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While the Iron is Hot
Although the ownership analogy doesn't really work for me as I'm an owner, it might be really helpful for my staff, - they would argue that they already act like owners! In fact most are partners in our enterprise and see direct benefits from growing our biz.
During slow times we can focus on communication with our ideal clients - past - as well as our prospects.
Important that this communication (indeed social communication in general) should not be geared toward outgoing communication but more to listening!
"Use your Ears" to make the next sale.
Sales communications have moved away from broadcasting, through narrowcasting to whispering in the ear of our ideal client.
Now it's time to use our ears. If we do it well, we'll have new products and services under development in the slow times and be ready to service clients once things speed back up.
Many of us ended up on our own because we had an idea about something we wanted to do that didn't fit into a tidy job description, or a company for that matter. So we build a business based on what we think we want to do.
What often gets lost, however, is that businesses succeed because they do something that someone *needs*. They solve a problem. Make something easier. Make something better. Make something go away.
I hear a lot of people (specifically in professional services/consulting) saying lately that they want to help companies with "strategy". Strategy is glamorous, lofty, brain taxing work, and it makes us all feel as though we're thinking at some mythical higher plane.
But the reality of this climate is that execution sells. I'm going to succeed when the next one won't. Why? Because I'm willing to take on the shorter term project that's less glamorous and means getting my hands dirty. Because that's what businesses need when budgets and human resources are uncertain. They don't need some air-filled, aspirational strategic plan. They need to survive, and sometimes a down and dirty plan with no-frills execution will do. And when everyone else is using $5 words and selling a handful of designer purses, I'm going to blaze the trail by selling a thousand pairs of overstock nylons.
Thanks for the reminder, Chris.
It's just so simple. It goes back to the ol' lemonade stand and the innocence of being a kid who's just jazzed to see a car drive up.
I can still picture anxiously waiting for a customer to finish off their dixie cup. Was it okay? Does it need more sugar? Are you hungry? We have cookies, too!
The other aspect that I think hits the mark is strengthening relationships. Not only is it just rewarding personally, it shows people that you're staying put. You're not closing up shop and going home. Even if your clients don't have the budget for your services right now, who do you think they're going to think of when things turn around?
You betcha. So keep the pitcher cold and the paper signs posted.
The more you do for your company, and the more parts you're involved in...the more instrumental, and likewise indispensable, you are.
Are there any tips to help me?
I've never considered myself as a business in my own right and what I do as a product, but it is a perfect analogy, particularly in this economic climate.
It seriously makes you re-evaluate what you do as part of your job, and what rewards you get in return.
It also makes you reconsider the relationships you foster in the workplace.
Cheers Chris
= )
corporations were created by visionaries like Sam Walton.
Makes you wonder what Henry Ford would be thinking today.
Do you think he would have flown the corporate Jet?
Glenn Seymour
I have always believed, it is almost always all about getting your fundamentals right. Here the store example is a fundamental model. Consistency at the fundamental level is the key.
Indeed: 'How Store Owners View Downturns' - this goes also for employees within large organizations; i.e. strengthen your relationships with internal customers, and look for new internal customers as well.
The father didn't have all that business education so he figured his son must know what he was talking about. He stopped buying new paint and pretty soon.. the business started looking shabby and pretty soon ... his son was right he started feeling the effects of the depression.
For so long people have depended on their employers for 'security' - so much so that the term 'career management' (or as you reference in this post and in your interview with LuckyStartUps - running your own store)has been basically ignored. Everyone needs to think of job security as 'extinct' in this day and age and begin to manage their careers on a regular basis (just as they would their own store). Unfortunately, many people just do not know where to begin they are so used to their employer providing everything and it is devastating when the layoff notice hits.
In my coaching practice I continually advocate being the 'owner' of your career. And as you also commented on in your interview "keep growing your network - don't just tend to it when a catastrophe hits". Your network is your pot of gold!
Great post - Happy Thanksgiving.
Robin Ogden
http://www.firedupcareers.com
The one thing I would like to say is that people need to be fearless. They need to ride into this crisis with their guard up and start making decisions that directly affect their business instead of worrying what the drama queens (the media) have to say.
People just need to ask themselves "What's Important To Me Right Now." If it's sales, relationships, or whatever it is, they should 100% focus on it because that is what's going to get them through this crisis.
I will use the inference "I", yet believe "we" may all be true to basic business principles as a group in the choir.
I know that my standard operating procedure does bend because of how I feel from day to day. Affirming and tending to the business foundations may be subject to a change in “the flavor of the day” but not in giving the customer the best (business 101) in "every" other respect.
To know a storm is coming and stand with your hands up and yell the sky is falling is such a crock. Ya just want to slap them and tell them to wake up and get to work!! ((Could be too much TV time, vicarious living, and poor modeling.)) Whenever in history we are challenged with what seems like insurmountable turmoil and change, there is the 20% or maybe 20% of that 20% who is always moving forward. The up side to this is – by using an analogy here - Remember how a fine perfume is diffused in a room. It seeks quickly a molecule at a time as it travels from a high concentration (that would be 20% of the 20%) to the areas of the lowest concentration (those that are in 80% that will be influenced the most). So influence strongly one relationship at a time by giving them what they need…
I had a very wealthy millionaire once tell me; "Terry while my children have everything including the all the stores in their times of need they whine and put their hands out. You have been challenged with it all and always do the next thing. You even used the analogy that life’s motivations internally & chemically feel the same. Ones response differs in to active ways 1. You are running away from something or 2. Running towards something. So in the storm make sure the planes are anchored down on the aircraft carrier at sea, and you are attending to the things that will yield the greatest benefits when the storm breaks" Take the lead, nurture and be the model innovator…
Build relationships that give and empower others whether with the products you provide or your words that set you apart. Always pay it forward while moving forward and you will create recession proof customer relationships looking for the pace setting innovations...
The company that I am very excited to work with is "Foot Solutions". I bring it up because we tend to the foot. I believe that when one holds another’s foot and discusses a full spectrum of concerns and needs you solidify a foundation and relationship.
So Serve & Be Blessed in all you do...
As a long term business developer who has a foot in both the sales and marketing side of our marketing consulting practice, its also about remembering to appreciate the client in numerous ways. Think about whats in it for them as well as the trim, cut and track mentality about ongoing marketing.
Wendy