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News & Features Business Know-How What Help Should You Get For Your Business?

What Help Should You Get For Your Business?

Written by Robert Craven on Tuesday, 18 September 2012 17:38
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Applied to your own business (and specifically to your marketing) I wondered if it is better to narrow your focus and look for deep activity in a narrow field (niche) or is it better to go broader and shallower?

As I reflect on my own activities with business owners and directors (spread between keynote speaking through seminars to mastermind groups and one-to-ones), I have been following the progress and successes of clients and delegates.

All the research points to one blindingly obvious fact.

Yes, the choice of intervention is varied from free workshops, seminars and ebooks through paid-for CDs, videos, events and workshops through to mastermind groups, strategy away days, coaching and consultancy support. And yes, business owners should choose the style of intervention that suits them best. However, the medium selected is just that, simply a means to an end. And the end is to significantly improve business performance. So, the question that should be asked is, "which medium gives the biggest and best improvement for my business?"

What is emerging is that the simpler, shorter interventions, especially what can be called 'one-to-many' activities, (one speaker to 150 delegates, one speaker to 150 people on the end of the phone, one person making a CD and selling 150 copies…) is not necessarily the best catalyst to get the business owner to:

- Recognise the business's key issues
- Understand the cause and best possible solutions
- Understand what decision needs to be made
- Take the decision and put in place a plan to roll-out the necessary actions
- Make the plan happen
- Know how to monitor/evaluate/improve on the plan (and do it).

'One-size-fits-all' solutions rarely do fit all. If (as a director) you don't know what you don't know then how do you know if you are actually doing the right thing…?

Because business owners need to understand what is wrong with their businesses (and because they probably don't have the diagnostic skills to identify them) so it can be seen that smaller groups working for longer time-periods (not just one-offs) and actually inter-relating in discussions about the specific business should be more effective.

To that end, we find that mastermind groups, strategy away days, coaching and consultancy support are the most effective interventions.

In general terms, you can see a continuum going from low price/low result through to high price/high result.

However, a high price-point does not guarantee high results. The key seems to be whether the intervention (at whatever price-point and by whatever medium) actually gets the business owners/directors to take the necessary actions to grow their business.

Regrettably, too few of the business interventions actually help the owner to do this.

So, as an owner-director what do you do?
I think you have to choose the intervention that you think will best help you to make the decisions and take the actions. Making decisions and drawing up plans is good but actually it is the implementation of the right plan that you are looking to accomplish.

So, is the best intervention (from the point of view of giving the individual client, you, the best result) to work with more clients (but in a shallow way) or to work with fewer clients (but more intensively)?

If you are talking about the future of your business then the shallow solution (a book, CD or workshop) simply cannot be sufficient. You need the intense solution that gets you to take action.

Robert Craven

Robert Craven

Robert Craven shows MDs and owners how to grow their sales and profits and focuses on how to do this in recessionary times.

He is a keynote speaker and the author of business best-seller ‘Kick-Start Your Business’ (foreword by Sir Richard Branson). His new book “Grow Your Service Firm” is out now! http://www.robert-craven.com/gysf.php .

He also runs The Directors’ Centre, helping growing businesses to grow. http://www.directorscentre.com For further information, contact Robert Craven on 01225 851044 rc@directorscentre.com

Website: www.robert-craven.com/gysf.php

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