Author – Michael Masterson
Just for Kicks (documentary) – Longeville, Leone
How to Become a CEO – Jeffrey Fox
Action Nothing Happens until something moves – Robert Ringer (author rec)
Buying Trances – Joe Vitale
The Tipping Point – Malcolm Gladwell
Getting everything you can out of all you’ve got – Jay Abraham
Influence – Robert Cialdini
Mail and grow rich – Ted Ciuba
If you’re Clueless about starting your own business – Seth Godin
The Tipping Point – Malcolm Gladwell
The Four Ws of Career Satisfaction: Demanding the Best from your Job
3 most important decisions in life are:
"I work when I want, where I want, and with whom I want, doing only what I want to do. If that isn't the definition of the best job in the world, what is?"
4 stages of business:
Smart entrepreneurs will encourage their employees to hire subordinates who are as good and capable as they are. If you are not doing that, start doing it now. It will make everything easier later on.
For a business to grow into a $100 million+ enterprise, it must be very good, if not great in five areas:
2 fundamental skills to successfully start a business:
You need to change your business into a company where innovation is a rule, not an exception.
The skill you need to meet that challenge is the skill of creating, almost instantly, and at will, a stream of good and profitable new ideas.
Entrepreneurs natural inclination:
Entrepreneurs natural skills:
Becoming a five-start business genius with 5 most important skills:
Of the major functions of business-product development, customer service, accounting, operations, and marketing-the one that should always be given top priority in an entrepreneurial venture is marketing.
Rule #1 of Entrepreneurship: Without sales, it is very hard to sustain an ongoing business.
As a business owner, selling should be your number one priority-and you must act accordingly. That means spending the lion’s share of your time on marketing and sales-related activities.
To be a truly effective entrepreneur, you must become your business’s first and foremost expert at selling.
Every entrepreneurial business needs four personalities at the helm:
During the first 2 stages of growth, the priorities should be in this order:
The ultimate strength of an entrepreneur: the ability to stimulate sales.
Rule #2 of Entrepreneurship: There is a direct relationship between the success of a business at any given time and the percentage of its capital, temporal, and intellectual resources that are devoted to selling.
When beginning a new business(or launching a new product within an existing business), the sooner you can make the first sale, the better your chances are of success.
In starting a business, your priorities and sequence of activities should be:
Identify the optimum selling strategy for the stage of growth that you are in and then focus 80 percent of your resources on applying it.
Implementing your company’s optimum selling strategy should be your top responsibility. Questions to ask yourself:
Where will I find my customers?
Imitate the industry norm.
Do what the competition is doing, in the beginning, at least.
Once you have identified the top three to five products in the market, spend some time studying them.
Try to figure out which characteristics are the most appealing. Then make a list of any shortcomings you notice.
Discounting: The easiest way to bring in lots of new customers
A powerful and reliable way to grow a small business is to market an upwardly trending product at a substantial discount to its perceived value.
How to price products
The ideal pricing mix for me is one lead product that is promoted at a heavy discount and all other products sold by emphasizing quality.
If you are in the retail business, it’s likely that the price you will be charging is roughly equal to twice the cost of the products.
Figure out how much a customer will spend with you on average, over a lifetime(LTV). Deduct the cost of goods from that. Then deduct a percentage of your overhead. And then figure out and deduct how much you want to profit from that customer. The final number is your allowable acquisition cost, the amount of money you can spend to attract a first-time buyer.
Step one: Determine your Lifetime Gross Profit
Step Two: Determine your Lifetime Net Value
Step Three: Determine a reasonable profit
As a general rule, healthy retail businesses yield 10 percent net profits.
Depending on the nature of your industry and how good you are at customer service, after their initial purchase your customers will spend, on average, between 100% and 500% of their original price with you over time.
That means that they will be worth, on a gross profit basis, between 50%~100% of what they spent on their first purchase.
It would be prudent to run your projections on 2 assumptions:
This idea of optimal pricing and discounting applies to front-end marketing only, to bring in first-time customers.
