Help 4 You podcast h4u020 061208 - Reviewing the podcast so far; Growing your company incrementally
Help 4 You and your small business
In today's show, I gave you: An idea to help your business to grow - How do you grow your company incrementally? A review of this podcast My goal is to give you insight into how to grow your small
business. The two-part process I follow gives you a) an idea that other SMEs have used to grow their business b) an interview with an entrepreneur to hear who they are, where they have come from,
what th...
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In today's show, I gave you: An idea to help your business to grow - How do you grow your company incrementally? A review of this podcast My goal is to give you insight into how to grow your small
business. The two-part process I follow gives you a) an idea that other SMEs have used to grow their business b) an interview with an entrepreneur to hear who they are, where they have come from,
what they are doing with their business and their growth intentions. I also ran through the topics I have covered and the people I have spoken to How do you grow your company incrementally? I work as
a business coach, helping small businesses to grow so I enjoy meeting entrepreneurs who want to increase their company size. When I met Michael recently, I was happy to tell him that there are only
three ways in which he can build his business: Increase the number of clients. Increase the average sale value to each client. Increase the number of times clients return and buy again. Of course,
there is a gap between knowing this fact and actually achieving it. That is where the business coach comes in. Knowing your numbers The first step was for Michael to calculate his baseline figures:
1. Calculate the number of clients that bought his services in the past 12 months. 2. Work out the average amount these clients spent on each transaction. 3. Determine how often these clients made a
purchase in the year. Michael runs a photocopy and art ware shop. So his electronic till system told him he had 3,400 receipts in the past 12 months, with an average £10 for each till receipt.
He also has a customer loyalty scheme so he was able to break down his client list to show that the 3,400 receipts represented 2,100 customers, ranging from one to nine purchases in the year, with an
average of about three purchases in a year. So 2100 Customers x £10 each receipt x 3 times a year = £63,000 Incrementing your numbers The next step was to help Michael to recognise the
power of incrementing his numbers: If he can get a 10% increase any factor, his revenue will grow by 10%. If he can increase two factors by 10% each, that is 21% revenue growth. If he can increase
all the factors by 10%, his revenue growth will be 33%. So we are looking at the costs of making these increases. Getting more customers Michael drew up a list of ways to increase his customer base:
putting more advertising in local papers; leafleting the homes and businesses in his town; turning his delivery van into a mobile advert; putting an A board outside his shop; and updating his shop
window display. When he has costed each of these actions, we will rate what response we think each will produce and decide what actions he wants to take. Increasing transaction sizes Michael was
stuck for ideas to increase the average size of each sale. So I started to coach him on what each sale comprises. Well he knew the basic component is the item that the customer has come to the shop
for – predominantly photocopying. So we examined the till record to see what patterns there were in the multiple purchases, then we developed a list of more than 20 popular ‘shopping
baskets’. We brain stormed why his customers would have bought those particular combinations and then we hypothesised the customer’s needs that lay behind each ‘shopping
basket’. Suddenly Michael could see some meaning in his data. So the next step of knowing how to increase his receipts became easy – he had to find out which pattern each customer falls
into and then encourage them to buy the combinations of goods and services that they are interested in. Knowing what his customers want to buy, he can easily to cross sell and add value to their
basket before they check it out. So he is optimistic that a 20% growth is possible though I have encouraged him to start with a more realistic 10%. Boosting resale frequency In some ways, Michael has
already made a good progress with repeat sales. His customer loyalty scheme is quite effective with 25% of his custom
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Mon December 11 2006
In today's show, I gave you: An idea to help your business to grow - How do you grow your company incrementally? A review of this podcast My goal is t...
read more
In today's show, I gave you: An idea to help your business to grow - How do you grow your company incrementally? A review of this podcast My goal is to give you insight into how to grow your small
business. The two-part process I follow gives you a) an idea that other SMEs have used to grow their business b) an interview with an entrepreneur to hear who they are, where they have come from,
what th...
