Results

For the Customer and Your Business

Your business results, especially the financial results of Sales/Revenues, Profits, and Cashflow, reflect what is and isn’t working in your business. Your financial results are a performance metric on how well you are generating results for your target customers. Are you:

  • Reaching the customer
  • Making pitches for the sale
  • Closing the sales
  • Delivering the products and services
  • Delivering the benefits the customer expected (creating value)
  • Administering the business in a cost-effective manner
  • Utilizing and maximizing capacity
  • Managing your resources
  • Paying bills
  • Accounting for transactions
  • Monitoring your competitive environment
  • Adapting to changes
  • Growing?

Decide on YOUR Performance Metrics –  Align Your Organization

Your Results and the performance metrics you establish to monitor your progress have to be aligned and tied to your business goals. What goals does your business have? Typical goals include the financials: Sales/revenue $ and growth % year-over-year, profits $ and Gross and Net Profit Margin (as % of Sales), and cash flow (cash conversion rate in days).

Other goals may relate to:

  • Employee retention
  • Days of accounts payable outstanding
  • Inventory turns
  • Days of accounts receivable outstanding
  • Number of leads generated
  • Number of quotes issued
  • % of sales made versus quotes and leads
  • Sales per sales team member
  • Sales per employee
  • Return on Investment
  • Return on Assets
  • Customer satisfaction
  • Customer repeat sales
  • Average Sale
  • Customer retention rate

Align Metrics with Values and Goals

The metrics you choose should be a reflection of your goals, culture, and values. They must include financial metrics. I recommend to every client to track what I view as CORE metrics – revenues, profits, and cash flow because your results have to generate the ability to stay in business. Tracking your CPR (cash-profit-revenue) will keep you cognizant of how your business model is working.

I also recommend to clients that they track key performance metrics that feed these core metrics. For sales, you will want to monitor the processes that feed sales. So this may mean setting metrics related to qualified leads generated, sales calls made, and quotes issued.

For customer service operations, you will want to keep an eye on customer satisfaction.

For overall business success, you will want to monitor employee turnover. You may even use employee satisfaction surveys periodically.

Whatever your business, you want to keep an eye on the areas that will make or break your business. You will want to identify and set performance criteria and targets that enable you to establish priorities and align resource usage to those goals.

Focus on generating great results for your customers and serving them well. Build a business that values the customer and your team.

 

Mastermind Groups for Exponential Business Growth

“If you find yourself weak in persistence, surround yourself with a mastermind group.” Napoleon Hill Why You Need a Facilitated Mastermind Group Business owners, solopreneurs, and entrepreneurs have a lot of demands on their time, and this leads to stress. Stress...

Strategic Delegation – How to Optimize Your Output and Profits

We all wish we had more hours in the day. Since that won’t happen, it is critical to make the best use of the hours we have. Delegation is key to maximizing results. You want to be productive and work toward your goals, not be overwhelmed by nonproductive activity....

Cost Versus Revenue Focus

The challenge of growing a business includes determining which aspect of managing financial performance should take top priority. I have worked in organizations that focused on costs and others that organized around profit centers. There are benefits and drawbacks to...

Organic or Cultivated Clients? Which Do You Want?

These days the term “organic” seems ubiquitous.  Organic has come to mean more than the traditional dictionary definition. In this instance, I want to talk about organic growth as it relates to a natural process that is without direct intervention or influence....

Haste Makes Waste: Do It Right the First Time

Haste makes waste is a common saying. Another common saying is time is money. Time, like money, is always in short supply in organizations. Every moment is precious, so the question is: “If you don’t have time to spare, how do you have time to fix a problem when you...

Where is Your Business Located? Realist Road

Normally when I am writing about the location of your business, I am focused on the physical or virtual locations of the business. Today I want to focus on the mental or psychological location of your perspective on your business. In working with clients, the success...

Strategic Plan: Your Five-Year Roadmap to Success

Too often, the owners of many businesses of all sizes and industries don’t see the need for a strategic plan. They make critical decisions on which deals to do, what systems to put in place, and who to hire based on the current vision of the business. They focus on...

Check Your Priorities: Real World Lessons Learned

Many years ago (I won’t say how many), I had a new boss (we’ll call him “Kevin”). He was actually my supervisor’s boss. Kevin had spent most of his career in communication roles (he created presentations and documents to give to the board.) When Kevin came from a part...

Business Danger Signs: Is Your Business the Frog in the Pot?

A business danger signs may be ignored or unnoticed, much like a frog in a pot of water on a stove. Yes, I am talking about the the experiment with a frog and a pot of hot water. If you put the frog in the pot and the water is boiling, he hops out fast! But when you...

Is the Glass Half Full? Half Empty? Or is it the Wrong Glass?

One of my friends was telling me about a discussion she had with her eighteen-year-old son. They were talking literally about a glass of Dr. Pepper. “Is the glass half full or half empty?” she asked her son. He said he thought she just used the wrong glass. If she had...
Verified by ExactMetrics