Designing an advertising campaign is like designing a house. You have to begin with an idea of what you what, the purpose of the house, and how you what to enjoy it. Then you have to translate those needs and desires into a structure. Finally, you have to tie it all together with a style, something that tells your guests just what kind of family lives in that house.
You have to create want in your customers’ hearts; stimulate emotions.
You need to get potential customers thinking about how your product is going to enhance their lives.
Your ads should be demonstrating one or several benefits of your product.
Rationality comes into play only after the irrational process-the emotional persuasion has already taken place.
You are hoping to arouse in your prospective customer a feeling of irrational exuberance.
Who are my target customers? And why would they want things to be easy?
Deconstruct every benefit you list into deeper benefits. And don’t use abstract language. If you feel that your customers are looking for success, define success in concrete terms. What, exactly, do they want?
You will find that the most successful advertisements are those that highlight a single benefit above all the rest.
When this benefit can be presented as uniquely characteristic of your product, you have an advertising proposition that can last and last and last.
If you want your best chance of selling a new product in an established market:
When you are starting a new business, you’d be crazy not to make the concept of underpricing a core part of your growth and marketing strategy. And if your business is mature, underpricing your competition is still the the strongest way to introduce a new product or product line or to enter a new market.
“You need to be faster, more varied, slower, cheaper, easier to work with, prettier, more highly recommend-something to distinguish it.” – Seth Godin
The unique selling proposition has to be a benefit to the buyer.
Take a good look at all the other similar products on the market and try to identify gaps by recognizing “unfilled customer needs” such as:
3 aspects of a solid USP:
All effective sales efforts have 4 components, The:
The Big Idea – The main idea you use to sell your product.
Look for something that excites you.
Big Ideas need to excite you. So start with that and trust your own feelings.
During the startup phase of your new business, selling must be your top priority. It must consume 80% of your and your employees’ time, interest, and creativity.
But what about the other 20%?
Creating happy customers should always be the primary focus of your company’s work.
You need to identify a specific CMQC(critical mass of qualified customers)-a target number of qualified customers who will make most of your subsequent marketing efforts profitable.
Your customers, not you, are the ultimate arbiters of what is good and valuable and exciting. The sooner you can find out what they think, whether it supports or contradicts your judgement, the better.
Tips and advice from the author:
STAGE TWO: CHILDHOOD— 1���������1MILLIONTO10 MILLION
IN REVENUE
Main Problem: You are only breaking even or may even be losing money.
Main Challenge: Creating additional, profitable products quickly.
Main Opportunity: Becoming a business of innovation, increasing cash flow, and becoming profitable.
Additional Skill Needed: Coming up with a constant stream of new and potentially tipping-point ideas.
Most entrepreneurs never get to enjoy those Stage Four revenues because—for whatever reason—they can’t make the personal changes necessary to create the corporate changes. If you want to bring your start-up to the highest level, you will have to:
Entrepreneurial Axiom: Every time your business changes, so must its leader-you.
Those companies that experienced accelerated their growth pace very quickly from 1���������1millionto10 million in a short span of time in every case: they had made a fundamental change from being a company that was marketing one product to a business that was marketing many products.
= An aggressive proliferation of new products.
Entrepreneurial Axiom: The primary factor in Stage Two growth is the development and marketing of new products. The faster you can develop and sell those new products, the faster your business will grow.
Focusing on selling a single product the first year and then pushing out as many new products as we could once we had the cash flow and creative resources to do so.
Our first product in this business was a collection of cheap perfumes made to look like designer brands-the kind of perfumes you see in flea markets. Back then, it was a rarity.
In retrospect, it is clear that our growth was the result of 2 calculated marketing strategies:
The secondary strategy involved selling products to existing customers-products that were similar to what they had bought before, but cut and polished in a more elegant way so as to fetch a higher prices.
Consciously developing frontend and backend sales is an important growing secret.
When you start a business your top priority is to collect as many qualified customers as you can as quickly as you can.
You should expect to generate your profits. Selling those customers other products is.
Backend marketing is extremely easy. All you have to do is tell your customers about your new products and give them some incentive-almost any incentive to buy. If someone has bought from you once and found it to be a pleasant experience, that customer will be happy to buy from you again.
