From the category archives:

Grow your business

How does your business go about using “outsourced solutions providers”?

Outsourcing is a powerful way to quickly scale or stabilize areas of your business. It brings four powerful benefits to your business:

1. You get instant scale in that area of your business. E.g., the fulfillment company you hire already has the capacity to handle 100 times the order volume you currently have; the payroll service you use can immediately handle any increased staff you hire, etc.

2. You get the benefit of all the development costs and trial-and-error learning that the outsourced service provider had to go through to build that business. You skip all this and tap directly into a proven business system and team in that specialty area. In essence, the outsourced service provider has amortized all the significant development costs over its base of customers, of which you are one.

3. Your outsourced service provider offers expertise your business lacks. E.g., the shipping and distribution company you outsource to may have decades of experience for what may be very new to you; the advertising agency has created hundreds of television ads before, whereas you may have only been involved in one or two, etc.

4. As the outsourced provider grows and matures its business, you get immediate access to that company’s upgrades in know-how, systems, and staff.

So how do you know when to outsource, and when to hold on to the project, task, or area internally in your business?

We developed a simple 3-part criteria to make this decision inside of your business.

3 Criteria to Determine When It’s Smart to Outsource

1. When outsourcing lowers your real cost. Make sure you factor in the direct and indirect costs of keeping the work in-house as well as the direct and indirect costs of outsourcing the work. Indirect costs to keeping it in-house include: loss of staff time and focus to perform the work; increased overhead to both perform and manage the work; and more complexity for your business to manage.

Indirect costs to outsourcing include: the cost to find and implement an outsourced solution; the cost to replace any failed outsourced relationship; and the costs to integrate the outsourced service with your own company systems.

2. When outsourcing increases the value you provide your customers and clients. For example, will outsourcing give you faster and more reliable delivery service for the same or less money? Will outsourcing give you access to better technology in this area than you could afford to buy or lease yourself?

3. When the outsourced area or function isn’t core to your business. If the area or function you’re outsourcing is the main way you create value in your business, then outsourcing puts you at risk. In fact, disruption in the outsourced solution can kill your business, leaving you vulnerable.

While it can be appropriate to outsource a core area or function of your business, be much more cautious about doing so. Do thorough due diligence on the service provider you hire. Make sure you have contingency plans in place to handle the worst-case scenario of the outsourced relationship failing.

Have a great close to your week!

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9 Critical Wealth Lessons I Learned Over Past 24 Months

by David Finkel on October 26, 2011

Top 3 Business Lessons:

Lesson One:  The fundamental model and map that 95+% of business owners follow to build their business is simply flawed.

Time and time again I’ve seen thousands of business owners who have invested so much of their time, energy, passion, and money to build a business, but their model for how to build that business was simply wrong.

They used a model that both limited the business, and left it vulnerable to “SBD” – Sudden Business Death (a term I created to describe the numerous businesses that seem stable, but after one of the key team members leaves the business dies in less than 90 days.)

That’s why here at the Maui company we work so hard to define, map, and clarify the Level Three Road Map™ so that clients get a concrete road map through the entire lifecycle of their business, from launch to exit.  This way you know the specific focus, key milestones, core systems, critical controls, and necessary team at every step and stage along this powerful map.

This way you start off with the proven road map to go straight to the end state of a Level Three business.

Lesson Two:  Don’t build your business in isolation.

Very few business owners can successfully scale their company without having a core community of other business owners with whom they can associate, share ideas, get candid feedback, and soak up new ideas.

Your employees can’t fill this role – it just creates problems of its own.

Often your significant other can’t fill (or fully fill) this role, or the business becomes too consuming in your life.

You need an upgraded peer group of other DOERS.

Lesson Three:  You cannot build your business based solely on the backs of a strong team.

If you haven’t yet learned this, you will–people’s lives are complicated.  They will come and go in your business.  The one thing you can count on is that given enough time, you will have turnover of key team members.

If you build y our business so that all the key “know how” and design of the business is based on great people just knowing what to do your business is incredibly vulnerable.

Instead you’ve got to build your business on the strong foundation of three cornerstones:  solid business systems, intelligent business controls, and a talented team.

