How to Think About the Systems in Your Business
Robert FORD
Business Growth Specialist | Business Community Leader| Business Connector
I was stunned while reading this article about How to Think About the Systems in Your Business. Here are some of them:
Many entrepreneurs start a?business ?and end up owning a job. The difference between owning your job and owning a business lies in the various systems used to operate the company. These systems determine how the business functions and its structure.
Many?small business owners ?are content with owning a job. They want independence. They want the ability to work for themselves. But others strive to turn their business into a self-functioning entity, one that gives them more freedom. They can walk away from the business for months, but when they return they find their business continuing to run like clockwork.
Whether you are striking out on your own because you want freedom or scaling to sell, the key to success is in the systems. These systems run the business. They determine the steps needed to create orders, sell products, deliver goods and invoice customers. If you have consistent processes and procedures, your customers learn to trust you.
Trust from customers comes from giving them what they want and doing it so they can count on you. But you can't do that if you don't have set procedures to follow and wake up every day trying to wing it.
Here are 3 ways to think about the systems in your business to help improve it and grow.
1. Begin to see the patterns.
Patterns tip us off to the underlying systems. What are the phases at each point in product development? What do customers tend to write in their online reviews? What is the average time for each step in your billing process?
The patterns are the first way to start to think about the systems in your business. This will help you see that the?sales ?process isn't as random as you thought. It likely follows a similar pattern each time.
This is the foundation for many sales training programs. They have better steps to get someone to purchase your offering. They know that they can teach you how to create a gap between what your customer currently has and what they want. The sales process highlights this gap with an easy bridge to what they want (buying your product).
2. If you had to explain what you do at each stage, how would you describe it?
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If you were training a new person, how would you walk them through what you do, so they can replicate it? This will help you see that the steps you take form a pattern and create your process.
If you ask why you take each step, you start to see if it developed because you happened to do it that way or if you have a solid reason for it. If the answer is "I don't know, I've always done it that way," then become more active in creating the procedures. Don't assume the way you happened to do it is best — most of the time it isn't.
3. Processes and procedures in your business are like habits in your life.
This perspective of?habit ?explores the nuances of human existence and realises that we go through life repeating much more of our daily lives than we realise. We want to think each day and each decision is unique.
But psychologists see the way we live as much more systematic. These habits drive our thoughts and our behaviors. They form patterns that can be helpful or harmful to us over time.
The processes and procedures in a business are like the habits of an individual. They tend to form by deciding once. Then, when faced with a similar decision, we make a similar choice. When we do this repeatedly, we start to create habits.
Finding ways to think about your business systematically will help to create the right steps that will lead to better processes. This leads to more success. Regardless of how you see your business, make sure you know the systems to continue to grow and improve.
Want to know more? Head on over to the full article here for more ideas and perspective. Afterwards, why not drop me an email to share your thoughts at [email protected]; or call me on 0467 749 378.
Thanks,
Robert