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Growing a Small Business: Grow to Thrive
by Molly Gordon, MCC
A thriving business needs to grow or it stagnates and
may even fail. But what does it mean to grow a healthy business?
First, understand that growing revenues is a necessary
but not sufficient aspect of growing a small business. Thinking of growth
exclusively in terms of revenue is like dumping fertilizer on a garden
without watering or weeding it. Inevitably, the crop dies.
Second, growth is iterative. The process is repeated
over and over again. In this sense there is no first or last step. Still,
you can posit a starting point for growing your small business, a platform
from which you begin and to which you return to measure your progress,
assess your direction, and refine your vision.
One way to posit a meaningful starting point for growing your small business
is to assess current reality and how it differs from what you intend to
create. What are you experiencing now? What is working? Where are you
dissatisfied? Look at both external, measurable factors such as sales,
prospects, productivity, and experiential and qualitative factors such
as engagement, enthusiasm, creativity.
Examine your motives for wanting your small business
to grow. Are you dissatisfied with current reality? Do you sense that
something new wants to come into being? Are you feeling impelled by a
creative drive? By boredom? Fear?
Competition? Envy? List your motives without censoring them so that you
can understand what is really true for you. Every motive is an expression
of a sort of worldview. If you repress or misstate your motives, you are
the prisoner of their worldview and unable to examine the underlying beliefs.
Some of these underlying beliefs may seriously hinder growing your small
business.
With your motives clearly in mind, take a look at how
your small business is doing now. Measure how many clients you have, how
much income you are earning, how much time you are spending delivering
services, refining your niche
marketing strategies, and administering your business. Review feedback
from clients and look at what others in your field are doing that you
admire. Talk to your employees, or rather, listen to them. What is the
turnover rate? How happy are they? How engaged?
Look at how much you enjoying your work. What aspects
of it bring the most joy? What sorts of clients or customers seem to benefit
most from what you do and who you are? Where is the sweet spot where you
add the most value with the least struggle -- your unique niche
market? What are the key intangible sources of energy and inspiration?
Again, ask your employees the same questions.
As you gather the qualitative and quantitative data about
your business, reflect on the circumstances and choices that shaped these
results. What were your goals six months or a year ago? What personal
and professional factors have been at play since your last business assessment?
What forces in the marketplace affected your decisions and your results?
What were your aspirations and assumptions? Notice how current reality
correlates with thinking, beliefs, practices, and intentions that were
in place three, six, or nine months ago.
Does this sound like a lot of work? It is, and it will
repay your attention by revealing new possibilities for growing your small
business and by showing you where you can let go of outmoded policies,
procedures, and attitudes. By regularly reviewing what you have and what
you want, you generate a healthy structural tension -- a tension that
can impel you to grow your small business in a holistic, grounded, and
integrated way.
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Learn
more about Authentic Promotion - a comprehensive small
business marketing resource that turns marketing and self promotion into
a path of increasing self-awareness, authenticity, and right livelihood.
In particular, the pricing strategies you learn to apply will build the
solid foundation for your authentic prosperity as an entrepreneur.
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Contact an acknowledged expert
on small business marketing Molly Gordon at:
Shaboom Inc. Life could be a dream…
PO Box 195
Suquamish, WA 98392-0195
mgordon@authenticpromotion.com
As a business coach and small
business marketing consultant, Molly Gordon, MCC, is available in Greater
Seattle Area and internationally |
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