Learn
from the mistakes of others. Make better and
different mistakes!
No
one sets out to fail! Most business owners
read all the statistics (maybe more than once)
before they open their doors. Many know the
reasons why businesses fail. But some businesses
operate under this paradigm: "failure
can never happen to me because I know better."
Is that you?
What
most business owners miss is looking at the
reasons for business failure and turning them
into action steps to help overcome the odds
of failure. How do I know? I once thought
I knew better, too!
Maybe
you made Mistakes
in Choosing a Business Ideea
Bear
in mind that even "adolescent" businesses
fail. According to the SBA statistics, 90%
of small businesses fail within the first
five years. Many businesses aren't producing
enough income because the business owners
aren't "business wise." They may
be excellent at a specific task - consulting,
programming, massage therapy, web site design,
copywriting, etc. Or they have a great product.
But wise about the "business" of
business, they are not!
In
the past five years of my business, not one
client (including those who have been in business
for more than 10 years) provided me with a
business plan to review. Not one! Two
of 100 clients have had marketing plans, but
marketing plans don't work without a business
plan and other focus type tools, too. The
other common (95%!) mistake I see (and help
my clients correct) is pricing their services
very low as a way to gain market share and
new clients. So low, in fact, that a potential
buyer will perceive the service or product
as being cheap and of low quality, even when
the provider offers years of expertise. NO
onE wants to hire a business that is
cheap! Inexpensive - yes; affordable - yes;
cheap - no, no, no!
The
most common problems business owners experience
stem from simple functions like streamlining,
organizing, information resourcing, marketing,
planning, visioning, languaging, communication,
technology and ecommerce.
Example:
If you know that most businesses fail because
they don't have a usable business plan, develop
your own business and marketing plans and
use them daily; don't create one that
gathers dust on a shelf. I use the one
Page Business Plan Book or Interactive CD
by Jim Horan. It helps business owners create
very realistic, focused, and well thought-out
business and marketing plans, including scorecards
to help you anticipate and avoid business
problems.
Example:
Recently, a client turned down an opportunity
to teach computer classes on a subject
she could easily teach. Using teaching to
market her business is on her marketing
plan. So why not? Well, the proposed classes
weren't going to help her get business for
her primary business, they weren't going to
attract her ideal client, and the pay was
much lower than her usual hourly rate. She
felt confident about declining the offer.
Of course, that same week, other new business
- the type she really wanted - came her way!
Example:
New client knows she wants to create a business
plan. She also has a strategy of increasing
her income by joining four organizations with
networking opportunities for her to meet her
ideal clients. She joins the first two groups
- total cost: $400. As she starts her business
foundation work, which includes the one
Page Business Plan, she realizes that her
ideal client isn't whom she originally thought
it was! Some clients might be found in the
two groups she's already joined, but not her
ideal clients. As a new business owner, she
wants to spend her time around her ideal clients,
first and foremost. Planning just a little
more for her business would have saved her
$400 in membership fees.
What
other simple things can you do to build a
solid business foundation?
· Use a one-page plan daily to
create your to-do list and monitor your business.
· Create an Ideal Client Profile and
Elevator Speech and define a niche for your
business.
· Read one of the "E-myth
Revisited" books by MichaelGerber.
· Go with your strengths. Hire individuals
whose strengths ARE your weaknesses to "fill
in the gaps."
· Remember that there is no need to
repeat the SAME mistakes others have made.
· Know what your business exit strategy
will be.
Most
business owners don't know what they don't
know. Get assistance by hiring non-biased
professionals who help you realign with your
vision, create plans and financial scorecards
to monitor your business. Look for someone
who can suggest resources to help you and
your business grow. Someone who's been in
your shoes and succeeded. Start looking at
how having a partner - a business consultant,
coach, counselor, strategist, organizer or
planner - can help you grow your business.
Ready
to learn more about business success? Take
a look at the articles I found on business
failure that are posted below, (http://www.coachmaria.com/articles/succeed.html).
Learn to overcome the costly (both in money
and your time) errors that other business
owners have already made. Give your business
a fighting chance to continue to succeed.
© 2004 Maria Marsala, business builder
who helps women-owned service businesses increase
their bottom line in less time. A former Wall
Street trader and manager, she used her business
expertise to create 6 S.I.M.P.L.E. Business
Steps, a program developed to help her clients
succeed in less time. Learn more at http://www.ElevatingYourBusiness.com