April 24, 2011

The “L” in IDEAL

And finally, the “L” in IDEAL stands for “loyalty”. This is the element that makes your business model tick; the ability for you to create a customer or client experience that keeps them coming back for more. Even more importantly, their customer experience with you is so awesome, they want other people they know to experience it too, so they refer you.

I like to say that this “L” results in two “R’s” — repeats and referrals. Repeat business is very valuable for you to have, because it doesn’t cost you very much to continue receiving this. And referrals are valuable too, because they drastically lower your cost of acquiring a new customer.

So keep the elements of my IDEAL business model in mind. It could lead you to fulfillment and prosperity in your business. It certainly has for me, for past and present businesses that I’ve owned.

April 15, 2011

The “A” in IDEAL

Getting back to my concept of the IDEAL business model, we come to “A”, which stands for “advantage”. Your products and/or services must have some sort of advantage over your competition, some of which may already have greater share of business than you do right now. Looking at it another way, there must be some advantage for your customers to do business with you, compared to whichever competitor they’re using now.

An advantage could come through price, features/benefits, having a patent on a new technology, or even just being repeatedly more dependable than any other supplier. Whatever the advantage, try to build one that is sustainable. A price advantage, for example, is mostly temporary — until your competitors drop their prices too. Building and demonstrating a sustainable competitive advantage is the ticket to gaining market share.

April 3, 2011

Beginning of Second Quarter

The first quarter of 2011 is already in the books. Where did the time go? Maybe it seemed faster with all the weird winter storms and such, but at the time it sure felt like it was going to be a long winter.

Did you get some or most of the things done that you planned on doing in the first quarter? Take whatever remaining items, prioritize them, and put them on your plan for Q2.

March 23, 2011

The “E” in IDEAL

“E” is for Economics – all of the numbers in your business. Prices, costs, expenses, size of market, potential sales, number of repeats, number of returns, demand … anything that relates to your business’s products and services. You should know your numbers, particularly what it costs you to be in business. Too many business owners I’ve read or heard about, are former owners because they didn’t realize the size of some of their numbers.

As a business owner, you should not delegate the knowledge of these numbers to someone else, like your accountant or your marketing director. You should know where you stand.

The “E” also includes economics from the customer perspective, too. What’s the value to the customer, to buy your products or services? What’s the magnitude of financial benefit your products bring to your customer, in terms of saving time, saving money, or some other measure?

March 18, 2011

The “D” in IDEAL

“D” represents “Differentiation”, in the IDEAL business model. Whatever you’re offering, whether they’re tangible products or services, needs to be different from whatever your competitors are offering. If you offer things that are largely the same, or what we call “me too” products, potential customers would more likely stick with competitors who have been around longer and who already have a track record.

Of course, if the competitor’s track record is a lousy one, you could offer the same offering and perhaps get away with it. But even then, since you’re an untested supplier of that product or service, you run the risk of the customer thinking that you might be no different than the lousy competitor.

So make something different: your offering needs to allow the customer to be better, faster, more productive, more relaxed, prettier, younger, stronger, slimmer, smarter, funnier, or whatever, than your competitors can do. Without this differentiation (the “D”), you’ll be viewed the same as the others, with no compelling reason to give you a try.

March 9, 2011

The “I” in IDEAL

I previously mentioned my concept of the “ideal” business model, with each letter of the word IDEAL signifying a quality that the business needs to have. In that vein, let’s talk about the “I”, which stands for Initiative.

I’ve met some people who think that entrepreneurship and starting a business is only about coming up with the idea. These folks think that just because they thought up a particular idea for something, they’re an entrepreneur. Never mind that they never did anything about the idea, they’re still an entrepreneurial thinker.

Then there are other folks who think that starting a business is about coming up with the idea, then applying not much more than positive thinking. Somehow, if they “want” it enough, or visualize it often enough, it’s magically going to happen.

If you look at Merriam-Webster’s definition of the word “initiative”, you’ll see that it means “the energy or aptitude displayed in initiation of action”. And that’s the key word … action. You can think up all the ideas you want, visualize all you want, want it all you want, but if you don’t have initiative to take cohesive action, you’ll just want, you won’t have.

That’s the brief story of the “I”.

February 22, 2011

The IDEAL Business Model

I always say, “Great ideas are abundant; great execution is rare.” To have a chance at great execution, your business (or business idea) must have IDEAL conditions. That’s my acronym for the ingredients of a successful business model that can sustain itself and grow.

More of the details later, but for now I’ll just introduce you to the components of the acronym IDEAL:

  • I = Initiative
  • D = Differentiation
  • E = Economics
  • A = Advantage
  • L = Loyalty

Stay tuned! I’ll write more about each letter, in future posts.

February 10, 2011

What to Learn from the Super Bowl

Enough time has passed since Christina Aguilera flubbed a line in her rendition of the Star Spangled Banner at the start of last Sunday’s Super Bowl. Tens of thousands of opinions ranging from snarky to sheer outrage were expressed over the next few days. But Aguilera has moved on, as she should, issuing a short statement about it all.

A columnist/blogger for The Daily Beast, Clark Merrefield, asked himself the next logical question in his blog entry today. He wondered how many of those critics, or Americans in general for that matter, know the anthem and could do better? His purely random sample while standing on the streets of Portland, Oregon, yielded a surprising (or perhaps not so) result.

Of the 73 adults he asked, only 8 of them (less than 11%) could recite the Star Spangled Banner correctly. And that was just performing in front of him, an audience of one, never mind the hundreds of millions of people who were watching Aguilera.

What’s the takeaway? You’re going to make mistakes, though hopefully not in front of a hundred million people or more. But if it happens, just move on. Most of the vocal critics probably couldn’t do any better than you did, and likely would do a lot worse.

February 6, 2011

Uncovering New Ideas

I do a lot of skim-reading at a number of different newspapers’ online sites, for papers in New York, Chicago, Denver, San Francisco, Boston, D.C., etc. It’s part of my morning ritual. The national and world stories are all about the same, so I try to catch the special-interest or topic-oriented stories that catch my eye. One of those stories this morning gave me a new way of looking at a possible business opportunity, in a way that I had not thought of before.

This is one of my keys to discovering new ideas.

February 5, 2011

Spreading the Word?

Just a quick blog entry to see if the new connections with my Twitter and Facebook accounts are up and running…

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