7 Lessons Learned From Running a Consulting Company

mad men

by: NEIL PATEL

Although I don’t do much consulting these days, I used to run a consulting company. It was an Internet marketing agency that helped small and large brands like GM, HP, Samsung, Viacom, AOL, boost their traffic through search engine optimization and social media marketing.

I did it for around 6 years and boy did I make a lot of mistakes. Running a consulting company is tough and sadly it’s a lot less sexier than it seems…

Here are 7 things I learned from running a consulting company:

Lesson #1: The day you sign a client is the day you start losing them

Consulting companies have a high churn rate. Some consultants claim that they have never lost a client, but that’s a bunch of horse crap. If a customer doesn’t renew their contract, I consider that a lost client.

You never know how long a client is going to last, so make sure you do everything possible to keep them. Here’s what I used to do to ensure that clients stay as long as possible:

  • Set expectations from day one – before you take on a client, you should let them know what they should expect and when to expect it by. If they have unrealistic expectations, let them know why.
  • Have a kick off call – having one is a great way to ensure that things start on the right foot. One unique thing you can do is send your client some cookies or snacks in the mail so that way they feel like they are with you during the kick off call.
  • Weekly calls – every week you should have at least a 5-minute call with your client. Tell them what you did for the week and see if they have any questions.
  • Send industry updates – if you are a design agency you should be sending unique design news to your clients. If you have a marketing agency, you should send them marketing information. Sending industry related news to your clients not only shows that you know the latest and greatest, but also it makes them feel special.
  • Monthly reports – at the end of each month you should send your clients a detailed report of everything that you did. Ideally it should include pretty graphs and other forms of visuals. You should go over the report with the client over the phone or in an in person meeting.
  • Monthly surveys – at the end of each month I recommend sending your clients a quick survey. The survey shouldn’t have generic questions like “are you happy”, but instead it should be specific questions that help you improve the quality of your work. Such as, “how can we make the monthly report better”.

Lesson #2: Client’s are always right, except when they are wrong

You are always going to have clients telling you what they want. And although they are paying you, they shouldn’t be telling you what you should be doing.

See, you were hired because you have a specific expertise that they don’t have. This is why it should be you telling the client what is best for them. It doesn’t matter if they like what you have to say or not, your job as a consultant is to do what’s best for the client.

If you focus on doing what’s best for them, your work will provide better results for their company.

When trying to do what’s best for your client, you will run into roadblocks. The best way to be prepared for this is to show them data that backs up what you want to do and show how it is best solution for them.

Lesson #3: You’re worth every penny, so show it

Every once in a while you’ll have clients who make snarky remarks on how much they are paying you or how they feel they can do your job better than you can. Don’t take crap from clients; make sure you show them that you’re worth every penny.

You can do this by showing their return on investment. For example, with my consulting company, we looked at 3 numbers: average revenue per transaction, conversion rate, and search engine traffic. We used those metrics to show how much additional revenue we brought in through our efforts.

This shows how valuable of an asset you are, assuming you are actually providing results. The next time they are thinking about canning you, they’ll think twice because they know you actually bring in more money than you cost.

Lesson #4: You have to dress to impress

Just like how I mentioned last week, you have to dress to impress. The better you dress the higher of a consulting rate you can demand.

When I started off as a consultant I dressed like a bum, and I wasn’t able to make more than $100 an hour. Once I started to dress a bit nicer I was able to make up to $250 an hour. And when I dressed really nice, I was able to command rates in the four-figure range.

Not only does a nice wardrobe show potential clients that you are successful, but it will help boost your confidence. Plus, clients want to pay people who successful as they hope they can bring that same success to their company.

Lesson #5: The more you charge, the less they complain

One of the first things I learned is that there is an inverse correlation between how much a client pays you and how many times they complain. In other words, the more money a client pays you, the less they will complain.

Large paying clients usually have a lot more cash, so spending it isn’t as big of a deal. They know that if they want to continue to grow, they have to spend money. And when doing so, sometimes things work out, while other times they don’t… but at the end of the day you have to keep on making bets.