Yes your team matters and is an essential ingredient.  It’s just that they are one of three critical elements.

Investing Lessons

Lesson Four:  Investing from a place of ignorance may work when you are in a bubble market, but it is the kiss of death when that bubble bursts!

In fact, it is the false confidence that so many of us (yes I include myself in this category… I have learned my lesson!) generated from years of succeeding with our investing due to the rapidly appreciating bubble market that caused us to under invest (or reinvest) in our Advantages (of skill, expertise, knowledge, experience, contacts, etc.)

This lead me directly to the next lesson.

Lesson Five:  The major risk you take is NOT a factor of your choice of investment niche or specific investment itself, but rather it is a result of YOU!

Hard as this is to accept, you are the greatest risk variable in your investment portfolio.

Learning to manage YOU… continually reinvesting in YOU… is the very best way to manage risk.

Lesson Six:  You must have a sound, clear, financial plan that you build based on your future, not on your past.

I share from personal example.  From 2002 through 2006 I had massive growth in most of my investments and my main businesses.  When I sold off my two main companies I had a big cash position.

I spent 2006 deciding how best to invest this liquid cash and I made the MAJOR mistake of not re-evaluating my investment plan from scratch.  My needs had changed (I now had the net worth I need to retire if I chose), my risk profile had changed, my strategy SHOULD have changed… but I didn’t.  I invested based on my past successes and as a result my total portfolio was totally out of whack.  And when the market melt-down happened I had the joy of learning this lesson up close and personal.  Granted we still had a large net worth relative to the average person, but we lost close to 60% of our investable assets.  While I can’t change that fact, I sure did learn something of enduring value from it, and I want you to learn it to:

Your wealth plan has to reflect your current starting point and build FORWARD, not be based on how and who you were in the past.

Whole Life Wealth

Lesson 7: Focus more of you on what matters most.

For me that meant simplifying my life.  Heather and the boys and I moved out full time to Jackson Hole Wyoming and to a smaller community.

I cut back on many of the commitments I had so that I could spend more time with my family, and doing things with a smaller group of friends and family.

Lesson 8:  Life is sweet, life is good, and life is FLEET.

It all seems to happen faster and faster every year you get older.  The kids grow up… you get older… and before you know it you’re at one of those “zero” birthdays looking back and saying to yourself, “It all seems to have gone by so fast.”

Savor it now… enjoy it now… share it now.

Lesson 9:  To be happy we’ve got to get over ourselves and focus on what we can give and do to make the world better.

I know these last few lessons are a bit corny, but they are so significant in my book.

Have a great day,

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Seven Techniques to Close More Sales

by David Finkel on October 14, 2011

First, a little background:

  • Handle means dealing with an objection once it comes up… Commonly referred to as “overcoming” the objection.
  • Harnessing the objection relates to using the objection to provide the emotional juice and momentum that you can redirect to close the sale.
  • Reframing means putting their objection in a new context. How can you reframe their objection (either before it comes up or after they raise it) in such a light that the logical and emotional conclusion is to buy? (Or at the very least so that the objection melts away or is significantly diminished?)
  • Preempting an objection means you proactively design it out of the sales conversation so that it never comes up to begin with.

Here are 7 proven tactics to apply this knowledge to close more sales. This list is not meant to be exhaustive, but rather to get your brain warmed up and thinking of the best solutions to sell more of your product or service!

  1. Feel, Felt, Found (A classic, and my least favorite!)
    “I can understand you feel like the timing just isn’t right at this moment. In fact, you remind me of William Smith on of our customers. William was just like you when we talked with him…he had so much going on and felt like his plate was so full that he ended up delaying coming on board with us for 6 months… you want to know what William told me about that decision to decision to delay–it’s a shocker… In fact, let me SHOW you what he said in his words… let’s see, where is that letter, oh yeah here it is… ‘My decision to delay 6 months literally cost my company $72,000 in lost sales… To anyone thinking about working with Acme Direct Mail all I can say is do it now. My delay cost me the equivalent of 5 years of working with them!’”
  1. Restate and Shift the Objection
    Prospect: “It would just cost us too much to change.”

