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10 Reasons Why Businesses Succeed
Check
To See What Your Business Has In Common With Other Successful Companies.
Only
one of every 5 businesses makes it to its 5th year, and fewer
still make it to 10 years. What do the successful businesses
have in common?
1. The
experience and skills of the top managers. Over half of
business failures are directly related to managerial incompetence.
2.
The energy, persistence and resourcefulness (the will
to make the business
succeed) of the top managers. Many business owners
have failed or come close several times before their “instant” success.
Don’t give up.
3.
A product that is at least a cut above the competition
and service that
doesn’t get in the way of people buying. There
must be a compelling reason to buy; the product is great, the people
love to provide service, and the buying experience is easy and
fun.
4.
The ability to create a “buzz” around the product
with aggressive and strategic marketing. Make scarce marketing
resources count. Do as much homework about your customers and their
choices as you can before investing your marketing cash.
5.
Deal-making skills to sell the product at the highest
possible price given
your market. It comes down to your customers’ perception
of the value of your product and sometimes the power of your personality.
6. The
ability to keep developing new products to retain and build
a customer base. Consider gradual product development based on
improvements to the current product line and sold to the current
customer base.
7.
Deal-making skills to work with resource suppliers to
keep costs low. Keeping
costs lower than competitors’ and continuing
to look for cost reductions even when the business is profitable
is key.
8. The
maturity to treat employees, suppliers and partners fairly
and respectfully. Trust and respect result in productivity increases
in ways that may be difficult to see and quantify.
9. Superior
location and/or promotion creating a connection between your
product and where it can be obtained. Studies have shown it
can take seeing your product or name seven times before a customer
is ready to buy.
10. A
steady source of business during both good economic times and
downturns. Over the long term, develop a product mix that will
include winners during good economic times and other winners when
times are tough.
Jan B. King is the former President & CEO of Merritt Publishing,
a top 50 woman-owned and run business and the author of Business
Plans to Game Plans: A Practical System for Turning Strategies
into Action (John Wiley & Sons, 2004). She has helped hundreds
of businesses with her book and her ebooks, The Do-It-Yourself
Business Plan Workbook, and The Do-It-Yourself Game Plan Workbook.
See www.janbking.com for more information.
Reprinted
courtesy of © Robert
Warlow, Small
Business Success, www.smallbusinesssuccess.biz
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