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Six Ways To Grow Your Business
Jay Abrams, an excellent marketing guru and
speaker, says there are only three ways to grow your business: 1) More
customers, 2) Higher average sales/revenue per customer and 3) A higher
purchase frequency from your customers. Although this is a great model
to divide and attack the problem, it is more a classification of
categories of ways than actual ways to grow your company. Luckily we
can come up with hundreds of ways to grow a business and the tough part
is deciding where to put your efforts. One theory is that with ever
growing sales and marketing costs it is usually easier to get more
revenue from existing customers than to find new customers. Yet most
businesses put more time and effort into customer acquisition than
retention and upselling (#2 and #3). This varies greatly from business
to business, and is a function of the actual acquisition costs of a
customer, what else they might need when they need your product and many
other factors.
Every business has lots more ways to look at
within these categories. Odds are you can do something with most of
these ideas eventually.
#1 - Identify your company’s weakest link and
make it a strength - Every business has many limits, but usually one
or two are more of a bottleneck on growth than the others. As each limit
is taken away the level of success of the business can leapfrog. This
is a great way to grow your business in steps. Often than not these
limits are in the areas of sales and marketing, though certainly they
can be anywhere. Minor changes in product and service positioning, or
adding options can also have a dramatic effect. So one great way to
understand this is to analyze your marketing and sales process, or
marketing funnel. Each step, or level, has a cost and a leakage rate of
customers that are lost at that level. Companies need to understand the
economics of each of these steps. How much does each potential customer
cost to get to each level in the process? When you understand these
steps well the weak spots will jump out at you to work on. Typically
sales and marketing people are not analytical types and so the CEO must
drive this process. If you keep identifying the weakest spot and
correcting it one to three time per year your company will grow.
#2 – Be willing to spend more to get a customer
– Many companies I coach and consult with are very limited in their
methods of customer acquisition. Typically you should have at least
three to four good solid ways to acquire customers and maybe more. This
diversity in customer acquisition makes your company more stable and
gives you a broader base of customers. It also gives you better
information to steer your business to success due to the diversity of
the customer base and feedback that will result. A common trap is to
not understand each way has a real limit on volume and a very different
acquisition cost too. Just because you can get a customer for $45
using direct mail does not mean you should limit yourself to this
acquisition cost. It may still make lots of sense to spend $500 per
customer if your customer lifetime value is high. So consider each
customer acquisition strategy, or channel, to be completely
independent. Understand that a mix of customer sources is safer and
more protected from market changes and also gives you many more ways to
grow.
#3 – Add channels/Niches – A great way to
build a business that is more defensible against big companies is to
either build a portfolio of products for the same customer base, or
build a portfolio of niches in the same core competency. I define a
niche as the intersection of a vertical market and a specific
application of a product or service. Big companies generally cannot
customize products and services for small niches well. They generally
must go after large markets (horizontal or vertical plays) just to cover
their overhead and get funded internally. By having a plan to develop
new niches, after your first niche is stable, you can build a $100+
million company that is very stable with high barriers to entry around
it in each individual niche. You have spread your bets well and hence
you can also better protect your margins and customers.
#4 – Figure Out Your Sales Management Process
and Never Stop Scaling Sales – More often than not when I go into a
newer business that is in the low millions in revenue the founder or CEO
has done some sales and/or hired a couple salespeople, but not really
figured out the sales management process well yet. They have a couple
sales people, who survived from the five or ten hired over the last few
years - a Darwinian selection system. These couple people often carry
the company, but the company does not really know yet how to hire more
salespeople that will be successful without lots of trial and error.
The company often does not have a real sales management process in place
and needs to do this serious work to get up to 5 to 15 sales people.
This is a completely different job and requires lots of work and
experience in sales management, and they usually do not have an
experienced sales manager on staff. Sometimes the company has been
going sideways, just surviving not growing, even for many years as a
result. Selling, hiring sales people, managing salespeople and planning
sales strategies are all very different skill sets. Few people, except
very experienced sales executives with 15+ years experience know how to
do all these things. It is therefore usually a mistake to let one of the
current sales people take on these sales management responsibilities.