It is not a good idea to create a lot products when you are just beginning. It’s much better to sell one good product extremely well. But once that product is producing cash and you have the personnel and other resources to produce new products, you should do so.
Selling a single product was your primary job as a Stage One entrepreneur.
Selling a million dollars’ worth of that product to get your business to Stage Two qualifies you to call yourself a master of marketing.
Get your business from 1���������1millionto10 million, so you’ll need to get more products to the marketplace.
It is nearly impossible to tell which products are really good when they are in the conception stage. The only way you know for sure is to launch them. Since you can reasonably expect to wind up with only one good product out of two or three, and one excellent product out of five or 10, the pragmatic approach is to get good at launching many products—and then to fold the weak ones and nurture the strong ones.
Consumers aren't looking for brand-new products. They are looking for clever new adaptations of products they already know and love.
When it comes to new, the human brain can take only a little bit of it. Eighty percent of the old and twenty percent of the new is a good ratio.
You can’t dictate to the market; you must let the market tell you what to do.
Because of goodwill, the likelihood that an existing customer will buy again is very, very high.
3 fundamental marketing facts:
Winning Stage Two formula: Create a small number of tipping-point products for your frontend to enter any new markets and to replace any frontend products that are flagging. And create lots of ordinary products for your backend.
You will produce tipping-point products—but probably only one time out of every 10 times you try. And that’s the reason you have to always try to come up with new tipping-point products, even though you know you can make lots of money with ordinary products on the back end. By always trying to be innovative, you wind up with exactly what you need: nine ordinary products for your back end and one tipping-point product for your front end.
If your new-product idea feels like a breakthrough, it might be (but probably won’t be). But if it feels ordinary, it will be ordinary. So always keep working on it until it feels really good.
The first product to market isn’t always the winner. Best sellers usually come later, in the second wave. Often these second-wave winner are knock-offs marketed by Fortune 500 companies.
Formula for creative brainstorming:
Product development is a three dimensional cube: price, product type, USP(unique selling proposition)
Price: cheap, moderate, expensive.
Product type: three different types of product
USP: three different levels of KOL
The primary purpose of a business is to grow constantly change in small ways that are positive and stimulate overall growth.
The best way to spur growth is through innovation.
Fresh product ideas, like fresh dairy products, go bad over time.
The amount of growth a company can expect at the second stage of its development is directly related to its ability to generate and test new product ideas quickly.
Good ideas are what's hot there, adapt it to local conditions, and test it. More often than not, if it works in the States, it works anywhere.
Methodology of Ready, Fire, Aim
8 guidelines to streamline implementation of good ideas:
7 essential questions during the Ready phase:
Start by defining what good means to you.
An idea, of and by itself, has no intrinsic value. It must be accompanied by action.
The most important thing, by far, is starting with a good product, a product that provides a big benefit to the customer. The benefit has to be so big, in fact, that it’s easy to communicate. The moment your customer hears about it, he has to be able to see himself benefitting from it. That’s a good product, one that offers that kind of huge, instant appeal.
You probably already have more of a feel for what a “good” product is than you realize. Don’t ignore it.
“What if I’m wrong?”; simple but accurate calculations:
Finding the right people to execute your plan is perhaps the most important “get ready” activity.
You have to nail down who can help you start and run the business, and who can provide valuable advice(leading experts in the field). You should create a network of all of these individuals that you can draw on when you need to.
A big network is a steady source of opportunity.
“Who can help me get this done?”
The ideal Ready, Fire, Air business proposal looks like this:
If you routinely spend months or even weeks planning every new business venture, you are probably wasting time.
The key to being successful with start-ups is having a good general idea of what you want to do but being flexible enough to change plans quickly as you discover the invisible secrets of the market you’ve jumped into.
If you can develop the habit of 1. asking yourself the 7 essential questions and 2. coming up with a Ready, Fire, Aim business proposal for every new product or project you attempt, your chances for success in business will skyrocket-even if the ideas you have aren’t always brilliant.