Smaller clients on the other hand don’t have that much money. So if they hire you and you mess up, they usually don’t have the luxury to hire someone else like the larger clients do.

When you first start off you may have to take on smaller paying clients, but your goal should be to transition to the larger paying ones as quickly as possible.

Lesson #6: Fake it till you make it

As I mentioned in lesson number 5, you should be going after larger paying clients. If you don’t have a bunch of case studies or years of experience under your belt, don’t worry. You can still lock in the big guys.

All you have to do is figure out what separates your consulting company from the larger ones. Big clients typically pay big consulting companies, but if you can show why you are better than the bigger ones, you will lock them in.

At my consulting firm, I realized that clients loved how I would work on their projects compared to how bigger firms assigned them junior consultants. Once I found this out I would tell potential clients how I personally would be working on their project and how they wouldn’t get that with the bigger firms.

Lesson #7: When it rains it pours

Like I mentioned earlier, you are going to lose clients. It’s just a matter of time. Because of this you should try to conserve as much cash as possible. When things go south you don’t want to have to fire people, instead you want to operate off of your reserves.

A few ways you can conserve cash is by:

  1. Have a cheap office – my office was cheap and didn’t have windows. I also didn’t have fancy furniture and I made it a point to make sure my clients didn’t see it by only doing in person meetings at their office.
  2. Create a variable compensation plan – when my business was doing well my employees got compensated well. And when it wasn’t, they didn’t. Everyone had a low base salary and earned a percentage of the profit.
  3. Keep a healthy reserve – I never depleted my corporate bank account by taking a high salary. I always left a 6-month to a 1-year reserve in the bank before I paid myself well.
  4. Don’t grow too fast – even if you are constantly getting new cliental, don’t hire too quickly. Consider outsourcing some of your work to a local firm before you hire new employees. This way, if you lose a few clients, you won’t have to fire any of your staff.
  5. Always be closing – even when things look good, remember that someone still has it better than you. Never stop trying to bring in more clients, as this will help your business stay afloat.

Conclusion

Running a consulting company isn’t easy. It’s a lot of work, and you have tons of bosses (each one of your clients is your boss). Although it can pay very well, at the same time it can be very stressful.

If you want to reduce your stress as a consultant, make sure you learn from your mistakes and only take on clients you can actually provide results to. Because being with a client is like being in a marriage. Sometimes you get into it for the wrong reasons and eventually they hit you in the face.

So do yourself a favor, don’t get into a marriage unless you know it will work.

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Decide If Social Media Is Right for Your Business

Decide if Social Media Is Right for Your BusinessSocial media is often a big help when you’re developing your brand. It allows businesses to connect to customers on a more personal level. But that doesn’t mean it’s right for every small business.

Sheryl Sandberg, the COO of Facebook, believes that 9 million small businesses in the U.S. use Facebook.

Twitter and Facebook are useful in different ways. Twitter is known to be better for customer engagement, while Facebook helps funnel traffic to your site. Both sites help you better your search engine optimization (SEO).

Take three steps before launching Twitter and Facebook campaigns and decide which social media platform is right for your small business.

1. Is social media right for your company?

Remember the old question, “If everyone was jumping off a bridge would you do it too?”

The buzz makes everybody feel that social media helps their business. It’s likely that’s true, but it’s vital that you decide if social media is necessary for your business to succeed right now.

Though millions of small businesses have jumped on the social media train, your target audience might not be caught up in it. If you feel that’s the case, it makes sense to hold off. Or, perhaps you aren’t ready to make the most of social media’s benefits, so wait until your company is ready.

2. Timing is everything

Having a strong presence in social media takes a lot of time and a lot of resources. If you can’t dedicate the manpower to keeping up a quality profile, it might hurt your brand in the long run.

Look at your team and decide if your business can handle the workload. If it can, then be fully prepared to implement it. Like any good marketing campaign, your social media portfolio has to have a clear identity, and reach your target audience.

