choice became easy.

It is very easy to forget the impact that the person has on the identity of the business. Every employee, from security on the front desk to the chair of the board, adds a key ingredient to your brand. In times of apparent doom and gloom, what kind of impression do you give the outside world?

A visitor to your business, whether by phone or in person, may well learn more about your company from the first point of contact in the first few minutes than in the whole of the meeting you have carefully planned.


January 18th, 2009 |

Tags: Bank, Business, Cash




Ban negativity!

Blog, Business, Cashflow, Chaos, Crisis, Economy, Finance, leader, success 2 Comments »

I have been pondering a number of issues over the Christmas period to do with the power of positive thought. As I was starting to compose my own blog, I was pointed towards a great article by Jon Cooper (founder of JupiterDawn.com), published in the Birmingham Post on 1st January 2009. Serendipity strikes again…

Jon writes:
I’ve been isolating myself from pessimists for as long as I can remember. As soon as I feel a negative “vibe” from someone, I always make a mental note to be in a different room next time they’re around.
That particular skill is one I’m calling on more and more these days, as finding people without the doom-bug can be quite tough.
One thing which hasn’t changed with the economic climate is pretty much a fundamental law of the universe. Whether or not you believe some of the more spiritual stuff preached by Dale Carnegie, or in recent publications such as “The Secret”, it will always be an irrefutable fact that you get back what you put out.
If you think negatively, you will get negative results.
Even more obviously, if you say and do negative things at work, those around you will mirror those words and actions, producing a spiral of bad outcomes for your business.
The fact is, thriving in 2009 is far from impossible; here’s my 3-point plan to ensure that you keep your plans on track when others are falling off the rails.
1 – Review which of your goods or services are selling best, and focus on making those even more attractive.
Pricing, features and delivery can usually be tweaked if you look closely enough.
Conversely, consider dropping whatever isn’t selling well or making you a profit.
2 – Use PR to get your message to the market cheaply, and ahead of the competition.
Standing out from the crowd as a fashionable, desirable business can cost less than you imagine.
Newspapers, TV and BBC Radio offer great opportunities for entrepreneurs to broadcast interesting, recession-busting stories.
3 – Banish negativity from your business. If suppliers are talking doom and gloom, agree with them and get better prices and longer payment terms.
If customers are whining, find out what it would take to make them happy again.
If staff or colleagues are getting you down, re-arrange your office so you don’t have to listen!
In summary, identify the key success factors which made your business great in the past, promote them and focus on them, whilst eliminating waste and negativity.
I know 2009 is going to present some brilliant opportunities; make sure you are set up to grab them with both hands!


January 1st, 2009 |

Tags: benefit, Crisis, Economy, Finance




The R Word

Business, Cashflow, Crisis, Economy, Output, Starting, success No Comments »

Recession. What is it? What does it mean? And most importantly, what does it mean to you?

The sales are in full swing, parties are loud and late, cars are travelling far and wide. Some days it feels like there are two worlds, the one we live in and the one we read about.

Losing a job is not fun – I know from personal experience – but take this out of the equation, and what else is happening? Food prices are down, fuel is just 86p a litre, variable mortgage rates are at an all time low. The spectre of recession might be based on little more than a perceived worsening of our world.

Perhaps the biggest thing we have to fear, is fear itself.


December 27th, 2008 |

Tags: Cashflow, Crisis, recession




Rejection

Business, Cashflow, Input, leader, success 2 Comments »

Just picked up this great link about rejection.

http://cstadvertising.com/blog/2008/12/17/creative-rejection/

My maths teacher told me that everything was easy when you knew how.

Having learnt this, (pretty quickly as it happens, but then he was an inspirational teacher!) I have spent the rest of my life trying to work out how everything worked.

Those that expect life and success to be handed to them on a plate will either be very lucky or very disappointed.

There’s a great quote (I forget by who) about the balance between inspiration and perspiration.

Life isn’t easy, but by being persistent and ambitious, who knows how successful you can be.


December 17th, 2008 |

Tags: ambition, Life, reject, rejection, success




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