    You: “I understand Mr. Prospect… it’s important to keep an accurate eye on the real cost of any solution you use and there is a real cost to change that you’d have to factor in to make sure you make the soundest decision for your company. I both respect that view and echo it. May I ask you a few questions just so we can get clear on all the cost factors, both of switching over and the short term and long term costs of staying with your past provider?”

  1. Probe with the Objection

    “Tell me more about that Mr. Prospect… You mentioned that you feel like you’re tied in with your current vendor, may I ask you a few questions to better understand your dilemma…”

  2. Close on the Objection

    “I understand that you can’t do anything that doesn’t fit your budget. Let me ask you Mr. Prospect, if we were able to find a way to solve that challenge and make this fit your budget, is there anything else that would stand in your way of owning this widget today? Are you sure? Great. Let’s put our heads together and see if we can work together to solve this challenge…”

  3. Reframe the Objection

    Prospect: “I can’t afford your product.”

    You: “I understand Mr. Prospect that right now it would be very hard for you to afford our product. Quite frankly, that’s why it’s so critical for you to own this product Mr. Prospect, you literally can’t afford NOT to have it… Imagine for a moment Mr. Prospect what it would cost you if you had an accident out in the middle of no where and had to pay to have your car towed for 100 miles at $20 a mile, what do you think that would cost you? That’s right $2,000! Doesn’t it make sense that $95 a year of “insurance” for your membership would be a lifesaver in that situation?”

  4. Script and Control the Conversation (Better script the interaction so the objection rarely gets raised)
  5. Preempt the Objection

    E.g. Credibility Issues
    –Build in credibility boosters into your pre-selling process
    –Improve your scripting to insert Marquee Client stories
    –Upgrade your sales collateral to show REAL USERS and their satisfaction
    –Set the sales stage better (upgrade your office, dress more appropriately, etc)
    –Leverage referrals and introductions for the “Halo Effect”

    E.g. Pricing Issues – Your product is more expensive UP FRONT then your competitor(s)
    –You introduce the term of “Real Cost of Operations Over 5 Years” so that you have a better frame to show how your product is MUCH less expensive over 5 years
    –Have a scripted “Question Cascade™” designed to help them reach this conclusion step-by-step themselves with you restating their discovery (vs you telling them)
    –Have a compelling VISUAL way to reinforce this frame of reference
    –KEY: YOU bring up the price issue BEFORE they do!

I hope that today’s ideas on how to use these 7 sales tactics helps you increase your sales.

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One of the unique benefits we get by working with so many business owners is to see the common patterns and “fatal flaws” that catch so many business owners unaware in the key areas of their business.

Now in case you’re wondering, below is a short, simple 7-question true/false quiz to see which of these all too common sales/marketing mistakes you’re currently making (I’m willing to wager that you’re likely making at least 3 or more of them!)

Take 2 minutes and go through the questions yourself (WRITE DOWN YOUR ANSWERS AS YOU GO!)

Mini Quiz: True or False?

  1. True or False: To increase your lead flow you need to increase your “fishing lines” in the water (i.e. come up with more marketing tactics you implement to increase your lead flow.)
  2. True or False: The best leads are fresh leads.
  3. True or False: Getting a majority of leads from “word of mouth” is one of the best signs that you are operating your business the right way.
  4. True or False: No one will ever be able to sell your product or service as well as you the owner can.
  5. True or False: To grow your sales, grow your target market.
  6. True or False: The best marketing decision tool is the owner’s gut instinct / honed intuition as to what actually works best in the real world.
  7. True or False: Ultimately, effectively managing sales people comes down to aligning rewards to encourage the right behaviors.

In just a moment I’ll give you the correct answers to the quiz questions

Question One: True or False: To increase your lead flow you need to increase your “fishing lines” in the water (i.e. come up with more marketing tactics to increase your lead flow.)

Answer: FALSE. (On Thursday night you’ll learn why trying too many different marketing tactics can be the kiss of death and a powerful strategic principle you need to follow as your plan out which marketing tactics to apply.)

Question Two: True or False: The best leads are fresh leads.

Answer: False. (On Thursday night you’ll learn why fresh leads are NOT the best lead source, and specifically what is. What’s more, I’ll share 3 quick tactics you can implement to immediately boost your sales.)