If you forge ahead, prepare the information you want to share each week. Figure out what time of the day your posts and tweets have the most impact by reaching your core customers.

3. Set goals and guidelines

In 2011, companies saw a 63 percent increase in marketing effectiveness. But businesses of all sizes are trying to establish a strong ROI when it comes to social media.

Setting goals for the next few weeks, months and years helps you decide if your valuable time is worth the effort and if you’re using social media successfully. It’s also important to set ground rules of who in your company will handle your social media sites.

Decide on what content is and isn’t appropriate to post. Learn how to handle customer interaction and what steps to take if something goes wrong. Then spend some time educating your staff before the first day of having a visible social media profile.

Once you have created a place for your business in the social media realm, look around your direct and indirect competitors’ pages. It helps you understand what the best practices are to engage customers.

Also research the different ways social media platforms are reaching out to help small businesses advertise. See if those steps are right for your brand as well.

In the end, social media is another tool for your company’s toolbox. It will only be effective if you can take the time to learn how to use it properly.

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The Top Branding Mistake Small Businesses Make

by: ROB SCOTT

There is a crucial error businesses and experts make when wanting to find the right brand for themselves, and if we don’t figure this out we will always miss just a little bit with our marketing.  If we can figure this one problem out, our message just really lines up directly with what interests our customer and we ultimately grow our business and have much more success.

Branding, in concept, is really about “you” and so as businesses we all want to define “us.” Direct response marketing, in contrast, is actually that shift over to what “they” care about and making your business about the customer and less about defining “you.”

Here’s the hard truth:  They don’t care about you.

They don’t care about you, or your company, or your product.  They care about them.  Don’t be upset, they don’t care about me either.  This is a universal response to having a self.  We care about ourselves.

OK, back to branding.

You could call branding “distraction marketing.”  Brands actually distract us, and end up in places where we do not ask for them, billboards and magazines etc. Direct Response Marketing has to begin with a distraction but ultimately asks the customer to say “Yes, that’s me.” They give a direct response, and choose to connect with your company.

Brands are asking you to “make a decision later.”  They want you to remember them and later to make a decision. Like with Tylenol, who is trying to stay in your head so that later on you will think of them when you are making a purchase at the store. But for people online, it’s not as effective to brand them for a later decision, we want them to actually take action now.  Direct response is looking for action now as opposed to branding and idea for a later time.

So how do we really get into the head of our customer? How do we get away from caring so much about our own branding, and get over to what they really care about?  We need to be the person we are trying to talk to and really craft our marketing towards who they are and not who we are.

There are 3 steps:

  • Step 1 Close your eyes and imagine being that ideal customer and having the problem that your product can solve.
  • Step 2 Describe what they are feeling. Write down their issues, concerns, complaints, frustrations, etc.
  • Step 3 Craft your marketing message from there.  Make your blog posts, any ads or headlines come from these frustrations.  Learn to “brand yourself” by coming from these problems and no longer from what you are about.

Basically learn to LIVE on/in/around these customer issues. Because that’s what THEY most care about.

What if you did this in your business? What if you only spoke to people that are having such a hard time that they are ready to buy right now, instead of getting everyone “out there” to know you? Branding is about getting everyone to know you but it doesn’t matter if everyone knows, it only matters if they know you, and they are going to buy.

If you would like more information on how to begin a Direct Response campaign and ultimately come up with a sequence that sells, or what I call a “Sequence for Strangers” you can check out this video and grab the free report.  Have fun!

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3 Marketing Truths I Wish I’d Known Sooner

By: Tim Berry President, Palo Alto Software 

3 Marketing Truths I Wish I'd Known Sooner

I won’t say I learned all three of these the hard way, because that would imply having put real money into a contest against real people, which never happened. It did, however, take me years to recognize that strategy based too heavily on superior product was not good enough, and I’m still working, I have to admit, on the critical decision of when to change the plan. So I’d like to save you some of the trouble I’ve had, and suggest that the following are three truths you ought to know.