Two reasons why most good business ideas and good product ideas never get off the ground:
The nothing-less-than-perfect attitude has been the theme of many success stories, but it is exactly the wrong notion to have in your head when it’s time to launch a new product or business. When the time is right to fire, you must fire. If you spend another moment aiming, the opportunity to hit your target may pass you by.
“I believe all successful people share this trait(the willingness to move ahead with a good but imperfect product). You cannot be action-oriented unless you are willing to make mistakes-even willing to look foolish or stupid.” – Robert Ringer
People who are obsessed with playing the “what if” game are destined never to get out of the starting gate.
In doing a brain scan on Bill Gates, the one thing I zeroed in on, above all else, was his strategy for getting Microsoft’s software out to the public as quickly as possible-bugs be damned.
3 simple rules of Ready, Fire, Aim
Imperfections are really just profit opportunities waiting to be seized.
Getting things going quickly is more important than planning them perfectly.
So get your products ready. Then launch them. There will be plenty of time to perfect them later, if they sell well now.
For every product or business idea that has failed because it wasn’t properly perfected before it was launched, a hundred never got launched because their champions(entrepreneurs or executives) got caught up in the make-it-perfect-first game.
What would I say to someone else to get them to get moving from a standstill?
Treat your customers as you like to be treated when you are a customer.
Most of your profits will come from backend sales, which means the easiest way to grow your company is to develop good, long-term relationships with your customers and produce really good products for them.
If you want to develop a business that keeps growing, don’t spend all your time trying to reduce your product costs. Spend a good deal of time asking “How can we make this better?”
Incremental imporvement is an ongoing process. Once or twice a year, you get together with your product development team and figure out how to make the product(and the experience of buying the product) more useful and enjoyable.
The idea is not to produce the world’s best watch for only 39,�������������ℎ������′�����39,buttoproducetheworld′sbest39 watch.
If your customers are not buying it, you should not fix it.
I have found, over and over again through the years, that it is almost impossible to make a bad(weak-selling) product good(strong-selling) by improving it incrementally. It is much smarter to drop it, go back to the drawing board, and come up with something significantly different.
Let me say that again to emphasize my point: If the product fails to sell well, trash it. If it does sell, improve it.
Products that sell moderately should be improved too, but only after the top-selling ones have been taken care of.
The product goal is constant never-ending improvement, because the business goal is constant, never-ending sales.
To get your business through its first stage(from 0 to $1 million in revenue), you are going to have to expand your product line, and that means expanding your marketing skills.
How to be a sales and marketing genius
Step one: exorcising the righteous demons
To overcome your antipathy towards sales, rid yourself of the following 3 very common myths:
If you want to market needs, move to a third world country and sell flour.
The things we buy because we need them are called commodities.
Consumers don’t want to pay a lot of money for them. They want to spend as little as possible.
Discretionary selling is selling to desire, which is exciting because it involves the breadth of human psychology, and unlimited in terms of profits because you can sell into a buying binge.
If you are selling discretionary product, the price you charge isn’t dictated by what your competition is charging but by how you position the product in the marketplace. And that is because the value of your product is not objective but perceived.
95 percent of modern commerce is based not on selling basic commodities but on selling things that have been manufactured.
When something is manufactured, there is room for quality differentiation.
When there is room for quality differentiation, there is room for perceived value.
How much that little extra difference in quality is worth is entirely subjective.
Don’t be ashamed of doing to thy neighbor that which you secretly want done to you.
Treat your customers the way you want to be treated.
Deep down it’s not about the freatures or even the superficial benfits of your products. It’s about what the buying and ownership experience does for your customers. Ultimately, your customers want you to continue shaking their molecules the way you shook them the first time when you sold them your first product.
Step two: Shooting revenues through the roof with 3 basic approaches.
The only 3 ways to increase revenue
The key to running a successful Stage2 marketing program is to put your best people to work on the frontend. The frontend is where you need tipping-point ideas, and you are not going to get tipping-point ideas with your inexperienced or b marketers.