Question Three: True or False: Getting a majority of leads from “word of mouth” is a sign that you are operating your business the right way.

Answer: False. (On Thursday night you’ll learn why if you rely on word of mouth for the majority of your leads that means that you’re vulnerable, and why you desperately need FORMALIZED referral systems versus passive word of mouth.)

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I hope you had a great holiday weekend (can you call it that for Columbus Day?)

This week I had several client calls with business owners who are working to scale their sales teams and grow sales. It can be a scary and intimidating process if you’ve never done it before.

Today I wanted to share with you 8 “controls” to use to help you protect your business as you scale your sales team.

  1. List negotiating parameters your sales team can work within out in the field. Examples might be pre-approved concessions your sales team can use to close a sale, discounts or credits your front-line staff are authorized to give when dealing with a purchasing customer in your store, and so on.
  2. Establish an approval process for sales exceptions. For example, if a concession is worth less than $x, the sales manager must verbally approve it; if a concession exceeds that amount, the sales manager must physically sign off on it.
  3. Require standardized sales paperwork and contracts.
  4. Provide sales team with formalized sales scripting.
  5. Require employment contracts that protect the proprietary nature of your client list. Possibly parcel out access to that database among the sales people so that they never have access to more of that list than they actually need.
  6. Require sales people to use only company-controlled contact phone numbers, emails, fax numbers, etc. with clients. They should never be expected or allowed to give out personal contact information.
  7. Provide a direct line for client feedback that doesn’t allow sales people to filter out negative messages.
  8. Record clear and accurate sales metrics. These would include closing ratios, retention rates, return rates, net referral score, and so on.

Have a great week everyone.

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Key Lessons on Your Businesses Financial Information

by David Finkel on September 22, 2011

Today we want to talk about your business’s financial information, and some key lessons you can use to better understand it.

If you don’t know, or can’t find out where your business is financially then the best business plan, business product and sales team in the world won’t save your business. Remember, your cash flow and financial information are like your business’s heart beat.

And yet, time and time again we meet people at our Maui Mastermind conferences who insist on doing their business’s bookkeeping because they either don’t see the value in hiring a bookkeeper to do that work, or they don’t trust a bookkeeper to “get it right.”

It’s hard to hear those words coming from someone who isn’t a trained bookkeeper or accountant. It’s frustrating to see people nodding their heads in agreement about the need to take themselves out of the business in order for it to grow, and then dig in their heels on this issue. But here’s a truth we firmly believe:

Your business will NEVER reach Level Three if you hang onto the bookkeeping

Accurate and timely bookkeeping is critical to your business’s success. It’s also time-consuming, detail-oriented and, as the business owner, a complete waste of your time. Those hours you spend trying to enter receipts and balance the business’s checking account are hours you aren’t spending growing your business. And, in all honesty, unless you’re a trained bookkeeper you’ll probably do something wrong.

We’re not suggesting that you bring someone in to handle your business’s financial side and completely withdraw. What we are suggesting is that you:

  • · Bring someone in to handle the books or outsource that work to a contract bookkeeping service,
  • · Have at least a working knowledge of bookkeeping,
  • · Understand how to read basic financial statements and information,
  • · Establish strong financial controls, and
  • · Implement the systems you need to keep your business’s financial information secure.

Perhaps one of the best educational steps you’ll ever take is a night class in bookkeeping and basic accounting. Just having an understanding of double-entry bookkeeping (for every amount entered on the debit side there is a corresponding amount entered on the credit side) and what each of the three main financial statements (Balance Sheet, Profit and Loss Statement and Statement of Cash Flows) represent can put you miles ahead of most business owners.

Now you’re in a position where you can knowledgeably monitor your business’s financial records without being bogged down in actually doing them.

At this point, learning how to prepare your own financial statements isn’t the lesson. Learning how to read and interpret the story behind the numbers is.

At the advanced stage Level Two, most business owners move away from an outsourced bookkeeper and hire a full-time controller. The controller generally has more education and experience and has the ability to design systems and see the story behind the numbers.

