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Paul Lemberg's Extraordinary Results for Business | |||||||||
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What do you - in your heart of hearts - want to accomplish this coming year? The key words here are ""want to do."" Not what do you think will happen, not what will the market let you do, but what do you want to do.
When you answer this question, it does help to think about things like money - revenue, profits, cash-flow (as if anyone wouldn't) - but also consider other non-monetary details as well.
Think about what new products or services you'd like to introduce, what markets you'd like to branch into, how you'd like to improve your relations with customers, how many new distributors you'd like to add, how you will make thing better for your employees, partners, even your community, and of course, what lifestyle and ""work- style"" changes you'd like for yourself.
For each of the targets and goals you are about to set - why do you want to set these targets. Make sure your reasons strongly support you.
Step 2
Learn what you can from whatever has happened over this past year. This is something many of us simply don't do.
For example, make this year the year you act on the knowledge that it takes three months to train a new distributor, not the four weeks you generally plan for. You'd be surprised at how many entrepreneurs repeat variations on the same mistakes over and over again.
Deliberately capturing the lessons of the past year, and thinking about how to use that new knowledge can provide major opportunities to boost profits.
Step 3
Set targets which will inspire you and your team and get out of bed every morning (even when it's snowing.)
Instead of using that 10% multiplier - or 25% or whatever - come up with growth numbers that you believe in and which will make it all worthwhile. Say you are committed to 35% growth. But you've never had more than 15%. Well how are you going to do that? What would it take? Is it possible? If you believe it is, but you don't know how yet, don't worry. You'll tackle that in a minute.
Step 4
Now is the time to review changes in your market.
Are there new factors - changes in customer buying behavior, shifts in the demographics, new issues in your industry and fresh competitor activity? Consider how these changes will make it easier or harder to achieve your bold targets.
Do any of these changes cause you to rethink the targets you've set? If so, go back and make adjustments you feel are necessary.
If you'd like a list of the kinds of questions I ask businesses, send an email to stratq@lemberg.com.
Step 5
Figure out how to reach the targets in Step 3.
How can you achieve the targets you just set? Do you know how? Will that plan work? You may have to work backwards using the Merlin Method. (For those of you who don't know, Merlin was a wizard who was born old and lived his life getting younger. What he called seeing the future was really just looking into his own past.) So use this idea to create action plans.
This is the method I use successfully with my consulting clients to transform their businesses. I'll give you a quick overview:
Visualize those bold targets as already met. Looking back from the future to the present, ask what was the final step or milestone you achieved before completing the goal? And what was the step before that? And before that? All the way to the present day. Check for reasonableness.
That's your action plan.
Believe me, this works! Do this for each of your targets and goals, then execute that plan, and you can almost guarantee a breakthrough year.
In a future article, I'll write more about the critical success factors you need to review.
Best regards,
Paul Lemberg
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