Yet young companies cannot usually afford this higher level of talent,
or justify it until they have five or more salespeople on board. (See my
September 2005 article on using virtual executives to fill this
experience and knowledge gap cost effectively). CEOs must spend time
working “on” the business, not “in” the business. This means really
understanding in depth how to manufacture more “units” of the sales
machine. A unit might be a single salesperson, but more than likely it
is a combination of resources that might include a salesperson,
marketing support for enough new leads, sales support functions and
maybe other resources in the proper proportions. To really grow a
business well you need to have this unit economics down to a science.
You also must understand the human factors that allow you to do it well
without high risk of failure. This means understanding the personality
profile and psychology of all the people in the sales unit and how to
find, test and select them. Of course, this may vary significantly by
niche and is always being optimized against past benchmark results. Once
you have this formula down you can scale your business up without great
risk, often to the $100MM plus level. Without really getting this down
to a science you are taking a big chance. The economics of adding sales
people is usually compelling so understand these and always be growing
your sales force if the market potential is there.
#5 – Develop a Wholesale or Reseller Strategy
– Most businesses can build reseller channels, yet many do not. There
may be a different price point, target market or even product
variation(s), but if you are selling a product or a service there are
definitely others out there that can resell it. Some might even sell or
refer customers at no cost to you for other benefits. The obvious
questions are who also serves that exact market and who can benefit as a
result of people using your product or service? A challenge is doing
this business development work and research without first hiring a
business development expert. The CEO must be responsible for keeping up
with the market and doing regular competitive intelligence work in any
small business. This effort should identify these opportunities.
Usually the best indicators will come from your current customers, so
treat this as a market research and competitive intelligence project and
test it on a small scale before making any big commitments. Lots of
“frugal experimentation” will pay off long-term and you will scale the
ones that work. Remember there is an 80-20 rule with resellers. Twenty
percent of them will generate 80% of the business. So this means you
may have to try five to get one that works well. This requires a good
training program for your resellers, as they will only be successful if
you teach them how to sell and get them focused on it. Usually they will
have other business objectives too. You will eventually need to hire a
dedicated business development person to build and manage this reseller
network but you should be able to prove it can work before you commit to
this expense.
#6 – Offer upsales, bundles and higher priced
offerings with more service included – In almost all businesses
there is a price quality curve that allows multiple offerings. Would you
like fries with that? Upsale. Would you like the value meal? Bundle.
Would you like that dinner delivered with hot plates, dessert, and clean
up services? Yes, we all see these tactics every day, but have you
thought about all the options for your business and how it might
represent additional markets? Dominos and Staples are great examples of
multi-billion dollar companies created quickly with one simple tweak on
the industry standard formula. Staples did retail sales when delivery of
office supplies was the standard and Dominos did delivery when retail
pick up was standard. Wow! Simple and yet these were two of the most
successful growth companies ever! Put simply one decided to focus on
delivery the other NOT to when their competition was focused on the
opposite. Bundles are often more convenient for customers too because
you can provide something else the customer needs in a single
transaction saving them time and capturing more profit too. I am told
about 40% of calls to Home Shopping Network sell the complementary
product that goes with the main product being sold when offered. The
upsale is generally a cheaper add-on, but that still may be a 25%
increase in sales to the same customer with no additional marketing
costs. Also the profit margin on the add-on product/service is often
higher too. For example most major real estate firms now offer
mortgages. Most car dealers offer financing etc. At one point real
estate companies were making more profit on their mortgage businesses
than sales commissions on the homes. Jiffy Lube does a great job of
this. They have it down to a science. The oil change at $20 generates a
slim profit. Then they bring you out with a serious face and show you
the recommended maintenance for that car at that mileage. Upsales 1-2-3
- change the hydraulic fluid, wipers, and antifreeze at 50,000 miles.
That will be $100 and almost all profit! I would bet they make more
profit on these upsales than on the basic oil changes.
There is no end to the creative ways to grow a
business. After all a business is just a legal entity to provide
products and services really. The challenge is to stay focused on your
“core competencies” and/or best customer base. So odds are you can find
several different ways to increase your sales on this list and keep busy
on these for a year or more. I would recommend focusing on one at a
time though. Good luck.
Bob Norton is the author of four books on
starting and running companies and entrepreneurship. He runs the
exclusive
CEO
& Entrepreneur Boot Camp
to help CEOs and senior executives cut years off their learning curve.
He also
coaches many CEOs at growth oriented technology companies with between
$500K and $30MM in sales on how to get to the next level. He can be contacted at
Bob@CLevelEnterprises.com.
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