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What
Successful Businesses Have in Common
14 Traits of Successful Businesses
How
does a small company become successful? Despite the bad news we so often
hear about the number of small businesses closing or moving, the news
really isn't all that bad: Thousands of small businesses startup every
year, and a good percentage of those companies have learned what it really
takes to survive the early startup years and become successful enterprises.
After working with dozens of small companies, I discovered that the successful
ones share some common traits. Here, then, are the 14 qualities I've witnessed
in many of the thriving small businesses I've worked with:
1. Company culture.
Culture is defined as the "integrated pattern of human knowledge,
belief and behavior that depends upon man's capacity for learning and
transmitting knowledge to succeeding generations." For successful
companies, culture is about attracting and hiring the people who would
be most successful in that specific organization. And it's about driving
the behavior that makes the company successful.
2. Customer service.
Simply defined, customer service means taking care of your customers.
Many companies integrate customer service into their business culture
through training and the design (and frequent redesign) of relevant business
processes. In most cases, the business plan dictates how they will provide
quality customer service.
3. Attitude.
As the owner of the company, you must have a positive attitude and accept
100 percent of the responsibility for the results of your business. When
you accept responsibility, you can act to make the necessary changes to
accomplish the desired results. Then, when success is achieved, you're
generous in giving credit to others within the organization. Without exception,
the most successful business owners understand that it's all about people:
hiring and retaining the right people, eliminating ineffective people
and providing the necessary resources for employees to master their tasks.
4. Business strategy.
A complex strategy or business plan isn't necessary to achieve success.
A simple one-page document will do, but it should be well thought out
and well executed. A poorly crafted business plan that's well executed
is far superior to the well-crafted business plan that sits on the shelf
collecting dust. A good business plan defines and drives the activities
and behaviors of the entire organization. Without it, the business becomes
a ship without a rudder; it simply can't be steered and ends up going
around in circles. A sound strategy should include a financial plan, marketing
differentiators, and product strategy as well as a plan for employee retention.
5. Discipline.
Discipline is all about executing the strategies and then staying
the course. It's about staying focused on your core markets and measuring
success as defined by your business strategy. It's not about overreacting
to market changes and adjusting your core strategy to keep up.
6. Risk.
Successful business owners aren't afraid to take calculated risks
with clear outcomes in mind. Most owners who take risks do so because
they recognize the need to change as the economic climates changes, and
they understand it's disastrous not to embrace change. Successful business
leaders understand that being in business is about managing and responding
to change. Companies that succeed embrace change and respond to challenges
presented by the market, the competition or changes in general business
conditions.
7. Financial roadmap.
An important attribute is the creation of a financial roadmap and budget--and
then having the discipline to follow it. A financial plan reminds owners
where and how to spend money, and it provides ways to measure progress
or shortfalls. A sound financial plan is the cornerstone of a great business
plan.
8. Business processes. Another frequently credited
attribute of success is the streamlining of business processes. We call
this "creating predictability." Unfortunately, this is probably
the least understood task a small-business owner can take accomplish.
Business processes are how things are done within a business. Every company
has some processes; some are clearly defined, others are implicit. The
intention here is to increase productivity and reduce costs while generating
the same (or better) outcomes. Successful businesses understand the need
to continuously improve their business processes: to become more efficient
and productive, and to respond to market changes faster while providing
better service to customers.
9. Information technology.
While technology is important, it doesn't have to be complex or
costly to be effective. Effective technology is probably the most important
enabler for change that a company can introduce.
10. Marketing.
Effective marketing efforts perform different functions around unique
selling environments. For example, business-to-consumer enterprises have
completely different marketing needs than business-to-business companies.
Having a good understanding of the pains your clients are experiencing
and how your product and services stop that pain can help you understand
just how to market to your customers--and that's critical to business
success.
11. Sales.
Every company's approach to sales is different. Some depend on building
referral partnerships and strategic alliances, and this is the extent
of their sales process. Others aggressively attack the market with direct-mail
campaigns, cold calling and other forms of direct customer contact. The
specific selling approach a company uses is usually defined by its marketing
plan. Successful owners know that the concept of selling is a process
that can be measured and improved, like all business processes. They talk
about the importance of having a consistent, measurable and repeatable
sales process, and they engage professional sales trainers (with flexibility
to customize training to their selling environment) to help create consistency
within their selling process.
12. Training.
Because we live in a world of continuous change, it's more important than
ever to implement a culture of continuous learning. For many successful
owners, continual investment in training is a major contributor to success.
For training to be successful, however, there must a direct link back
to the business plan and an understanding of how training supports the
successful implementation of the business strategy.
13. Team of advisors.
Without exception, every successful business owner I've worked with has
talked to about how having trusted advisors is necessary for success.
They know they can't know everything and they searched out advisors they
could trust. They usually preferred to pay for this advice because they
were looking for someone who would challenge them, hold them accountable,
ask them important questions and introduce them to others who could help
them when necessary.
14. Work/life balance.
Successful business owners understand that every person has just
1,440 minutes in any given day and how they spend this time directly impacts
how effective they'll be in growing their businesses. Smart entrepreneurs
successfully integrate their social lives into their business lives: The
client who purchases a product today gets invited to the lakeside cabin
the next weekend. Clients become friends, and co-workers become like family.
These entrepreneurs build their lives around their business, and it's
almost impossible to distinguish between their social lives and their
business lives.
Published by: Ron Finklestein, a business coach and
the owner of YourBusinessCoach.net. He is also the author of Celebrating
Success!
Fourteen Ways to a Successful Company.
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