Business Management articles: tips, advice, ideas, strategies & solutions

WOODRIDGE

Business Management Articles

Follow us at

Subscribe to our Business Management Articles Feeds


Feeds

What's this?

Home > Business Management

The Simple Things You Take for Granted are Costing You a Fortune

by: Beth Schneider

Back when I was a college student, I invited my Grandparents over for dinner to see my first apartment. I made a gourmet dinner of Spaghetti and Salad using every mismatched pot I owned. I set a beautiful table with my hand-me-down silverware, poofed up my hair (it was the early 90's after all) and waited for them to arrive.

After a lovely dinner, the show began. In what was truly just a few minutes, Grandma had cleared the table, packed the leftovers, washed all the dishes (including the pots and pans) and had desert on the table. At the time I just sat there with my mouth open, dumbfounded at how fast she'd handled everything.

Looking back I realized that all her years of making dinner and doing dishes had caused her to develop a system. A process for handling the dishes and the mess. And it didn't matter that she wasn't in her own kitchen, she just instinctively followed her process and got the job done in record time with little effort.

Just like it had never occurred to me to create a system for basic things like handling the dishes, many people skip over creating systems for basic things like handling phone numbers and making follow up calls.

But skipping over these crucial systems can be costing you thousands of dollars in lost time and money. Here's what I mean.

One of my clients is a marketing guru. He charges $250 an hour. We found he was spending an hour a week looking for lost phone numbers. Doesn't seem like much, right? Do you know how much that comes to? That comes to $12,000 per year. He was losing $12,000 a year looking for phone numbers. So many people tell themselves they don't have time to worry about the "little things". Just by creating a system to manage his phone numbers, he can make $12,000 more a year without hiring anybody.

The "little" or "simple" things are defined as those things that "just happen". You know those quick little things that only take a minute. But ever notice that those little things that should only take a few minutes take 10,000 times longer than you think they should? And then you find those little simple things have eaten up all of your time and energy.

So how do you create these systems? Well I'm glad you asked. Here are 3 steps to help you determine how you do all those "little things".

Step 1: Decide What You Need to Write Process About

Think about what you do on a daily, weekly or monthly basis. Create a list of all these things to create your own job description. Most people don't really know how they are spending their time. They spend tons of time on answering email, making phone calls, looking for files. These are all the "simple things" that are over looked. Make a list of all the things you do and be sure to include the "simple things".

Step 2: Set a Desired Outcome

Technically process is defined as a sequential set of events that leads to an outcome. Everything we do has an outcome. The idea is to decide ahead of time what that should be and then create the steps to get you there.

Think about this, if you are driving somewhere you know when you are "there". You wouldn't get in your car without knowing where you are going. For all of the items on your list - what or where is "there". When the process is complete, what are you holding in your hands? Why are you making that phone call? What do you want to get out of it? Determine what the end is BEFORE you get started.

Step 3: Document Your Process

Put it on paper people. Create a flowchart of all the steps you need to take to achieve your desired outcome. Just start with a pack of sticky notes and start asking yourself questions.
What do I do first? Write your answer on a sticky note and place it on a wall.
What do I do next? Write that answer on the next sticky note, put it on the wall next to the first note and so on until you have a map of how you want to do things.

It's an easy process, but it's not always a simple process. Keep at it, the rewards are worth it.

© 2005 Beth Schneider, Process Prodigy. Want to reprint this article, feel free as long as you include the resource:
About the Author:
Beth Schneider, Chief Infopreneur of Process Prodigy, is a business process consultant who helps solo-entrepreneurs, small business owners and network marketers who want to systemize their business to increase profits, increase productivity and grow their business without having to give up the family oriented, flexible, balanced lifestyle they desire. Beth works one-on-one with her clients, offers home study courses, and teleclass boot camps. For more information visit http://www.ProcessProdigy.
thumb it up
 

 

No. of Times this article has been viewed : 616
Date Published : Oct 6 2009

Most Recently Published Business Management Articles as of

Feb 9 2010    Warning: Be Careful Who You Hire

by BMA Editorial Team A

And, yes, if someone does not work well with you fire them immediately because they are not who will bring your dream to the next level. Relationships are the key to all partnerships and if it ain't working from the start, it never will.

Feb 9 2010    Keepers of the Truth

by Rebel Brown

Our audiences put their money where their beliefs are. Since those dollars represent the success we seek - let's follow them instead of our own assumptions.

Feb 3 2010    Hiring Procedures: Avoid These 7 Big Mistakes

by Annette Estes

Making these seven mistakes can keep you from hiring the right people. Don't base hiring decisions primarily on the job interview if you want to hire superior performers.

Jan 28 2010    How to Beat the Recession

by BMA Editorial Team A

It's no use waiting for the economy to turn around. Here and now, there's no such thing as the economy. There's only your business and your customers.

Jan 28 2010    How to Accelerate Organizational Performance and Improve Job Satisfaction

by Greg Smith

The new realities of this economy have challenged business executives at all levels. Uncertainties about the economic recovery, increasing government involvement, rising health care costs, and the motivation of the workforce have placed management in a complicated and tenuous situation.

Jan 27 2010    Customer Surveys - Satisfaction or No Satisfaction, What are the Questions?

by Colin Fell

This article shares some information about the importance of surveys and statistics in understanding your customers, and how well you're delivering it.

Jan 26 2010    Little White Lies

by Rebel Brown

Little white lies become dirty little secrets.

Jan 26 2010    Some tips to help avoid destroying your company's long term value

by Jim Stewart

Economists are trying to figure out how long and how deep this recession will be. As a business owner I think they're missing the point. The point is that this recession will come to an end as every one before it has done.

Jan 25 2010    Problems for offshore manufacturing

by Jim Stewart

No strategy can confer advantage forever, regardless of how disruptive or earth shattering it is when first used. And it's often events beyond the control of the company employing the strategy that reduce, or eliminate, the benefits it offers.

Jan 25 2010    4 Key Ingredients of High Performance Companies

by Jim Stewart

High Performance Management which, like golf, looks easy and isn't and requires a number of things to work together simultaneously. Get one wrong or out of synch with the others and the result will not be what you intended - in fact it could be quite the opposite.

Jan 25 2010    4 Reasons why every Company should be Sold

by Jim Stewart

I've always believed that, on a day-to-day basis, most owners are more concerned with making the year's profits goals than the value of the business as an asset. But it had never really occurred to me that anyone would not consider selling either for the right offer or when they're ready to retire.

Jan 22 2010    How Business Owners Can Enjoy Luxury Of Their Own Wealth

by BMA Editorial Team B .

It seems rather unnecessary to say that important steps should not be taken without careful consideration, but experience shows that such steps are often taken from caprice or without serious thought.

Jan 22 2010    Is Starting A Nutrition Business Now A Brilliant Idea?

by BMA Editorial Team B .

It's a fact that health, wellness and nutrition are the biggest booming markets in the world today. Everyone is just starting to be more and more health conscious and people are in search for that solution to keep their mind and body fit and strong for as long as possible.

Jan 21 2010    10 Items or Less- How to Use the Customer's Demand for Fast Service and Convenience

by BMA Editorial Team A

Figure out how to create your own '10 Items or Less' convenience for your customers. Your sales and profits will increase.

Jan 20 2010    Why Priority Is A Key To Work At Home Success

by BMA Editorial Team B .

The need for discipline in a work at home job is essential to the success of the business. After all an individual can't do their job efficiently if they're playing at the Atari arcade online or catching the latest judge show on television.

12345678910...
Search for ebooks on Management & Business