1. Great marketing beats great product.

Sad but true. The full form of this statement is that great marketing for mediocre product will almost always beat mediocre marketing of great product.

I started in high tech in the late 1970s as a market analyst for Creative Strategies. I followed the personal computer and personal computer software markets as a professional analyst into the 1990s and since then as a software entrepreneur. I’ve seen this happen over and over again. The best product doesn’t usually win the race. Sure, it happens sometimes, but far more often, the best marketing wins.

For proof, look at the real winners of this millennium: they’re marketing driven. Amazon.comFacebookZappos? That’s great marketing.

Apple perhaps, with its “insanely great” products? I’d argue that Apple’s design and Steve Jobs’ success story is more marketing than product. There were MP3 players before the iPod, multifunction phones before iPhone, and tablet computers before the iPad.

2. Real people beat real money.

As one of my grandkids would say, “I hope I hope I hope.” The world is changing so fast. Big companies spend big money on big ads in big media, but people prefer local, authentic and real people. Lots of Davids beat the Goliaths.  People want focused, segmented and local, and they want to identify with an individual.

I was one of a group of angel investors who chose to invest in Good Clean Love, a natural organic intimacy product. One of us worried aloud that big pharmaceutical and consumer product brand names might jump on the market, copy the product benefits, and spoil the opportunity.

“Nope,” came the convincing comment from an investor who’s already built a natural organic brand, “that won’t happen because people won’t buy these products from a big impersonal company. People care about the story, and the people behind the story.” And I believe that. I’d argue that Apple’s success feels like Steve Jobs’ success, and Amazon.com is Jeff Bezos’, and Zappos is Tony Hsieh’s. And then there’s Huffington Post. There are so many examples.

And who’s winning in the new world; Facebook, Twitter, and the like? The real winners are smaller companies run by individuals who share their authentic selves.

3. Consistency beats brilliance.

The full form of this one is: better a mediocre marketing plan consistently applied over a few years than a series of brilliant strategies, each lasting months, each contradicting the last one.

That’s another one, like the first one here, that I call sad but true. If you define marketing like John Jantsch does, getting people to know, like and trust you, then you have to realize that it takes being the same you – whether that’s a personalized company you or a larger company brand – over a long period of time. Every time you reinvent the brand, you start back at zero.

Sure, in real-world marketing you can’t keep doing something that isn’t working just because it’s in your plan. But, on the other hand, with any normal marketing strategy you and your whole team are bored stiff with a marketing strategy long before it begins to make impact on those people you want to reach. You need to give it time. And you need to stick with it until it’s not working, not just until you’re bored with it.

You can’t expect to hit the bullseye with every arrow. You keep trying.

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14 Nice Things You Can Do For Your Customers

By: Ian Lurie

I make no promises. But I suspect if you do some of this stuff, your customers will thank you. Or, they won’t notice the stuff that used to make them curse you:

  1. Make every page on your site load 1 second faster. Start by taking every image on your site and compressing it. Please. It makes a difference.
  2. Accept PayPal. Just because you hate it doesn’t mean they do.
  3. Do a little basic typography: Increase line spacing, use a bigger font. Make your site easy to read.
  4. Put no more than 15 words on a line. See above.
  5. Put no more than 5 lines in a paragraph.
  6. Break up your page. Use lists, images, subheads and such. Don’t give them one big blob of images or text.
  7. If they ask you a question on Twitter or Facebook, answer it.
  8. If they compliment you on Twitter or Facebook, say thanks.
  9. Instead of giving them a discount, give them a better product.
  10. Before you pay $45000 to redesign your web site, pay $4500 to make the existing site easier to use. Then use what you learned on the new site.
  11. Don’t even imply that your customers have to log in before they can buy. Put that stuff at the very end of the checkout process, on the ‘thank you’ page.
  12. Trade ‘elegance’ or ‘personality’ for ‘clarity’ and ‘obviousness’. Watch your sales go up.
  13. Remove one feature that you wanted, but your customers didn’t, from your site.
  14. Stop reading about marketing stuff and go do it.

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