Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Who is running your life? Is it you, or…..the events in it?


Are you missing major events because you are ‘busy”?  Real events in your community that you really want to attend, or ‘should’ attend because of the significance to your life or business.  Too many times I hear people say they wanted to go to something but were too busy, or by the time they got around to it, it was too late to make arrangements.

Do you find yourself working on customer emergencies at a cost to your own business or plans?  Do you have a soft heart for others’ problems - or a need to please – people pleasing, so are known as a nice guy and you are getting lots of enquiries, but there are no real customers and your business is not moving forward?

Are you a coward?  You think you can’t or won’t state your needs to your customers and negotiate something realistic for both schedules because you don’t want to anger them, or for them to think badly of you.

Here are some comments that might help you get control of your business so you can participate in the events that are necessary for the development of your skills and business.

Policies


Too many small businesses don’t have policies, not even small ones to decide how to make some decisions.  These could be about when and how to pay for your services, or a 5 day turn around (keeps you on top of work, and customers know they don’t have to pressure for completion because their work will be done in turn, and there are others before them).  Your emergencies are not necessarily our priority!  Another policy could be that you take time to ‘sharpen your saw’ per Stephen Covey and attend seminars and trade shows relevant to your business.

Priorities


You are entitled to set your own priorities based on your needs, whether they are business needs, health and safety (not driving in a blizzard), family, rest, or a badly needed vacation.   Others have a vacation, you should too!

Whilst all customers are important, some are more so than others.  I once had to let a customer find his own solution.  I was responsible for a multi-million dollar account, and another prospect had called in out of the blue and needed someone out there right away.  So I wiggled a bit of time and went on site.  It was a small job and would be time consuming and expensive to do.  He proceeded to tell me how to do it, and I had to sharpen my pencil because he had other prices.  I discussed my current priorities and said I couldn’t drop what I was doing, I needed some time to clear my desk so I could concentrate on getting him a proper proposal and a good price, so give me a few days and I could make some calls to suppliers and get a proper quote for him.  He had already called before I got back to the office wanting the price, and called 3 times 15 minutes apart that afternoon.  Each time I explained we had discussed the timing, and I would get him a price as soon as I had this one job off my desk and he had to stop interrupting me. In the end, he said he could do it faster himself, so I said to go ahead.  The priority was the big account which was our bread and butter, and not someone with a high PITA factor who was trying to bully me and would cause a problem with my main account.

Policies and Priorities make it easy to deal with Squirrels and Shiny things (unexpected distractions and opportunities).  You can decide if you should use them now, put them in your parking lot, or toss them.

Planning 


Build in the time to attend events, and deal with unexpected problems.  Evaluate the past few weeks – in 40 hours (more or less), were a few hours – like 12 or 20 dealing with emergency walk-ins?  Do you run an emergency clinic or a business?  Is this the way it is?  Then plan what you can plan, and leave room in the schedule for walk-ins.  This worked quite well for one of my clients.  She found she had 2 days worth of emergencies a week, so she put her ‘shoulds’ into the calendar, then planned about 3 days, so had room and time for the other 2.  She also stated her time constraints and negotiated for a more realistic customer deadline, taking her needs into account.

Knowing what she had on her plate and the time available gave her a more solid footing and was key to her success.

Mind you, a snow storm can wreak all sorts of havoc on plans, but most people understand if you communicate about it.

The opposite example would be a knee jerk reaction without thought of priority or planning.  This is what happens when your decisions cause you to cancel something: a customer calls you with a problem that has to be fixed ‘right away’!  You had an appointment with a colleague or another customer.  You cancel it, and have to reschedule.  Your schedule is messed up and you screw up the schedule for that colleague or customer and perhaps others around them and put them behind by however long it takes to get it back into your schedule.

Planning is key in any business.  If you take some time on a regular basis and evaluate priorities and opportunities, you won’t miss important events.  You won’t scramble because you know ‘what you have to do next’ and can make decisions based on your Policies and Priorities.

So do look at your year, put those trade shows and seminars back on the schedule.  Connecting and ‘sharpening your saw’ per Stephen Covey are a very important priority.  Figure out your lead time for longer projects and schedule it.  Plan around it.  If something comes up, maybe you can do it if you get up a bit earlier and still make that event you wanted to attend.

Remember: Policy-Priority-Plan!