read more
In today's show, I gave you: An idea to help your business to grow - How do you grow your company incrementally? A review of this podcast My goal is to give you insight into how to grow your small
business. The two-part process I follow gives you a) an idea that other SMEs have used to grow their business b) an interview with an entrepreneur to hear who they are, where they have come from,
what they are doing with their business and their growth intentions. I also ran through the topics I have covered and the people I have spoken to How do you grow your company incrementally? I work as
a business coach, helping small businesses to grow so I enjoy meeting entrepreneurs who want to increase their company size. When I met Michael recently, I was happy to tell him that there are only
three ways in which he can build his business: Increase the number of clients. Increase the average sale value to each client. Increase the number of times clients return and buy again. Of course,
there is a gap between knowing this fact and actually achieving it. That is where the business coach comes in. Knowing your numbers The first step was for Michael to calculate his baseline figures:
1. Calculate the number of clients that bought his services in the past 12 months. 2. Work out the average amount these clients spent on each transaction. 3. Determine how often these clients made a
purchase in the year. Michael runs a photocopy and art ware shop. So his electronic till system told him he had 3,400 receipts in the past 12 months, with an average £10 for each till receipt.
He also has a customer loyalty scheme so he was able to break down his client list to show that the 3,400 receipts represented 2,100 customers, ranging from one to nine purchases in the year, with an
average of about three purchases in a year. So 2100 Customers x £10 each receipt x 3 times a year = £63,000 Incrementing your numbers The next step was to help Michael to recognise the
power of incrementing his numbers: If he can get a 10% increase any factor, his revenue will grow by 10%. If he can increase two factors by 10% each, that is 21% revenue growth. If he can increase
all the factors by 10%, his revenue growth will be 33%. So we are looking at the costs of making these increases. Getting more customers Michael drew up a list of ways to increase his customer base:
putting more advertising in local papers; leafleting the homes and businesses in his town; turning his delivery van into a mobile advert; putting an A board outside his shop; and updating his shop
window display. When he has costed each of these actions, we will rate what response we think each will produce and decide what actions he wants to take. Increasing transaction sizes Michael was
stuck for ideas to increase the average size of each sale. So I started to coach him on what each sale comprises. Well he knew the basic component is the item that the customer has come to the shop
for – predominantly photocopying. So we examined the till record to see what patterns there were in the multiple purchases, then we developed a list of more than 20 popular ‘shopping
baskets’. We brain stormed why his customers would have bought those particular combinations and then we hypothesised the customer’s needs that lay behind each ‘shopping
basket’. Suddenly Michael could see some meaning in his data. So the next step of knowing how to increase his receipts became easy – he had to find out which pattern each customer falls
into and then encourage them to buy the combinations of goods and services that they are interested in. Knowing what his customers want to buy, he can easily to cross sell and add value to their
basket before they check it out. So he is optimistic that a 20% growth is possible though I have encouraged him to start with a more realistic 10%. Boosting resale frequency In some ways, Michael has
already made a good progress with repeat sales. His customer loyalty scheme is quite effective with 25% of his custom
read less
Fri December 01 2006
In today's show, I gave you: An idea to help your business to grow - How does your value chain look? Information about the fifth annual Consultancy De...
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In today's show, I gave you: An idea to help your business to grow - How does your value chain look? Information about the fifth annual Consultancy Development Network conference on 11th and 12th
December 2006 at Paramount Daventry Hotel, Northamptonshire An interview with Jaci Godman Irvine, of Employment Law Essentials - putting businesses in control of their employee issues Jaci is a
Certified ...