And, finally, at Level Three, it’s time to get a CFO. The CFO is able to forecast the intricacies of multiple businesses and investments and how it relates to owner’s personal financial statements. It’s like the bookkeeper knows how to play checkers, the controller can play chess, and the CFO can play 3-D chess. The differences have to do with perspective and ability, along with talent.

The final element of your business’s Financial Pillar is systems and financial controls. This is the place where you create the safeguards that will allow you to let go of the financial recordkeeping and still sleep at night. Yes, it is reasonable to have concerns about an unscrupulous controller or CFO raiding your business’s finances. However, the answer isn’t trying to control the risk by doing all of the financial work yourself. The answer is creating, implementing, and maintaining financial controls to protect yourself.

For example, even the smallest business should make a distinction between who writes the checks and who signs the checks, and between who creates the deposits and who makes them. As the business owner, signing checks and (at least in the early stages) making deposits are two things you should be doing personally. Separating the money-handling tasks is a key to preventing fraud and embezzlement.

As your business grows you will reach a point where it is necessary to bring additional people onboard to assist with the financial area. Again, as people come in you will want to separate tasks into those who look after money coming in and those who look after money going out. By always separating the process so that at minimum two different people would have to collude to steal, you are minimizing the chance of that happening.

You add a second layer of defense by establishing consistent audit procedures and other financial checks and balances. These are standard financial practices and safeguards, so a great way to find out how your business should be structured in this aspect is to talk to your CPA, or, better yet, have your CPA work with you to design and implement your business’s financial safeguards.

Well that’s enough for one day. We hope that you truly profit from these ideas on the financial side of your business.

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  1. What are your most effective systems for generating new leads for your business? E.g., referral relationships; online advertising; affiliate program; social media; display advertisements in industry journals; trade shows; etc.
  2. How could you scale up the best of these systems to bring in more business? E.g., establish clear tracking to ensure you know which leads are the right leads; scale up your ad buys or send out more marketing pieces; optimize your website for better search engine results; spend more on winning key word advertising campaigns; create formalized referral programs; etc.
  3. How can you make these systems more consistent, reliable, or dependable? E.g., create a master marketing calendar with clear dates and assigned deliverables; establish a proven control ad or direct mail letter; have a sales website used by your prospective customers who come to shop or gather information; establish clear metrics that allow you to know objectively what is and isn’t working; etc.
  4. What are your least effective lead generation systems? This is the best place to look when searching for ways to grow your business. Too many business owners try to fix or improve their bottom 20-40 percent. They’d be better off cutting these losing efforts and immediately reinvesting the saved time and money into scaling the top 20 percent of their lead generators.
  5. What are your most effective systems for closing sales? E.g., live sales people; direct mail letters; sales landing web pages; sales DVD; etc.
  6. How could you scale up the best of these systems or better use them with the leads you already have? E.g., hire more sales reps; invest in technology to better handle the lead flow you currently have; create an automated follow-up selling system; design a website to effectively sell; move from selling one-to-one to one-to-many by hosting online webinars or live events; etc.
  7. How can you make these systems more consistent, reliable, or dependable? E.g., draft a best sales script; create a PowerPoint template all your sales team use to make their sales presentations; etc.
  8. What are your least effective sales conversion systems? Again, this is the place to make immediate improvements to your sales in the shortest period of time. Rather than “fix” them, scrap your losing systems and leverage the selling systems that are working best. At the very least, take the elements of your winning sales systems (e.g., scripting, offer, pricing, sales logic, etc.) and incorporate them in your worst performers.

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Listen in on how to organize your master system of all your systems around your workflow. Includes two concrete examples of when it’s best to organize by function (e.g. Sales; operations; etc.) and when it’s best to organize another way (E.g. by client; by property; by project; etc.)

Listen below:

A Powerful Tip to Organize Your Systems-Organizing Around Workflow

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Today I wanted to share with you a simple question to spark you to increase the value of what you offer your customers or clients. This question is: How can you increase the received value of your core product or service without increasing your costs? You’ll notice a new term here, “received value”. In a [...]

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The most important question you can ask yourself is this: “What can I do today to prepare to sell my business two to three years from now ” Building on what I taught two weeks ago on our advanced webinar on designing your business exit strategy, here are three concrete steps to follow as you [...]

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