Put together your B team to market your back-end products. They should be direct-marketing experts, since a significant portion of your back-end sales should come from direct-marketing efforts. It doesn’t matter how your front-end customers come in; there is a way to back-end them directly. You do it by gathering their addresses (postal and e-mail) and beginning a campaign of communicating with them. Talk to them about what you know they are interested in—the products and services your industry provides. Make your back-end team good at this kind of communication. Teach them to provide value so your customers become appreciative of the relationship you’re building with them. The more you give your customers, the more they will reciprocate by buying products from you.
Your back-end sales is a matter of good customer service, and good customer service involves only three things:
If you do one more thing—talk to your customers about what you are happy to do for them—your profits can skyrocket.
This is an aspect of customer service that too many entrepreneurs, even good entrepreneurs, neglect. You shouldn’t do that. Talking to your customers is one of the most powerfully profitable things you can do.
If this shop owner is as good as I hope she is, she is already collecting the names and addresses (or, better yet, e-mail addresses) of all her customers and is sending them information on a regular basis.
She should be sending them a monthly newsletter that talks about all the great new parenting books and information products that are specifically geared toward affluent parents. She should be talking about what events are taking place in the store and what new ones are being planned, and including testimonials (which she should be collecting) from customers who have experienced her special events in the past.
Step Three: A crash course in sales
Take an hour, right now, to study the following crash course in advanced marketing—and then study it again once a month for the next year. Each time you read through it, you will be surprised to discover that you have learned something new and useful that you can put to use to create more sales. When you have mastered all 20 of these lessons , your business will be producing at least $10 million in sales each year.
The Secret of the four-legged stool: Every great marketing campaign has 4 elements.
One of the most important secrets of developing a successful business: Getting your customers to buy many more products from you than they have ever bought before.
If you want to maximize the lifetime value of your new customer, you shouldn’t let him cool off after that first sale. Instead, you should send him an immediate thank-you note, along with a bounce-back promotion that replicates the psychological trappings of the prior day’s purchase and stimulates in him, once again, the desire to buy something from you.
That bounce-back promotion might be a brochure featuring some hot new pencil set, or a handwritten letter from the president of your company announcing a very limited edition pen that just arrived (with a photo of it enclosed). Since he is a customer in good standing, you might offer him a discount. And you should probably let him know that if he responds to this offer within 24 hours, he will be placed on your platinum list of VIP customers, which will give him access to the highest form of customer service you offer—essentially, he will have his own personal buyer.
Successful business owners understand that it’s not about what customers need; it’s about what they want. And that if you cater to their wants rather than their needs, you will have a much better (and by that I mean richer and more long-lasting) relationship with them.
The Law: The likelihood of a customer buying a particular product is inversely related to his need for it.
And Its Corollary: The less a customer needs a product, the more likely he is to buy it.
You should never feel bad about selling people products they don’t really need, because
a) there is very little selling that doesn’t fall into that category.
b) since buying things you don’t really need is something you do all the time, then selling to wants and desires is very effectively following the Golden Rule of Marketing Genius: Treat your customers the way you want to be treated.
THE 80/20 RULE OF BINGE BUYING
20% of your customers will be responsible for 80% of your profits. This is a business truism that no smart businessperson should ignore.
Understanding the psychology of selling is essential to ensuring a long-lasting, profitable business. At least one aspect of the psychology of selling-how people think when they buy nonessential(discretionary) products-is especially important to learn early on because it is counterintuitive.
What is good about selling commodities is that you are meeting a need. What is bad about it is that your customers won’t be loyal to you, and will always try to pay as little as they have to for the kind of product you’re selling.
What is good about selling discretionary items—and especially luxury items—is that it is relatively easy to convince your customer that your particular products are unique, and that only by purchasing them can he get the psychological benefits they offer.
What is also great about selling discretionary items is that your customers will never be satisfied with a single purchase. In fact, the more they buy, the more they will want to buy, because their purchases are stimulated not by need but by desire. And if there is one thing marketing geniuses know about desire, it is that it can be satisfied only temporarily.”
A marketing campaign that stimulates long-held and deeply held desires(acceptance, recognition, admiration, and even love) will create the best kind of customers: buyers who will buy repeatedly over a long period of time.