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In today's show, I gave you: An idea to help your business to grow - How does your value chain look? Information about the fifth annual Consultancy Development Network conference on 11th and 12th
December 2006 at Paramount Daventry Hotel, Northamptonshire An interview with Jaci Godman Irvine, of Employment Law Essentials - putting businesses in control of their employee issues Jaci is a
Certified Partner in Employment Law Essentials. The company helps businesses to put in place robust employee systems so that employee contracts meet current UK legal requirements and employee issues
are easy to manage. You can contact Jaci by email at jgi@eleonline.com, by telephone on 01303 773178, by mobile on 07919 471335 or through the company web site www.eleonline.com How does your value
chain look? Last week, I was called into a company that has outgrown its start-up team. The directors told me that they no longer understood how the company worked and they wanted me to help them
re-organise it. When they started, everyone in the company had direct access to the three decision makers, Tim, David and Magi. As the staff size grew to 10 people, people moved to working in twos,
threes and fours, and decision-taking has become chaotic. Building a business model To cut through this confusion, I talked to the directors about their value chain and how to understand their
business in terms of the activities that contribute value to their customers. This model shows the Overhead activities as a horizontal block spanning the value-building activities of Design,
Purchase, Manufacturing, and Marketing, Sales and Distribution. (Many people label these Back and Front End activities.) Mapping the activities to the model I worked with David to map who was working
for him in designing and making the goods. Magi talked me through how she leads the purchasing, training and distribution activities. Then Tim helped me to map the Marketing and Sales activities. The
overhead activities seemed to have grown ‘like Topsy’: David, Magi and Tim all pointed to each other when I asked who managed them. Much of the operational confusion has been eliminated
just by mapping these activities and then annotating the names of the managers and staff. Focusing on building value Considering the narrow value chain within their own business, I will probably
spend the next three months helping the directors to find incremental changes to improve how activities feed value forward along the value chain. Taking a broader view, Magi may want to work with
significant suppliers to review the back end efficiency. Similarly, Tim could form tighter links to key customers in the front end of the value chain. Collaboration in these two areas could enable
them to add more value (and reduce waste or inefficiencies that have crept in). Already, the three directors seem to have got a grip on their company once more. They tell me they are taking decisions
more confidently, knowing that the activities in the company are interconnected and that once again value is moving forward. The Consultancy Development Network are holding their fifth annual
conference on 11th and 12th December 2006 at Paramount Daventry Hotel, Northamptonshire (www.cdnuk.com for details and bookings) There are many important speakers: Nigel Risner, Andy Bounds, Alan
Stevens, Neil Annis, Rob Brown, Simon Zutshi, Stephen Askew and Laurie Philp. The CDN Conference gives consultants, speakers, coachers, trainers and business entrepreneurs opportunites for business
growth, personal development and alliance opportunities. Both days are packed full with a variety of practical ideas to grow your business and develop your personal skills and qualities. For more
details, call Laurie Philp on freephone 08004 589231, telephone 01227 451400, email laurie.philp@cdnuk.com or visit the website: www.cdnuk.com Adrian Pepper coaches people through business and
personal difficulties, helping company owners and directors figure out what to do, how
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Sat November 11 2006
In today's show, I gave you: An idea to help your business to grow - How well do you follow the buying signals? An interview with Michael Kemp of Am I...
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In today's show, I gave you: An idea to help your business to grow - How well do you follow the buying signals? An interview with Michael Kemp of Am I Secure? - providing confidential security advice
that is understood by all Am I Secure? provide expert security services to a wide range of business clients throughout the UK and internationally. They provide computer security that is affordable to
...
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In today's show, I gave you: An idea to help your business to grow - How well do you follow the buying signals? An interview with Michael Kemp of Am I Secure? - providing confidential security advice
that is understood by all Am I Secure? provide expert security services to a wide range of business clients throughout the UK and internationally. They provide computer security that is affordable to
organisations of all budget sizes, helping them to defend against current and emerging digital threats. They commit to providing technical delivery, customer confidentiality, and security advice that
can be understood by everyone, not just technical experts. You can contact Michael by email at mike@amisecure.co.uk or through his web site www.amisecure.co.uk How well do you follow the buying
signals? The owner of small business, Fred approached me because he generates plenty of leads but has difficulty converting them into sales. Fred was down in the mouth, ranting about his marketing
spend and complaining about wasting time chasing browsers not buyers. How do you recognise a hot lead? Fred was trying to weed out his hot leads from his not leads using follow-up conversations.
