Categories
B2B Marketing

How To 10x Business Growth With The 80/20 Rule (And Why CEOs Forget This)

A formula that was developed by Vilfredo Pareto and applied to quality issues (80% of the effects come from 20% of the causes) by a man named Joseph Juran, the ’80/20′ rule has garnered a lot of attention in the world of business.

The idea behind it is to showcase how 80% of all success for a business is going to be attributed to 20% of its processes.

If those 20% are improved upon, the business is going to succeed.

Yet, many people tend to focus on the other 80% and divide their attention which leads to minimal gains across the board.

Let’s take a look at why many CEOs tend to forget this and the benefits it has to offer. While we are focusing on processes, it applies to most facets of business and life. In sales, it’s the biggest opportunity you have right now.

And, as fellow author Perry Marshall says:

“80/20 is true of almost anything you can measure in a business”:

  • Sources of incoming phone calls
  • Effectiveness of sales people
  • Sales to customers
  • Physical location of customers
  • Popularity of products
  • Types of product defects
  • Problem employees
  • Customer service problems
  • Sources of conflict
  • Shoplifters
  • Activity patterns in a 24-hour day, or a week or month
  • Performance of distributors, affiliates, and channel partners
  • Sources of web traffic
  • Advertising waste
  • Advertising effectiveness
  • Productivity of web pages
  • Reasons customers buy

CEOs Wish To Focus On Everything

A person who wishes to demonstrate their ability as a professional and someone who works tirelessly will target everything. This is how they have been raised and they will assume it is the best way forward. Indeed, working hard is critical, but where the effort is being focused is essential to.

Many CEOs tend to spread themselves out too thin and that is when the business is negatively impacted.

The 80/20 rule pushes past such concerns by letting a person work hard on 20% of the most important processes a business has built in.

Real Life Example

Okay, so the principle is being assessed here, but what is a real life example of this being put into action?

Let’s take a look at some of the world’s biggest businesses. When you start to break down their client base, you will notice the majority of their sales are coming from the same people or companies.

So, in essence, 80% of their sales are coming from a select 20% in their client base.

Yet, they will continue to push forward and target new clients.

Why not optimize processes and continue to reduce expenses by focusing in on those loyal customers instead?

By bettering their experience, running surveys and tailoring products and services to them, those 20% will spend even more and lead to the business pushing forward. This is why many businesses sink themselves early on.

They simply are not focused enough on those who are loyal to the brand and company.

How To Double Or Even 10x Business Growth

Let’s move onto the heart of this topic.

Let’s assume one begins to understand the viability of this principle and what it brings to the table.

What should a business owner be aiming to do in order to double their growth in the coming year?

How will this principle be applied in order to garner success?

It all begins with a checklist.

You have to understand all aspects of the business and how the processes work. You can only make tweaks if you are aware of how the business is working and how the products and/or services are being delivered to the customer.

If this is not being focused on, the principle is not going to work as neatly.

Sit down and focus on putting together a meaningful checklist of what the principle entails and how it syncs with your business.

Start Breaking Things Down

Take a look at the complaints, sales, staff, and products. Where does the 20% rule apply?

Here are a few additional examples that can help in breaking things down:

* 80% of all complaints will come from 20% of the client base
* 80% of all growth will come from 20% of time put in by employees
* 80% of all sales are being made by 20% of the staff

Alright, so there are a few points one can look at immediately. Let’s pick one out of those three.

The principle that will be further analyzed here would be “80% of all sales are being made by 20% of the staff”. So, this has been determined now and your business seems to only be doing well because of a certain selection of staff members.

There are a few things you can do from this point:

1) You can increase the role those 20% have to play in the sales process
2) Have those 20% train the rest of the staff
3) Further, incentivize those who are succeeding already
4) Fire those who are not in the 20% and bring in those who do fit the system being developed

These are just some of the steps that can be taken because of the 80/20 rule. You can slowly start to see how everything becomes easier to optimize for the business.

The expenses start to go down and the business is able to concentrate on what works rather than trying to find balance.

This was just one example and there are so many different ways where this principle can be applied with great success.

Those who do will notice massive results in a short period of time. It simply works for those who want to make sure their business is on the up.

Common Mistake: To Spread Out

Let’s assume a business is earning $1 million every year. It seems to be doing well and they want to expand now.

Does the expansion mean they are going to hire more people and market even more? No, sometimes expansion can be expanding in the same market and simply cutting out the excess.

