A sample text widget

Etiam pulvinar consectetur dolor sed malesuada. Ut convallis euismod dolor nec pretium. Nunc ut tristique massa.

Nam sodales mi vitae dolor ullamcorper et vulputate enim accumsan. Morbi orci magna, tincidunt vitae molestie nec, molestie at mi. Nulla nulla lorem, suscipit in posuere in, interdum non magna.

6 Tips to Build Success in 2014

Well it’s mid January and the dust of 2013 has settled. Now is the time to start implementing the necessary changes to reach your personal and business goals. Hopefully your business goals are focused, measurable, and realistic because over 60% of people fail to reach their goals before the middle of the year even with strategic planning. Review my previous post about simple rules to use for 2014 and pay attention to punctuality, organization, and building value. It can be hard to know the best steps to take to ensure that you realize your potential, personally and in business. Here is a list of tips to help migrate from this month of reflection and evaluation to February, where you will  build a foundation for change.

Commit to Communication

Communication is one of the key tools for change. Discussing goals and opportunities with friends, family, and colleagues enforces the benefits of your goals and provides support through praise, advice, and  motivation. They may provide the necessary help to get you off the ground. Develop good communication habits by actively listening, responding effectively, and following up. Just like a small business, personal relationships require investment and management.

Finish Your Personal Evaluation

Everyone talks about goal setting, cleaning house, making way for the new, and getting ready. These are all great in concept but don’t lead to action. Take ACTION by finishing your reflective period and start to implement your plan.

Make Realistic Plans

Lofty goals?

Simple Plan… Big Results

In many cases lofty goals are just that, lofty. Make plans that are realistic and part of a strategy for the year not for a single problem. Build daily action that represent steps in your process. For example, in your small business keeping better track of expenses starts with recording them in a daily ledger. Don’t worry about what is going to happen tomorrow or how much you will use for taxes. Just do it! Remember, it is always easier to edit than to create.

Understand Your Value

If nothing else this coming year, figure out your value and apply it to your goals, expectations, and interaction with others. With this knowledge you can make critical decisions  to delegate, outsource, or eliminate tasks and projects that don’t add value or detract from your goals. Ask, how often is time, energy, or money wasted in pursuit of something that can be done faster, better, or for less cost by someone or something else? The answer will startle you and provide motivation for change.

Automate, Automate, Automate

Make it once and use it over and over again. Review practices or habits and remove the “one off.” Automated process and procedures become a way to optimize resources without additional investment. Examples include auto responders for e-mail, information aggregators, monthly payment plans, and online calendars. Regardless of the situation automation can save time, create value, and enhance experience.

Eliminate the Paper Trail

Writing something down more than once creates potential for loss, increase in clutter, and leads to disorganization. Put everything into on online format to make sure it is measurable, traceable, and available at the touch of a button. Don’t write it several times.. type it once and save.

Easy For You to Say

It all sounds great but how is it actually done. The processing, goal-setting, strategic planning, measuring tools, and technology. Where to begin?  Contact me and we can find out together. Don’t wait until tomorrow to make the changes that were necessary yesterday.

 

When is the Best Time to Make Changes?

You have managed to survive the visiting relatives, endless parties, and office “sugar buffets” without losing your temper or gaining to much weight.  Now is the time to focus

Strategic change is best

Alter your business practices strategically

on 2014 in your personal life and business. Pressure from society instructs us to set goals, create resolutions, and change behavior simply because of a change in a year digit. This philosophy is doomed to fail. Look back over the last 10 years and ask yourself how many “New Year” changes did you incorporate into your daily behavior. Not many is my guess.

Is change necessary?

Why make changes at all? This question masks the reason for any change initiative – perceived benefit. If a shift in behavior, practice, or process doesn’t result in quantifiable results, the alteration will not stick. Many small business owners attempt to reorganize their resources because of a pain response. Examples include cost cutting, hiring or firing employees, product changes, and targeting new markets. At face value, these are all solid ways of making changes to the fabric of their business. The problem is the decision-making process within the business model.

Process versus result    

Basing success on the assumption that any long-term change to the business has to demonstrate a measurable benefit helps to limit the scope of potential changes. The first step in the process is to define all potential areas of concern and outline a prioritized list of changes with respective benefit. From that list specific projects can be developed with set parameters, defined participants, and  expected outcome(s). Sounds great, doesn’t it? Unfortunately this process is as hard to implement as New Year resolutions, because benefits, typically, are not clearly communicated and results are partially measured, or not at all.

Fixing the problem

The solution lies in building a process for change that acts as a continuous framework to build on rather than attempting to make alterations to the business as a “one-off”. This method will sustain communication, lead to collaborative goals and expectations, and create the necessary value to make changes permanent. To start, the process should  be a simple template that answers the following questions:

  • Why the change is necessary?
  • Who is affected and who needs to participate?
  • What will it cost and how will it be implemented?
  • Where is the benefit and how will it be communicated?
  • When can it be completed and how will success be measured?

Once completed, create one small project and see how the process works. Make necessary adjustments and roll it out.

Breaking it down for use

Okay, you agree with the idea of the process and can answer the questions if cornered; but the real question is, how do I start? Begin by stimulating value in yourself and your business. Assess your areas of weakness and decide if any possible change would help.  List them in order of priority and focus on one fundamental area.

For example, there is an issue with collecting receivables. What would the benefit(s) be of a better collection process? Decide on potential options to fix. These could include outsourcing, rolling out policies, creating new payment methods, restructuring debt, or building customized communication. Measurement of success may include change in revenue, change in customer satisfaction, increase in short-term cash, decrease in processing costs, etc. The goal is to create a problem/solution relationship that is quantified and sustainable.

If you need help or have questions regarding building templates and optimizing your business structure, contact us for an appointment.

Return to Top...