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You Get Out What You Put In! by Kimberly Stevens
kim@askthebizcoach.com
During
a recent coaching session with Mark, I was briefly reminded of how it feels to
give your all to your business and have it spit in your face.
“I just don’t get it! I’m
putting all my time and energy into this business, and I’m still scraping by.
I’m so tired of fighting to ‘just to make it’ but this is what I
really want to do.”
“Tell me about what’s happening in your life,” I inquired.
“My
wife says I’m spending too much time working, and I know she’s right.
But I also know that I’m the one who is responsible for paying most of
the bills. As it is, I’m probably
working 80 hours a week.”
“I
really want to spend more time with her and our son, but if we’re barely
making it now, I can’t imagine what would happen if I slowed down.
I’d lose the business for sure. What
I need is more time, not less.”
Oh,
it was terrible to hear Mark experiencing such pain.
It brought back all of the feelings I had also experienced during the
first years of my business several years earlier.
He had fallen into the same trap that many of us do.
He believed that his degree of business success was directly related to
the number of hours he put in. And,
I knew, that until we altered that belief, he would never be free to achieve
great financial success and to enjoy the freedom that the life of a business
owner can provide.
канализационные насосные станции Somewhere
along the way, many of us pick up the perceived connection between time and
results. Yes, it’s true that if
you spend 10 hours a day practicing piano that you will likely be a better
performer than if you spend 5 minutes a day.
And
that same logic might apply to specific skills you use in your business.
If you spend 4 hours every day doing anything (creating graphic designs,
writing press releases, writing sales letters), you will undoubtedly develop
your skills.
But,
in an endeavor like business, success is based on much more than the total
amount of time you put in. It’s
based on what you do during that time, what skills you have, what customers
want, how you present yourself, what you charge, how you market your business,
etc.
Some things in life are easy …
Staying
Thin = Eating Well + Exercising Baking
Cookies = Measuring Ingredients + Following Directions
The
stinker part about running a business is that you get out what you put in.
And, it’s not easy to figure out what the monster wants to eat – but
that’s your job as a business owner.
If
you spend countless hours networking at events that don’t yield results, you
are adding time to your week. If you
re-create the wheel every time you have to put a proposal together, you are
taking up time that you could be spending on other marketing activities, taking
a lunch break, spending the afternoon with your spouse and kids.
If you are starting numerous projects without bringing any of them to
completion, you are wasting time spinning your wheels rather than profiting from
one of those great ideas.
You
see, it’s important that you know where your time is going, what results you
are getting from how you spend it, and what price you are paying (both
professionally and personally) for spending so much time in your business.
Please
don’t take years to learn this one.
It’s a truth.
If you figure out what your monster wants to eat, and you feed it to him
on a regular basis, he will give you the key to the kingdom!
Are
you ready to find out what you’ve been feeding your monster (i.e. “what
you’re putting into your business)?
Don’t
hate me when I ask you to track your time. ‘How
boring’ you might say. Doesn’t
she understand that taking the time to track my time just takes more time (you
can read that line again if you need to!)
Yes,
it can be boring and it does take a little bit of time. However, if you invest
tiny little bits of time throughout the day (adding up to only 10 minutes/day
probably), you can discover the keys to propelling your business forward.
Start
today by tracking how you spend your time (track every 15 minute segment) for
the next 5-7 days. Include all the
time you spend working, including evenings and weekends.
After
the week is over, look back over the completed worksheets and tell me what you
see. Look for things like:
breakdown
the number of hours you are spending on: marketing
providing
your services
office
work (invoicing, paying bills)
email
other
functions
add up the number of hours it takes you to do certain standard functions
that are part of your business attending
a meeting (driving to/from + meeting)
writing
a proposal
adding
a new client to your practice
doing
your accounting work
Too
much time spent on office work could tell you that you need to outsource some of
your administrative work.
Too
much time spent on email might tell you that you need to stop reading so many
ezines (except mine!), only read/answer personal email during off hours, or
learn how to use the sorting function of your email program so the most
important emails are highlighted.
Too
much time spent on marketing efforts that are not yielding new customers could
tell you that it’s time to quit that networking club or stop using direct
mail, so you’ll have more time to invest in the types of marketing that are
working well for your business (where have your current customers come from?
Do more of that!)
Too
much time spent attending prospect meetings might tell you that you need to
reduce the geographic area you are targeting in order to decrease the time it
takes to go to/from prospect and client meetings.
Too
much time spent writing a proposal might tell you that you need to automate your
process more so that you only have to input a few items of data to create each
new proposal, contract, or spreadsheet.
There
is so much to learn by tracking your time. Yes,
it might be boring, but it’s an investment of 10 minutes a day for a week that
might just buy you the freedom and financial success you’ve been seeking.
Best of Luck! ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Kimberly Stevens is the author of "Ask The Biz Coach ... How To
Multiply Your Income: The Professional's Guide to Making $100,000+ a Year".
Sign-up for a 5-part free Email Mini-Course, "The Secrets of Professionals
Who Make $100,000+" at www.askthebizcoach.com
October 1, 2002