By removing unnecessary roles in the company, putting more money in marketing campaigns that work, and taking out poor products and/or services, the business is able to expand without spreading out.

Almost all businesses who do this start to report success.

A company that is making $1 million right now can end up making $10 million with such changes.

Yes, it is truly possible and has been done on a regular basis around the world.

This is a fantastic principle and one that all businesses owners around the world cannot ignore any longer. The case studies are out there for one and all to see. It works like a charm and those who are ignoring it are going to miss out big time and that is not a good position to be in.

Competitors are always improving their methods too, you should be looking to get out in front of this as soon as possible.

How can you improve your bottom line, by taking one action on this principle today?

NEED SOME HELP? Contact Us Here and schedule your time.


Categories
B2B Marketing General

Surprise Them with Bold Marketing Steps

If you’re preparing to launch a home-based business or already have one, you need to think about how you can stand out from the competition with your marketing.

Hopefully, you have hired a designer to develop a nice website and a content expert to get good, original, and relevant content on your website.

Now you need to figure out how to stand out from the millions of accounts on these sites and reach your targeted customers.

STRATEGY #1: An Element of Surprise Can Help You Get Noticed

Distinguish yourself by doing something unexpected to rouse people to take a second look. There are a lot of businesses fighting for recognition and it takes a bold step to get noticed. Guerrilla marketers thrive on the reaction, whether good and bad.

Guerrilla marketing tends to lean toward shock value, but there are examples where sheer creativity wins the day and no one is offended. A bus stop bench painted very realistically to look like a life-size Kit-Kat bar featured by Creative Guerrilla Marketing is one example.

Think of images that reflect your business, but in an unusual way.

They can be seen anywhere — down the street, in your living room, from your car. Get in the habit of taking your camera with you everywhere you go, advises Sarah Evans, who owns a successful PR and new media consulting firm, in a recent Vocus webinar.

If photography isn’t your thing, use deposit photos from professional photographers and artists, often at surprisingly low prices.

Content on Google Images is not necessarily free for others to use and artists are starting to take legal action against those who use their work without permission.

Evans also suggests going old-school and running an occasional postcard campaign targeting new and potential clients. Fresh, engaging images and content can work in an older medium like this. Think about how people still put pictures up on their refrigerators and cubicle walls.

STRATEGY #2: Video is the Way to Go

Speaking of video, online video ads have the highest click-through rate of all online advertising, according to Business Insider.

They are more effective than buying banners, hiring bloggers, and paying for link-building.

Post a video on a site like Vimeo, Vine, or YouTube that ends with a call to action, such as a quick form and a link to your site.

If you’re stumped for ideas, practice taking videos of your (or your friends’) pets.

Animals remain wildly popular in viral advertising, notes The Viral Video Blog. Animals won’t complain or get bored. Put a chess set or other recognizable game on the floor where pets may be intrigued for a few moments, sniff it out, and maybe push around the pieces.

Start filming and you might capture a few cute seconds to put out in the social media world, courtesy your business.

Categories
B2B Marketing

3 Ways To Leverage The Cloud And Grow Your Business

Cloud computing was introduced in the 1960s, but it didn’t gain popularity until the late ’90s and early 2000s dot-com era when it was widely adopted by chief information officers. In today’s digital age, online cloud storage that can protect and securely back up documents isn’t just for large corporations anymore — it is a must for businesses of all sizes.

Other offerings such as syncing and collaboration can benefit your business too.

If you’re skeptical of moving your growing business to the cloud, consider this: According to ESNA, 82 percent of companies that use cloud services reported saving money, and 80 percent of cloud adopters reported improvements within six months of moving a business to the cloud.

Additionally, 87 percent of cloud users say they would recommend cloud computing to their peers and colleagues.

#1. Scaling — Growing and Shrinking

According to an AMI-Partners study backed by Microsoft, small businesses are losing $24 billion in productivity annually due to non-technical employees having to help manage the business’s IT program. Gianpaolo Carraro, Microsoft Australia’s SMB director, recommends that small businesses should scale down and embrace cloud technology to combat ineffective IT management.

Cutting costs during hard financial times or a slow economy can directly impact your business. If you’re thinking about scaling down, look to the cloud. Many companies trim down costs by cutting IT budgets and moving to online services in the cloud that don’t require expensive server hardware, backup systems, cooling systems or utility costs like traditional IT infrastructure.

If your business is experiencing growth, upgrade your cloud service to accommodate more users accordingly.

