Things change – have you?
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Things change – have you?

When I was pretending to be an electronics engineer over 35 years ago I had an epiphany*… (cue woo woo music)

I started my working life** at 16, as a technician (apprenticed to BT), and then worked for Apricot Computers hand designing very complex printed circuit boards (Intel 386 motherboards), way before the software was clever enough to do it all.

At nights and weekends for five years I went to university to get my degree (obvs, I was a swot, I got a first class electronics degree).

The weird thing was, even armed with my newfound knowledge and a big certificate, people at work still saw me as a technician. A desk jocky running the million pound computers to produce more million pound computers. They didn’t see me as an engineer. I had changed, but I was still used and seen as a technician. They weren’t getting the most out of me because of a bias – they ‘knew’ what I could do.

Things change. You change. Your business changes. Bloody hell, everything changes (except Tom Cruise)!

The software you’ve been using the same way for the last 10 years has improved (hopefully!), added features, changed their focus, introduced payment tiers – and you might not be getting the most out of it any more…

The people who work for you or with you have changed, learnt new stuff, added skills – and you might be overlooking them…

The changes might have happened so slowly you didn’t notice.

Or so fast you didn’t understand.

The problem is you might end up switching to the next provider, software, service, mentor, coach, or looking for new people for your team – ‘nexting’ away the opportunities to get the most out of the resources you already have.

My client, Andy Bass , wrote an excellent book all about this – Start With What Works: A faster way to grow our business, he asks: “What have you got, and what else can you do with it?” Which is a great question to get you started and thinking in the right direction.

BUT there’s another side to the equation - YOU!

Because the same happens to you – you have changed, added services, learnt new things, added products – the problem is your clients are too busy doing their thing to always notice – now and then you just have to make it clear.

HOW do you keep on top of all this change?

Do a quick internal and external stock take (I do this as part of my yearly detox).

External:

  • List all the software, services, suppliers you’re using
  • Check out their websites/sales page as if you were a new client
  • Are you using them to the best of their ability?
  • What else can you get for what you’re paying?
  • What can you stop because of redundancy or lack of use?

Internal:

  • What’s changed for you in the last year? Have you taken on new staff? Started a new program? Written a new book? Added a new product?
  • Have you told your clients?
  • Have you reminded them?
  • Have they heard you?
  • Would it hurt to tell them again?

You might just find you can get a lot more out of the products and services you’re paying for, AND bring in a lot more money by clearly telling your clients what you do, and how they can refer you.

Ciao for now,

Debs

* I didn’t say it was an amazing epiphany!

** My first job, after a paper round (lol!) was selling fruit and veg in a Kwiksave to pay for my first trip abroad to Salou, Spain


PS: I'm Debs Jenkins, I've written a few books over the years (16, I think). You might like: Stop Writing Books Nobody Reads and Stop Selling Books Nobody Buys. My newest book is coming out in Spring 2024, the working title is The Credibility Crisis. If you want to find out how I can help you get your book written, published and working for you pop me a message!

Estelle Read

Bestselling Author, Coach & Speaker | Optimising Your Brilliance | Empowering Leaders to Conquer Imposter Syndrome, Stress & Burnout | Cultivating Calm Confidence for Next-Level Results with My SHINE & CLEAR Systems.

1 年

Everything changes except for Tom Cruise ??. Classic Debs line. Love it.

Very useful article especially at this time of the year Debs! Thanks for mentioning "Start With What Works"!

Lisa de Caux

Stop your readers getting distracted by wordy niggles?Business books?Fiction?The enthusiasm is palpable

1 年

The Tom Cruise bit made me laugh, Debs – that doesn't distract from the important point you're making though! We certainly do develop and change as time goes by. LinkedIn still asks me to collaborate on articles about auditing and risk management… I've been an editor for years now, and it still hasn't noticed ??

Emma Williams PhD

Creatively Empowering Researchers in their Careers ● Author, speaker, trainer, coach ● Coffee loving physicist

1 年

Interesting! Just about to write my monthly newsletter but then this thought has stopped me in my tracks!

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