|
|
|
A Dozen Common Mistakes
The reason firms fail is
not creativity, location, or the marketplace. It's management ability.
Your firm is a direct reflection of you, and you must take responsibility
for it. Here are the most common 12 mistakes we see creative service
firms make. If you are managing a firm now, you'll identify immediately.
If you are an employee, this might give you some context for the decisions
you may not agree with. If you are considering starting a company, this
will help you learn from the mistakes of others.
1. Rely on Referrals
Enough
good work does not come from two traditional sources: referrals and
repeat business, but rather from new leads. The problem with referrals
and repeat business in a growing, changing firm is that a prospect's
perception of you will not keep pace with reality. Many firms look for
work. Some look for work that pays. Few look for work that pays...and that they enjoy.
2. Use Wrong Positioning
Most imply (though they seldom say): "If you come to us, we'll do it quick,
cheap, and you'll get to work directly with a principal." Instead, emphasize
(in descending order of importance): category experience; a defined,
proprietary process; strategic focus; leadership; and that you are fun
to work with. It's about generating stuff that works, and if it looks
good, it's gotta look good because looking good works. Results are too
measurable anymore to get away with decoration and/or sloppy
work, whether it's PR, advertising, or design.
3. Stay a Generalist
Specialization occurs
in every area of life. We stay a generalist, not because the marketplace
demands it, but because we get bored easily and because we don't have
a marketing plan and thus feel compelled to cast the net wide. Firms
that specialize thrive, especially in larger cities. We can focus in
up to two areas (in terms of our own mental capacity). In cities that
will be two specialties. In rural areas that will mean a general local
provider, and a niche regional provider. What will this do? It will
make it easier to find business, to service it without learning on the
job, and to find employees.
4. Feed Gorilla Clients
It's
unsafe to have any client larger than 35% of your business. Our studies
show that it's difficult to recover from the loss of any client larger
than that. (It doesn't matter if you have different contacts in other
departments.) And client relationships are now shorter and shorter every
year (less than 3 years for the average client relationship). If you
have a large client, be honest; have a marketing
emergency folder; set aside 3 months of overhead; have a maintenance
marketing plan in place for at least 6 months; and job work out, retaining
account service and creative direction. You can borrow money, but you
can't borrow marketing.
5. Misunderstand Growth
Smaller
can be better, based on what you want. Firms with fewer than 10 employees
achieve 16% more billings per employee than larger firms. Probably because
of more management scrutiny. Net profit, however, is lower with smaller
firms, since it is spread across a smaller employer base. But what is
"small" or "big"! Without good systems, more than 5 employees per principal
or senior manager will "feel" big. What it comes down to is what you
want to do. And that can change over time. When you started, you did
everything. Though you whined about it, there was a secret adrenaline
rush....which translated into a learned significance.
6. Hire to Delegate To
So...you
get really busy, and you have more than you can do. You hire people
to delegate to. That moves the upside down funnel higher, and you become
even more of a bottle neck. In the process, you want people to implement
your ideas. You judge work instead of shape it. In effect, you are working
"in" your business instead of "on" it.
7. Manage for Significance
Hiring
all these people doesn't solve the problem, and you are still too busy.
You learn to be important because you can do everything. You are forced
to peel off areas of significance and re-learn your role. If you continue
struggling, you'll likely refuse to put things in writing, insist on
seeing everything in the shop, steal the credit, and manage for loyalty,
not results. If this carries over into client relationships, you won't
be effective because you'll take on assignments with hopeless budgets
and schedules to be the white knight. In effect you'll be looking for
acceptance from clients instead of fighting for a strong direction.
8. Think Employees are Entrepreneurs
One
of the reasons you left the big firm to start your own was because you
hated structure. So you vow to avoid all those stupid rules. One day
you begin to realize, though, that many of those rules have a purpose.
And that the people who work for you aren't entrepreneurs. If they were,
they'd be starting their own firms. Employees usually always want more
structure, communication, job descriptions, regular reviews, etc.
9. Ignore Production/Traffic Issues
Having
more than 5 employees per principal/senior manager will feel big unless
you have good systems. Without them, you'll be unable to do a mind dump.
The best systems have centralized responsibility for budget and schedule.
Most firms are deadline-based versus management based, and as a result
they bill for only a portion of their time because it's not as important
as meeting the deadlines.
10. Spend your Way into Prosperity
More
than 90% of those making lots of money have no fixed obligations (leases,
loans, or credit card balances) for depreciating assets. In a small
service company, there is no separation between how a principal views
money and how money is used in the business, and that can spell trouble.
Is cash the best filter for acquiring a depreciating asset? It may apply
the brakes for companies who are growing too quickly. And the act of
spending cash makes it less likely that you'll acquire more than you
need.
11. React Slowly to a Downturn
Entrepreneurs
are optimistic to a fault and believe that hard work can solve anything.
They also react slowly, like a deer in the headlights. In a downturn,
it's tempting to let "admin" people go first because they aren't viewed
as income producing. Unfortunately, they are the toughest to train,
and the hardest to find freelance. Regardless, it seldom makes sense
to use other's money.
12. Count on Selling Your Firm
It
doesn't usually happen. Often the likely buyer is someone in your firm
with no money, who wants to use your money to buy you out. If you want
to sell: institutionalize your firm. In the process, build a strong
retirement fund, assuming you won't sell it.
This article has been provided by ReCourses. For more information, please
visit their web site at
http://www.recourses.com
|
| "Our PR and Design Agency looked diligently for a time and project tracking software application, only to find it right here in our own backyard. TimeFox paid for itself within weeks. Now we are accountable to our valued clients, we know how long we've worked on projects, and invoicing is a snap! I thank that little Fox every morning when he greets me upon log-in." Maggie Kerr-Southin Artemis Creative Communications
"TimeFox allows us to track our time more accurately by removing any/all objections my employees had to entering their time. More accurate time entries leads to better data for future project estimates because we have more accurate historical data. Better estimating leads to higher profitability and happier clients. All this leads to better profits and a happier CEO — me." Shannon Carter Cartis Group
"I needed a better time tracking system than the manual way we were doing things. I knew we weren't charging for all the "little" things and "quick" tasks like emails etc. We absolutely love your product. Learning to use it was so easy and it makes billing a snap. Thank you for developing such a functional tool. It's definitely making us more money." Allison DeFord DeFord Designs |