With the cloud, your costs increase as your business grows, and you only pay for what you use. This makes the switch to the cloud a savvy business decision.

#2. Collaboration

As your business grows, you may have more employees in different locations. If you’ve experienced hiccups with your current means of collaboration, such as back and forth emails, cloud computing is a nice fix.

Cloud computing can bring your on-site employees and remote employees together with seamless, interactive collaboration among all team members no matter their location.

#3. 24×7 Access

Accessing the cloud is also convenient. Like many small business owners, you may find yourself always on the go.

Attending morning meetings and gathering with clients in the afternoon can make for a hectic day, especially if you’re shuffling through documents and scrolling through hundreds of emails to find what you’re looking for.

Cloud services can be accessed anywhere, anytime, which can make your on-the-go lifestyle a little bit easier and more organized.

You’ll never have to worry about misplacing an important document, because all of your files will be securely backed up in the cloud. Also, you and your employees can access files and documents that are stored in the cloud on any device with Internet capability.

Cloud storage is becoming standard for document storing and file sharing among growing businesses. Small growing businesses can benefit greatly by using cloud storage systems for reasons including ease of use, collaboration and scalability.

Categories
B2B Marketing

What is Lead Scoring and Lead Scoring Best Practices – A Primer

What Is Lead Scoring?

Lead scoring is a method necessary to build an efficient marketing and sales process. By assigning scores to your lead, you can identify which are ready for sales and which are still in need of nurturing through various marketing strategies.

This practice can provide you with better leads and simplify communication between two departments. And, your sales lead management process will receive better quality indicators.

sales leads management tips

Knowing what leads you must prioritize gives you a better grasp of your prospects. It determines the probability that each leads fit the ideal customer who are informed enough to talk with sales (and vice versa.) 

Using a marketing automation system can ensure you that leads that land in front of sales are truly the most feasible.

Categories
B2B Marketing

How To Get An Unfair Advantage In Your Entrepreneurial Business (8 Actionable Steps And Download)

For 40 years, Dan Sullivan has worked with over 6,000 entrepreneurs and have over 10,000 members in his strategic coach network.

dan sullivan 10x multiplier author pictureHe defines unfair advantage as a new and successful way of thinking, communicating and achieving things that can not be claimed or achieved by anybody else, and especially direct competitors.

Most business owners ALREADY have an unfair advantage, but…

The key question is this: “do they actually take action on it”? Most don’t – and that’s the main issue. This is a principle of unfair advantage and is key to all success in business.

Let’s break it down, and we’ll share the 8 unfair advantage principles in this post. (Live-blogged from a recent webcast with Dan)

Categories
B2B Marketing SEO

How To Use SEO For Your B2B and Small Business in 2013 (WEBINAR VIDEO)

In a recent webinar series with our friends at LogMyCalls, we covered some key SEO (Search Engine Optimization) strategies you might implement for your business this year.

We covered 5 important topics:

  1. The SEO process (What works today + myths/trends)
  2. Keyword strategies (How to get the “best” keywords for rankings/traffic)
  3. Social implication (How to leverage social signals for search engines)
  4. Content strategies (What you can do now)
  5. Small business optimization (Automation and lead management)

(The webinar replay is available below).

Categories
B2B Marketing

16 B2B Marketing Strategies And Their Popularity (Graphs)

Business to business marketing is all about starting, building and keeping relationships.

This can be done in many ways, but in marketing there are sixteen options available to your business. Some are more popular than others, as you’ll learn from the recent study.

The comparison between overall marketing strategies as compared to SEO strategies for B2B are almost identical in areas, and we see ‘Content Development’ as a challenge for most B2B businesses.

Here are the 16 factors to consider.

Categories
B2B Marketing

Four B2B Social Media Marketing Challenges in 2013

Social media marketing (SMM) and related social campaigns are traditionally seen as more of a B2C (business-to-consumer) activity. The core idea is that relationships are based on person-to-person, not person-to-faceless-organization.

However, B2B relationships centers around people. It’s not unique to B2C. While we don’t necessarily advocate discussing the latest ski-trip or personal passions publicly  per se — the companies who inject ‘personality’ and ‘connection’ are much more likely to engage and create new business opportunities.

While B2C may be more ‘experience’ based, B2B positioning is all about value.

Time For Re-Thinking Traditional Marketing

A recent article from the Harvard Business Review (Jan 2013) stated that it’s time to “rethink the 4 P’s of marketing”. Here’s what Richard Ettenson (Professor at Thunderbird School of Global Management) suggested: