Название: 7 Steps from Employee to Employer
Автор: Biz Man
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Зарубежная деловая литература
isbn: 9781619337466
isbn:
Of course this is very product or service specific so we can’t do that for you but we are available on our Biz-Cafe discussion forum for general guidance.
biz-wisdom: People are emotional beings. Purchasing decisions are driven primarily on a subconscious level. Rationality is secondary, in general. The global Marketing and Publicity industry has grown very large because of this. It is not just about getting your name out there it’s about winning the hearts and minds of the customer and yes it is like a war, but a war of emotion and ego, of need and fear. Humans have a built-in six-month cycle of deluded, obsessive behaviour they attach to ‘objects of desire’, many marketers exploit this too.
Marketing is an iterative process. You often change the product, service, market segment. Don’t limit your imagination here. Eventually you will find your way.
Next you need to consider: can you sell it? Can you deliver what your customer wants and needs, better than your competition? Can you make a profit out of doing so?
Step Three - From Idea to Business Model
So you have what it takes. You understand what makes a sound business. You have a great idea which has stood up to market testing. It fulfils a need and offers perceived value by your target customers. There is sufficient demand to satisfy your needs? If not then please reconsider Step Two, else read on.
Now you are ready to start your project. You need to consider how you will transform your idea into a profitable business. This is like using a sketch to build a scale model. You are now testing not just the idea but how you will execute it in the real world. You need to be confident it will work before investing your time and money in the real thing and recruiting people. The risks and costs are not real at this stage but they will be at the next.
You need to define the business model. The good news is that you’ve already done some of this work whilst testing the market.
You then need to test that model to ‘destruction’, and modify it until it works, to maximise your chances of success in the real world. A small miscalculation at this stage costs you nothing but time, the same error five years down the line, could cost you an expensive failure.
What is a business model? In simplest terms it is defined by the answers to the ‘what, why, how and who’ of your enterprise. To define the model you start by asking yourself the following questions:
What does your business do?
Why are you doing it?
To whom, where and when are you selling it?
Why do customers need it?
Why will customers choose you over competition?
How do you sell it?
Who are the stakeholders in the business?
What are the resources of the business?
How do you derive a profit from it i.e. What is the profit model?
Will it have enough cash i.e. What is the cash flow model?
How do you organise your stakeholders and resources to deliver it?
To build your model whilst answering the above questions, you can use the business model framework, depicted above, courtesy of www.biz-man.com.
This has at its core the profit model. This defines how your business is designed to make that all important profit. Notice this doesn’t just happen by chance, by looking at your bank balance now and again - that is a recipe for failure, sadly followed by many a poor business person.
We will revisit the profit model later but for now accept that it is simply part of the overall business model.
Encompassing the profit model we have the finance function, which is the source of funding and its flip side, accountability for the finances of the business. This determines the scope and reach of the outer functions - think of it as the energy source of your business.
Every successful business needs ‘cash flow’ or money in the bank, to operate and every business is accountable to the jurisdiction where it is domiciled and so must keep accounts. Accounts are not kept just for that reason though. They are for your own understanding and accountability to all interested parties. Again, sadly all too many people overlook this and think of them as ‘something accountants do to keep the government happy’- whilst partially true, that is a bad start in business.
Finance exists to support and grow operations - how you deliver your offering. Your operational design should be a closely guarded secret from your competitors. We like to think of operations as the engine of the business - delivering and supporting the offering to your customers.
Finally the most visible function is the marketing function which, in our simple model, includes sales and which is analogous to the gearbox providing leverage and ‘spinning’ out the offering to the real world allowing your business to gain traction. Marketing is also nourished by finance and your marketing strategy should be kept very private too.
Taking the simile a little further, perhaps to its limit. Once your business is running, marketing often drives it - a bit like our imaginary car rolling down a hill, the wheels spinning out of control - is this good or bad? Some businesses are ‘driven’ by marketing (sales driven), some by accounts (cost or return driven), some by operations (supply led). It depends often on who controls the business and the culture that pervades. Culture and strategy for growing businesses are beyond the scope of this book but you will find more on our website.
Observe for now, that for the business to work correctly, all functions must work together and within the boundaries of the energy supply (finance) and within the capabilities of the engine (operations) and the gearbox (marketing) must be well matched to the engine! Failure to recognise this and to control it is one of the biggest root causes of failure in growing businesses.
In the following steps, we will show you how to answer the key questions we raised above and thus derive your business model. By now you may have realised that each of them falls neatly into one or other of the key functions of our model. Spend a few minutes working out which goes where.
Before you can consider the key functions in detail you need to consider who the stakeholders are in your business. Think of these as the glue that binds and holds the functions together over time.
Finally, we said earlier that a business must be scalable, sustainable and return value to shareholders so we need to check that this premise holds for the business model. If so then it has a good chance of success in theory. You can then consider putting the theory into practice.
Who are the Stakeholders?
What is a stakeholder? Any person or party that has an interest in or is affected by your business.
stakeholders may include, in no particular order:
Owners, and those that support them,
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