HAVE YOU CREATED AN IMPOSSIBLE
BUSINESS? C.J. Hayden, MCC
It's
easy to think that any business can be successful if you work hard
enough, but there are many situations where this just isn't so.
Consultants, coaches, and other service professionals often start a
business believing that all they need to do is charge a "reasonable"
fee and sell "enough" of their time. But unless you do the math to
prove or disprove your assumptions, you may be creating a business
that can never succeed. Here's what can happen:
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Impossible Business #1 -
My
client Molly was selling her services as an image consultant to
individuals who wanted an updated or more professional look. She
charged $50 per hour, which she thought was the most anyone would
realistically pay to work with her. In most cases, she traveled to a
client's home or went shopping with her client.
Including travel time and lunch meant that Molly could only
make two appointments in one day. The average appointment was two
hours long. So the maximum amount Molly could earn in one day turned
out to be $200. But in order to earn that amount five days per week,
Molly would have to schedule ten different clients, all of whose
schedules were able to adapt to whatever times she had
available.
This
was hopelessly unrealistic. Even if Molly had been able to make the
scheduling work, when would she have had the time to do the
marketing required to land that many clients? It turned out that the
maximum Molly could really earn using this model was about $500 per
week. After paying her taxes, she couldn't even cover her monthly
living expenses.
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Impossible Business #2 -
Fred
was a student of mine who worked as a software consultant for
midsize corporations. He typically charged $75 per hour, and when he
landed a contract, it often consisted of 20-100 billable
hours.
Because Fred's earning capacity was so high and he disliked
marketing, he spent a lot of money on marketing himself indirectly.
He purchased display ads in industry journals and directories,
mailed expensive brochures to large lists of prospects, paid to
exhibit at trade shows, and hired a telemarketer to prospect for
him. Fred also worked on contracts that came through agencies, who
often took 20-30% of his earnings as their percentage.
Fred
was earning as much as $80,000 per year, but he was losing about
$10,000 per year in agency commissions, and spending $20,000 per
year on marketing. In return for all his hard work, he was earning
considerably less than he had at his last job.
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Making the Impossible Possible -
New
consultants, coaches, and other professionals almost always
overestimate how much they can earn and underestimate the amount of
time and money required to successfully market themselves. They also
forget that they will have to cover not only their living costs and
business expenses, but pay self-employment tax, buy their own health
insurance, provide for their own retirement, and allow for unpaid
vacation and sick time.
If
Molly or Fred had taken the time to sit down with a calculator
before starting out in business, they would have quickly discovered
that they were on the wrong track. But both of these businesses were
able to be rescued.
Molly
began selling her time by the day instead of by the hour. She
offered her clients a full-day package that consisted of a wardrobe
review and consultation in the morning and a shopping trip in the
afternoon. By charging $395 per day and scheduling three clients per
week, she could earn more than double than she did
previously.
She
also began offering a monthly one-day image workshop as a way of
bringing in more income while giving prospective clients a chance to
experience her work. The workshop became her main source of new
clients, and marketing the workshop turned out to be easier than
marketing her personal services.
Fred
learned how to market himself less expensively through networking,
speaking, and writing articles. Instead of buying booths at trade
shows, he was showcased there as a presenter, and spent time
networking with the other attendees. The same publications where he
used to run ads now ran his articles. Rather than paying a
telemarketer, he started picking up the lunch tab for people he
thought could refer him some business.
As a
result, his expenses for marketing and commissions dropped from
$30,000 per year to $10,000. At the same time, his income rose to
$100,000 per year, because as his visibility and reputation grew,
his services were more in demand and he could command higher
rates.
If
earning a decent living as a self-employed professional sometimes
seems impossible to you, start asking how it could be possible. What
can you change about how you are marketing yourself, how much you
are charging, and how you are packaging your services? While it
could be that success will come if you just work a little harder,
it's more likely that you first need to start working a little
differently.
Copyright © 2005, C.J. Hayden
C.J. Hayden is the author of Get Clients Now!
Thousands of business owners and salespeople have used her simple sales and marketing
system to double or triple their income. Get a free copy of "Five Secrets to
Finding All the Clients You'll Ever Need" at www.getclientsnow.com.
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