Unfortunately, he had not figured out the buying signals that separate likely buyers from mainly browsers. So I have been helping Fred to recognise those target people who are holding up a placard,
and are already primed to buy from him. Keyword searching generates buying signals Every time someone enters a query into a search engine, they send out buying signals. Therefore, if you focus your
online advertising on buying queries, rather than browsing queries, more of your search clicks will become customers. For instance, if you are an electrician, the terms "electricity website" and
"electricity information" are browsing signals. Whereas "hire electrician", "rewiring quote", and "electrician recommendation" are buying signals. If somebody reaches you by typing in one of those
search terms, they are waving a placard at you. Directories give buying signals Simply by picking up a directory, your prospect is sending out a clear buying signal: people do not browse paper or
online directories for fun. Rather prospects use these directories to identify people from whom they want to buy. If a prospect finds you from a directory, they have a clear intention to purchase.
Sales from one business feed buying signals to another Buying a bath is a clear signal that someone will need to fit it. If you are a plumber, having a commission-based deal with a bathroom supplier
will get you a steady stream of customers. So affiliate with owners of other small businesses where their sale equals your buying signal: Graphic Designers with Printers, Video Rental Shops with
Cinemas, and Estate Agents with Interior Designers and Business Coaches with Accountants. People who come to you from an affiliate want your sale to add value to their previous purchases. What
questions do you ask? So I got Fred to ask his prospect about their search route – did they use Google, search the Yellow pages, read a newspaper advert or hear a personal recommendation. This
leads nicely into asking what criteria the prospect used to eliminate Fred’s competitors – such as distance, qualifications, something specific in the advert or brand familiarity. I also
coached Fred to hold off telling prospects about his products or services until he had found out what the prospect was looking for and what was important to them about what he was selling. If someone
comes to buy a car from you, how do you know what is important to them about the car? It could be the colour; it might be safety; possibly the CD player quality or even the fuel economy. So ask. How
do you gain rapport with your prospects? I asked Fred how he builds rapport while he talks to the prospect. He looked completely blank. Sales experts study NLP and similar advanced skills, however I
find the basic skills of rapport are sufficient for most sales: spea
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Sat October 28 2006
In today's show, I gave you: An idea to help your business to grow - What mindset do you use and what is effective? An interview with Jon Smith of Cha...
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In today's show, I gave you: An idea to help your business to grow - What mindset do you use and what is effective? An interview with Jon Smith of Chauffeur My Car - Our chauffeurs - Your car
Chauffeur My Car works for blue chip companies, smaller enterprises and individuals, providing experienced chauffeurs to drive your car, door to door on an ad hoc basis: part-time, full-time,
anytime. Our cha...
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In today's show, I gave you: An idea to help your business to grow - What mindset do you use and what is effective? An interview with Jon Smith of Chauffeur My Car - Our chauffeurs - Your car
Chauffeur My Car works for blue chip companies, smaller enterprises and individuals, providing experienced chauffeurs to drive your car, door to door on an ad hoc basis: part-time, full-time,
anytime. Our chauffeurs drive your car - no more worrying how to get there or where to park, the chauffeur takes care of the details and you arrive relaxed and ready to do the business. Why not
try this ultimate hands-free solution for businesses on the move, with chauffeurs throughout London and the Home Counties. You can contact Jon by telephone: 08081 787575, email:
info@chauffeurmycar.com or through his web site: www.chauffeurmycar.com What mindset do you use and what is effective? With a new client, I had tremendous difficulty making sense of how they wanted
to grow their business and improve their income. Then at our third meeting, I had a moment of insight when I recognised we were assuming different mindsets. Knowing your mindset I am sure that no
mindset is wrong but my experience with this client shows how important it is to know your mindset and run your business to match it. 1. Manufacturing activity In the manufacturing mindset, you
decide what you want to make and sell. You then set a price based on your costs and sell to the customers what you have on offer. Success with this mindset comes by competing on efficiency: using
your material inputs well and squeezing your costs to increase your profit margins. 2. Selling speak In the selling mindset, you convince your customers to buy the products that you like selling.
Then you get your supply channels to make what you ask for. Success with this mindset comes by competing on discounts and sales sweeteners to get your profit from the sales volume. 3. Marketing think
In the marketing mindset, you obsess about understanding what your customer values. When you find the benefits that your customers want, you package them to convince your customers to buy from you
repeatedly. Success with this mindset comes by watching your competition, listening to your customers and offering the best package available. The mindset in professional services Applying this
insight to my client’s professional services business, I was able to ask him three simple questions that helped him recognise his preferred mindset: Do you want to sell hours of advice, billing
by the hour and using your expertise? [Manufacture] Do you want to sell studies and reports to people who need them, possibly getting affiliates to write some of the documents for you? [Sell] Do you
want to deliver better business results, greater profitability and be a trustworthy partner for your long-term clients? [Market] Which mindset do you work in? If you understand yourself, and are
aware of your mindset preference, you will find business easier. Adrian Pepper coaches people through business and personal difficulties, helping company owners and directors figure out what to do,
how to move forward and what to get organised. You can contact him at Help 4 You Limited on +44 (0)7773 380133 or email adrian@help4you.ltd.uk. His podcast for small businesses is at
feeds.feedburner.com/help4you. Please can you add your pin to our Frappr map at www.frappr.com/help4you
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Sun October 15 2006
In today's show, I gave you: * An idea to help your business to grow - How do you develop your marketing portfolio? * A discussion on the sources of s...
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In today's show, I gave you: * An idea to help your business to grow - How do you develop your marketing portfolio? * A discussion on the sources of support for the small business How do you develop
your marketing portfolio? I have been working with a management team who have dreams of growing their small business by developing their market offering. Most small businesses grow because the
products...
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In today's show, I gave you: * An idea to help your business to grow - How do you develop your marketing portfolio? * A discussion on the sources of support for the small business How do you develop
your marketing portfolio? I have been working with a management team who have dreams of growing their small business by developing their market offering. Most small businesses grow because the
products and services that they offer happen to find favour with their customers. How refreshing it is to work with business people who plan for growth. We started by reviewing the marketing
strategies that Bill, Gary and Tim have for their four products. Some products are doing well but one of them needs to be re-positioned in the market and Tim worried about how this might change the
company strategy. Options in Your Market For each product, we explored four distinctive marketing strategies: Penetrate your current market to reach more customers (with your current product). Extend
your marketing to reach customers in new markets (with your current product). Develop new products for your current customers (to replace the current product). Diversify the products you offer in
ways that complement your current product. Small companies tend follow one strategy for each product at a time and, as Bill rightly pointed out, it takes 18 months to properly test the market
response to a strategy change. So we discussed the strategy for the product A. Gary is the technical design member on the team so he liked the third approach – selling new products and services
to the current clients. Bill has more sales skills and favoured the first approach (selling the existing products and services to new clients who are similar to the current clientele) together with
the second approach (reaching clients in new areas of the market). Options with Your Products For each product, the team considered, discussed, argued and finally agreed what they wanted to do. Next
we folded the four ‘product strategies’ into a ‘company strategy’ by working out how the marketing of each product would impact the marketing of the others. This resulted in a
decision to treat products A and D as a pair and to find complementary products for the B and C products – aiming to have seven products in their portfolio by next year. Building the strategy
into the business plans With this company strategy, Tim then amended the Business Plan to reflect the decisions taken while Bill and Gary amended their respective Marketing and Production Plans. How
their clients respond to the new marketing push will be interesting and Tim, Gary and Bill will need to update their plans as they see what happens. My hope is that developing their marketing
portfolio like this, they will have more control of where their company is going and what their clients buy from them. Sources of support for small businesses Today I discussed the various sources of
business support available to small businesses, and I noted that my experience in only with business support in England. So I would value your comments about the business support that you get,
whether in England, other parts of the UK, in Europe, the USA or other parts of the world. I discussed: Business Link www.businesslink.gov.uk HM Revenue and Customs www.hmrc.gov.uk/bst/index.htm DTi
www.dti.gov.uk/bbf/BSS/page28879.html Federation of Small Businesses www.fsb.org.uk British Chambers of Commerce http://www.chamberonline.co.uk Professional advisors: accountants, solicitors,
business consultants etc Of course I put a caveat on the discussion by saying that these are purely my own views and that you should not take action based on them but rather you should ask your own
advisors. Adrian Pepper coaches people through business and personal difficulties, helping company owners and directors figure out what to do, how to move forward and what to get organised. You can
contact him at Help 4 You Limited on +44 (0)7773 380133 or email adrian@help4you.ltd.uk. His podcast
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