(EXCERPT)
The 10 Biggest Blunders (and How You Can Avoid Them)
Blunder # 1 : Taking Your Eye Off of Your Cash Flow
The number one reason that businesses fail is lack of cash. Period. End of
story. Some of the issues that can bury a new business are:
- Under-funded growth.
- Lack of adequate record-keeping.
- No review of financial
statements.
- No control over business assets.
- Unnecessary infrastructure.
- Having
to wait for payment for sales.
- Sacrificing short-term cash flow for long-term
growth. Thinking that because they have a sale they have cash.
- Spending on
inventory.
Strategy: Watch your cash flow and do whatever you can to protect it.
In each of the previous examples of mistakes that cause cash flow problems,
there was simply a lack of consideration about cash flow. You wouldn't grow too
fast if you didn't have the cash, if you knew to watch the cash. You'd have good
financial statements and review these on a regular basis. You would practice
good control and make sure you weren't overspending when you couldn't afford it.
And, you'd make sure you first had the cash flow automatically working before
you took on any more projects or expansion. Cash flow is the lifeblood of your
business. The next five blunders are closely related to blunder one
(Continued below ...)
Blunder #2: Improper Management of Accounts Receivable
Accounts receivable are the amounts that your customers owe you. The best way
to handle accounts receivable is to not have them! Get paid in advance or get
paid at the time of service.
Strategy: If you must have accounts receivable, front load your
collection effort. The longer you wait to collect the money, the less chance you
have of getting it. Collection agencies know this. After all, that's why their
businesses exist in the first place. Yet, most businesses only put their energy
into collection after 60 days have passed. Imagine how much more effective it
would be if that same effort was put into collecting that money at the
beginning, as soon as the service has been provided.
Blunder #3: Over Expansion
If you're a forward planner, over expansion can be a real danger. You know
there is more business coming and so you staff up and invest in inventory,
capital assets, and additional space. The problem is that all this growth is
done without the revenue to cover the additional cost. The new business, if it
indeed does come, might be too little, too late. Your business is now
vulnerable.
Strategy: Plan for just-in-time growth. Remember to outsource and
watch your cash flow during expansions. It might be best to take out small,
short-term loans in the beginning to make sure you have enough cash to handle
all the other aspects of growth.
Blunder #4: Too Much Time Setting Up Instead of Getting
Business
There are some business owners who like everything planned out and organized
before they start. It's a great skill, but it can be death for a new company.
Often it's an excuse to hide behind instead of going out there and asking for
the sale.
Strategy: Sell first! Get money in the door, otherwise, you don't have
a business. You need to collect money and have cash before you can start
organizing anything.
Blunder #5: Selling by the Hour
If all you sell is your time, it's hard to build a true Level Three business.
If you sell by the hour, you are operating in the commoditized world competing
against everyone else. Find a way to capture your value in a comprehensive
solution, or a project result, or a value proposition, so that you can create
and charge for your value independent of your personal time involved in
fulfilling. It's also a much easier transition from a Level Two to Level Three
business, where you are transitioning away from day-to-day work in the business.
Strategy: Look for the unique value you create with your ideas and
work. If you have a successful Level Two business, or Level Two skills, then you
can transition easily to Level Three once you let go of the need to sell by the
hour. Begin by charging a flat fee for the service and then systemize and
optimize the service so your team, technology, and systems fulfill your promise
in a way that creates more value for your client with lower cost to your
business. And finally, turn your knowledge into an information product and sell
this as an additional revenue stream.
Blunder #6: Giving Your Expertise Away in a Way that Has No
Perceived Value
This is a challenge for many professionals. Prospects call and want to meet
with you for a free consultation. You want to dazzle them and give them tons of
good information in the free consultation. Yet this one-on-one time is the most
costly time you have, because you've got no leverage on it and you haven't been
paid for it. Plus, you have no guarantee that you'll even get a client out of
the deal!
Strategy: You've spent a career lifetime learning the skills to ask
the right questions and look at your client's situation and challenges in a
systematic way. Charge for this expertise and structure that you bring to the
table. Not only will it make you more money because it will be an additional
revenue stream, but it will also dramatically increase your closing ratio in
converting prospects into paying clients. Best of all your new clients will
benefit from the extra value they'll receive now that you help them understand
and appreciate the tangible value your expertise delivers to them.
Blunder #7: Requiring Payment Before You Give any Value
Okay, this might sound like a contradiction to Blunder #6, but it's not. Be
willing to give value first to start the relationship, but do it in a virtual
way that minimizes any one-on-one time of your own, Giving value is often a
great way to invest in a new business relationship that can pay great dividends.
Just do it consciously and not out of habit or fear of asking for payment.
Strategy: Give prospective clients some huge benefit that has just a
one-time cost and requires no ongoing time of yours. For example, we've created
the "Millionaire Fast-Track Program," a $2,150 free bonus for people who
register their copy of The Maui Millionaires for Business. While it costs us
over $100,000 to create and maintain this valuable bonus, we know that over time
it will generate millions of dollars of value for our business. How? Because it
is a simple and easy way for readers to start doing business with us after
gelling an incredible free gift that shows them the quality of the information
we offer, We used this with our last book, The Maui Millionaires, as well, and
thousands of our readers let us know their appreciation for the book bonus we
used in that case by choosing to enter into a long-term, mutually profitable
relationship with us and our companies.
One hint: Your free content needs to have real value. It shouldn't be just a
sales pitch. Instead, gracefully and tastefully offer your products or services
in your free content in a way that makes the experience a positive and valuable
one for your new clients.
Blunder #8: Ignoring Window Shoppers in Favor of Customers
A lot more people will visit your brick-and-mortar shop or your virtual
business than will ever become customers. Don't make the mistake of
concentrating on the customers only and ignoring the visitors. Your visitors are
people who contact your company through an inbound phone call, in-store visit,
or someone who buys your book, or visits your web site. Far too many businesses
ignore these unrecorded guests even though your business may be spending
hundreds of thousands or millions of dollars in marketing costs just to get them
to come by. You must find automatic, systematized ways to get your visitors to
tell you who they are.
Strategy: Offer your visitors such great value (for free) that they
choose to enter into a relationship with you in a way that lets you know who
they are. The special book bonus you get with this book is a powerful example of
this. Each of these offers requires our guest to let us know who they are in
order to receive this free information. We each get something of value in the
exchange. This same strategy can be used in a retail store (e.g. offer them a
free gift certificate), in a service-based business (e.g. script out how your
phone team will offer your callers a free e-book, gift, or upgraded service), or
in any other business. All it takes is a little imagination.
Blunder #9: Hiring "Warm Bodies"
When the rush of new business happens, it's really tempting to hire any and
everyone. The problem with doing warm body hiring is twofold. First, you may or
may not be getting quality employees. And second. you could very well experience
a sales slump and be stuck with a big payroll.
Strategy: Use outsourcing to fulfill staffing needs rather than hiring
employees. When you do hire employees, always make sure you do background
checks, verify references, and get signed non-disclosure and non-compete
agreements.
Blunder # 10: Failure to Fulfill Sales Promises
In Blunder #4 we talked about the danger of spending all of your time and
effort in building the infrastructure and systems and ignoring the sales
component. That's a complete non-starter for a successful business. Without
sales and cash flow coming in you have no business.
But the extreme opposite is a problem as well. In this case, you make lots of
sales, but don't have a good operations system to fulfill the product or
services. In the short run, you're fine because you have cash. But, in the long
run, you don't have a business that is sustainable because the only referrals
you are getting are tepid at best and negative at worst. And, taken to the
extreme, you might even have a lawsuit if you fail to fulfill or make a mistake
because your internal documentation is out of order.
Author David Finkel is one of the nation's most respected wealth
masters. A former Olympic-level athlete, he is a business and real estate
multimillionaire and the co-creator of Maui Mastermind, the world's most
exclusive wealth retreat™. He is also the bestselling coauthor of The Maui
Millionaires (with Diane Kennedy) and The Real Estate Fast Track, both from
Wiley. His how-to financial articles have appeared in over 4,000 periodicals
across the United States.
Diane Kennedy, CPA, is a top real estate author and investing expert.
She is the founder and owner of DKA, a leading tax strategy and accounting firm.
A past recipient of the prestigious Blue Chip Enterprise Award, she is also the
author of Loopholes of the Rich and The Insider's Guide to Real Estate Investing
Loopholes, both from Wiley.
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