Home | Marketing Maverick | Fill Out Surveys | Infinte Income Plan | The Guru Assassin | Forex Robot FAP | Contact
home business

From Part-Time to Full -Time Incomes




Learn how to Compress Time


In the popular 1980's movie "Dune," man learned that by "folding space" the distance between two points shortened and he could cover those distances faster. Around 1995, we found a substance that could bend time in the business community -- it was called Venture Capital. With enough of it, we could compress the evolution of a startup company from a few decades to a few years. Companies like Amazon, eBay and most recently Google showed us that billion dollar companies could be built in years, not decades.

What was more interesting is that these companies began growing faster even as the venture capital markets dried up completely. They found a better approach to growing at a dizzying rate - by compressing time.

Compression in Action

Compressing time in a business means reducing the time between two salient points of development. For example, reducing the amount of time it takes to acquire a customer. Or reducing the amount of time it takes to service that same customer. Or even better, reducing the amount of time it takes to get paid by that customer!

The bane of most business plans is that they quickly fall into the rut of doing what seems obvious, creating a sequential and time-intensive approach to growth. Amazon could have started out with one small store and then built that store out over time. Instead, they conceived (and built) the world's largest book store from the get-go, and then spent the rest of their time keeping that store in business. They essentially built their company backwards.

Google and eBay took a different approach. They realized that in order to grow fast they would have to acquire customers at an alarming rate. They also realized that they would need to acquire millions of free customers in order to get hundreds of paying customers. Their models essentially gave the services away for free in order to compress the timelines of customer acquisition. With a huge network of customers in hand, they can now spend their time servicing the paying customers that shook out along the way.

Squeezing out the Empty Space

When I talk about squeezing out the empty space, I'm not talking about getting rid of the BizDev Team. I'm talking getting rid of the bloated, sequential processes that keep companies from growing faster. Let's start with a problem that just about every business faces - the time it takes to acquire and service a customer.

With an eye on compression, the first thing we should do is agree on the goal. The goal is to get the customer to pay for your service. Everything else is just a means to that end.

For our own purposes, we'll say we are a consulting company that sells it's time to clients for a fee. We may decide that we can condense our sales cycles by picking up work that other companies have sold and providing our people on those projects. Instead of spending time soliciting clients, we could spend our time billing them.

Or we may decide that our sales cycle is efficient, but it takes too long to hire and train people. In this case we might decide to outsource the work we bring in, saving ourselves the time and expense of recruiting a team of our own. Once again we are able to compress the time it takes to collect our fees (and reinvest them) which ultimately grows the business faster.

Don't Squeeze Too Hard

Every lesson comes with a caveat, and this one is no exception. Compressing timelines just for the sake of going warp speed isn't always in your company's best interest. Some aspects of your business, like your corporate culture, benefit from developing over time. With each decision to speed things up, you must recognize which aspects of the organization may be strained as a consequence.

Keep the Pedal to the Metal

If you want to stay competitive your company simply cannot afford to waste time. Faster, more nimble companies are always breathing down your neck. Compression is a requirement, not a luxury. The reason the fastest growing companies have earned their positions is because they are concentrated on being fast growth companies. Their success comes from getting the most bang for the least amount of time.

As your business evolves, new opportunities to condense your timelines will continually arise. Constantly challenge your team to look for new ways to compress their own activities. Each person that attacks their tasks with compression in mind helps accelerate the evolution of the entire company.

Time keeps on slipping into the future

If anything is in short supply for an entrepreneur, it's time. The beauty of compression is that it eliminates time wasted on tasks that aren't moving you toward your goal quickly. Compression reclaims all of this time and leaves it for you in a nice package at the finish line - ready to use for your next business challenge.

- Wil

Wil Schroter is a serial entrepreneur, author, and public speaker. Wil has been recognized as U.S. Small Business Person of the Year, twice as the Ernst and Young Entrepreneur of the Year (1999 & 2004), and is a member of the Business First Top 40 under forty. Connect directly with Wil at wschroter@yahoo.com. Visit http://www.goBIGnetwork.com.


MORE RESOURCES:
Yahoo! News

Apps are a Goldmine for Developers (PC World via Yahoo! News) 18 Mar 2010 at 11:24am
A new study from Chetan Sharma Consulting claims that the market for apps will skyrocket to $17.5 billion by 2012. The independent study, commissioned by the world's second-largest app store GetJar, predicts that the number of app downloads will explode from around 7 million in 2009 to over 50 million by 2012.

South Africa : Street Knowledge is Power for a Hands-On Marketer (AllAfrica.com) 19 Mar 2010 at 6:50am
Johannesburg ? KGAUGELO Maphai is a young Johannesburg entrepreneur who believes his township roots are a business asset far more useful than any black economic empowerment deal.

Engineers revolutionizing Third World housing and infrastructure featured at ... 19 Mar 2010 at 11:18am
The recent earthquake in Haiti graphically demonstrated to the world how the impact of a natural disaster is magnified by poorly constructed housing and unplanned infrastructure.

Apps are a Goldmine for Developers (PC World) 18 Mar 2010 at 1:02pm
A new study predicts a huge market for apps, and illustrates what a significant business opportunity app development represents.

Handel's star rising in Georgia governor's race (Appen Newspapers) 18 Mar 2010 at 11:17am
March 18, 2010 ROSWELL ? Former Secretary of State Karen Handel continues to rise in the polls while front runner John Oxendine continues to lose ground, and the redoubtable Undecided leads GOP candidates with 32 percent.

Vital Voices Honors Extraordinary Women Innovators From Around the World at 2... 18 Mar 2010 at 3:43pm
In recognition of International Women's Day and the fifteenth anniversary of Vital Voices founder and then First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton's historic declaration at the UN Conference on Women in Beijing that "women's rights are human rights," Vital Voices gathered over 1,000 supporters to honor and celebrate innovative women leaders who are working worldwide to strengthen democracy, increase ...

CIOs who tweet ? a useful list for IT professionals (Computer Weekly) 17 Mar 2010 at 3:14am
Are IT bosses doing enough to understand and use social technology? Some still brush it off as irrelevant, but others are embracing it - here is our list of UK CIOs who tweet.

Do You Have "A Number"? (Inc Magazine) 16 Mar 2010 at 12:52pm
Every business owner, it seems, has "a number"--a dollar figure at which they will have considered their entrepreneurial endeavors a success. But whenever we examine that number more closely, it quickly withers in the light of scrutiny. There are so many essential questions to ask when thinking about one's exit strategy, yet all too often, common sense is lost in the emotional swirl of "the ...

FCC's eagerly awaited Broadband Plan unveiled today -- here's why it matters ... 16 Mar 2010 at 8:28am
FCC's eagerly awaited Broadband Plan unveiled today -- here's why it matters By Steve Borsch | Tuesday, March 16, 2010 Broadband experts and entrepreneurs are adamant that nothing is more important to Internet innovation than ubiquitous and fast broadband (except for startup funding, of course). But moving from a plan to congressional action is another matter entirely.

A Rebel Form Gains Favor. Fights Ensue. (New York Times) 14 Mar 2010 at 5:22pm
With performance art now fashionable, there?s a search for revenue that angers some artists.

home | site map
© 2009 Homebusinessdirect.net | Privacy Policy