The single fastest way to turn your ordinary business into a cash machine is to redesign your sales and marketing strategies to focus on stimulating buying frenzies among the top 20% of your customers:
Buying frenzies vary depending on the customer’s socioeconomic bracket, her cultural belief system, her financial circumstances, and the advertising she is exposed to.
Personal goals fall into two types:
Think about the lifelong personal goals you have had but never accomplished. What is it that stopped you?
Most important ideas about Stage Two entrepreneurship:
Before launching a new product, ask and answer the following seven critical questions:
Learn how to create a Ready, Fire, Aim business plan. Use it every time you create a new product. Make sure your plan:
Figure out how sales-oriented you are. Make a commitment to change your thinking if it needs changing. In particular, learn the truth behind the three most common myths about sales and marketing:
Develop and execute a three-part marketing plan:
Take my Ready, Fire, Aim crash course in marketing, including all of the following lessons:
For every product line, determine:
When you speak to a profit center manager, for example, you will want to know revenues, profits, and—depending on the business—deferred income or inventory. From customer service managers, you will want to know the number of problems addressed, the percentage that were solved, and the amount of time it took to solve them. When you get a report from a fulfillment manager, you will want to know how many products were delivered, how long it took to deliver each one, and how much it cost. And from a marketing manager, you will want to know how many new customers they have acquired, how much those customers are spending with you, and how many refunds they’ve had to process.
Many businesses never get beyond Stage2 because the entrepreneurs who grew them refuse to make the personal changes needed to accommodate the next level of growth.
Growing a Stage3 business requires at least 6 skills:
The best COO types that I have found have been working successfully as business managers-often in accounting, but also in other operational areas-for mostly larger, established corporations.
It is also important to curb your instinct to correct mistakes. And never correct your managers in front of their people.
I’ve found that criticism is more effective when it is expressed after something positive has been said, and when it is phrased as a question rather than a declaration.
When writing memos:
Good writing is good thinking clearly expressed. Think well. Write simply.
Best business negotiator I’ve witnessed:
Business colleague: “So, what do you think it’s worth?”
BB: “I don’t know, what do you think it’s worth?”
Business colleague: “I was thinking maybe $500,000.”
At this point, BB responds in one of two ways. Either he says, “That seems fair to me,” or he says, “Gee, I don’t think I can afford that.”
That’s it. Nothing more. He has been making deals like this for as long as I’ve known him, and I have to say he is the best negotiator I have ever met. He offers no haggling. If the price is within the acceptable range, he just accepts it. If it is out of the range he just rejects it.
Of course, you’ll have to figure out what number you will be willing to accept before the conversation.
The art of making a good deal:
Get candidates to talk about themselves as much as you can.
If you notice one who keeps turning the conversation back to you and how he can help you, then you know you’ve found a winner.
Great employees understand that their main concern should be how much they can do for the business, not how the business can take care of them.
7 Myths about training, motivating, and mentoring employees
Finding great people and converting them to superstars is the single most powerful way to solve all your business problems and continue your company's growth.
Remember that you are not looking for someone to do it the same as you do it. You are looking for someone to do it better than you do it, even if he does it differently.
When you began your business, you may have spent half your time as an employee, 30 percent of it as a manager, and only 20 percent as a business builder. When sales kicked in and your business moved into Stage Two, your role as an employee should have been eliminated, and you should have been spending perhaps 60 percent of your time as a manager, 30 percent as a business builder, and 10 percent as a wealth builder. In Stage Three, you should have been spending no more than 30 percent of your time as a manager, at least 50 percent as a business builder, and about 20 percent as a wealth builder. And now that you’re in Stage Four, you should make another shift and spend even more of your time as a wealth builder. The amount of time you spend on managing or business building is entirely up to you.
The most important change you can make when your business gets to Stage Four is to gradually remove yourself from the CEO role and spend your time, if you want to, acting as both an adviser to your company and as its primary wealth builder.
We share our thoughts, ideas, and projects for all to learn and grow as we embark own our venture to gain FFF.