This One Word Can Kill a Company or Build a Sales Empire
Recently I was talking with a small business owner enjoying a degree of success growing his business from a one-man-band to six person shop and achieving a degree of local business notoriety. Our discussion centered on talk of hiring a sales professional for the company and the owners exciting growth plans to take the business to the next level.
The owner was convinced that the correct course to grow the business was through a large expansion in products, markets served and by targeting larger customers that could buy in bigger chunks.
His theory was that with a significant expansion he could grab more revenue and tap new markets to avoid the risk of his primary revenue source drying up and foundering the company.
It was a reasonable line of thinking that I identified with even though it was a poor decision that could not have been more wrong. I know this because I was guilty of the same mistake in a similar situation at an earlier point in my sales career.
I could not persuade the owner to look at a more focused strategy of measured growth or any other option for that matter, so I knew it was something I was going to have to pass on. With any luck, maybe I can help you avoid a mistake that your business just may not recover from.
The biggest lesson I got out of my own personal foray into this folly was simply this:
Be the Master of Something or you will be known for nothing.
As a little, growing, cash starved business there is usually a strong desire, at some point, to throw sales discipline out the window and bend your little company around any and every opportunity for potential revenue you can find to survive.
Making that decision would likely be one of the worst decisions you could make, but I also know that over 50% of you will take that leap anyway because the alternatives will be too ugly to even contemplate.
It may seem counterintuitive, but the solution is to go narrow and deep, not wide and shallow. Narrowing your focus to your best product(s), best prospects, building your brand, your experience and credibility in a niche you can own is the best strategy for success.
Look to expand after you have become Master of your Niche and can successfully leverage your hard-won market credibility into sales of your new offerings. Having too many offerings or serving a large diverse market where it is hard to get traction will leave you Master of Nothing, unremarkable, swimming in a sea of mediocrity.
As focusing sunlight through a magnifying glass gets the attention of the local ant population, a razor-like focus on what you do best is the best way to burn through all the marketing and sales noise that can water down your message and drown out a small company.
What is the worst that can happen?
Typically this story ends one of three ways.
- The company expands and expands to a wider range of products and offerings in hopes of capturing cash flow and the company ends up eating the people it was supposed to feed.
- Continued expansion occurs until the sales, support or management structure collapses, damaging customer service, reputations and sales to say the least. With any luck the smaller but right-sized company will begin to grow again at a more measured pace.
- Miracles happen.
Three tips for the road.
Create a sales strategy to go deep, building brand, customers, and loyalty as you attract sales.
Manage your cash carefully to avoid potentially being forced to make poor decisions in a crunch.
Get known for something before your company and bank account are worth nothing.
Want to know more on the subject? Drop me an email with FOCUS in the subject line. val {at} saleslaundry.com. As an extension, click here to learn how to multiply your existing sales momentum into more sells.
Image courtesy of positivepsychologynews.com

