Tuesday, February 4, 2014

Getting Your Business Back in Shape (re-released and update)

It is the fourth week in January and the annual migration of the New Year’s resolution crowd is already departing gym’s across the United States; not to be seen again until next year.

At the start of each new year there is an enthusiasm to get back into personal shape. This same phenomena is present in the business world. Each year business owners declare, “This year will be different. We will have a well thought out strategic plan. We will have an actionable yearly tactical plan from which we will judge our progress. We will hold regularly scheduled staff meetings to review our plans, assess the actions of our competitors, and examine our financial health. Yes, 2012 will be different!”  And by the end of January.... they are back into their old routine, with the fire drills of each and every day dictating the rest of the year’s agenda. And like the fitness birds migrating through the gym each year, this cycle will sure to be repeated over again the next year.

I want to share with you a different story; one with exciting results and very much analogous to the business world, in hopes that it will inspire you to stick with your resolution.

At the end of November, a good friend of mine sent the following text message, “I need help.” He wanted to get back into shape and after numerous attempts on his own, he felt the aid of an outside expert was needed. I agreed to be his personal trainer. Before we began I wanted to hear what goals he had in mind in order to assess if it was realistic. He stated two specific objectives; (1) get back down to 175 lbs and (2) have a pool-worthy body for a vacation he planned in late March. We then looked at his current state; 5’11” and 198 lbs. We had a little over four months (18 weeks) interrupted by Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Years, to lose 23 lbs. and build some muscle. His goals were possible, but would require a very strong commitment to reach them. He agreed to commit to a plan that I would guide him to establish and we began.

Much like the human body, a company without steady work “on” the business versus “in” the business will too become out of shape and lose the market strength, they once enjoyed. So, exactly how do you get back into shape, or get into shape for the first time ever, and what can you expect from the process?


  1. Look in the mirror. Are you happy with the current state? Is the performance what you expect? Are sales meeting your expectations? Are you stronger? Are you still as agile and responsive as you once were? How do your customers view you? What will you look like in 3 years?
  1. If you don’t like what you see or are not sure what direction you are going do something about it.
  1. Set measureable, realistic goals to be completed at a specific time. In the business world this means capturing your vision, and balancing that with a clear unbiased view of how you stand relative to the competition and in the market for which you chose to compete. Steve Covey said it best in his book, 7 Habits of Highly Effective People, “Begin with the end in mind”.
  1. If you have never done step number three or don’t know how, don’t let your ego prevent you from engaging an outside expert. A business strategist brings two very valuable tools to the table; (1) experience working with a variety of companies in various industries from which you will benefit, and (2) they will stop you from drinking your own bathwater (declaring something is core strength when in reality it is not all that different from your competitors).
  1. Craft a written plan and stick to it. This means you review the plan regularly and use it to guide how you and your team utilize your time, invest your resources, and select your people.
  1. Accept the fact that change will involve some pain. Operating leaner is hard and demanding. Holding employees and yourself accountable to specific and measurable goals is also tough. Fight through the pain knowing what you are doing is for the long-term health of your company.
  1. Beware of excuses used to revert back to old behaviors or not complete an assigned objective on time. It is not physically possible to complete everything in the fourth quarter because you either procrastinated or came up with reasons for why it couldn’t be done earlier in the year as originally agreed.
  1. Most likely progress will be quicker for younger companies than older. That’s just nature. Older habits and patterns of behavior are tougher to change. But don’t use this as an excuse not to.
Now for the rest of the fitness story: The first few weeks were quite hard. He was a bit embarrassed being seen lifting the small amount of weights on the bar. He complained of being constantly sore. He would try to throw out an excuse or two for skipping a day; “Bad knees” and “I forgot my brace” were the excuses he used when I first suggested he start a running regiment. However, to his credit, he always showed up for our workouts. I knew we had turned a significant corner when on week eight he suggested going to the gym on one of our off days. That same week he set a goal to run a 5K. He had embraced the change in behavior. I was no longer pulling him along. His own goals and the measurable progress were now providing the motivation.

With eight weeks to go he is down to 182 lbs., having lost 16 of the 23 lbs. we targeted. He could barely run for 20 minutes when we first started, but can now run a full 5K in 30 minutes and is working to improve his time. 12 pushups in a row are now 40. He has doubled the amount of weight he is able to lift and fits into clothing sizes that he has not fit into since college. We’ve recently incorporated swimming into our routine and he is already thinking a triathlon may be a worthy goal for 2013.

Like your body, there is no shortcut to getting your company back into shape. It requires an investment in time and resources and an absolute dedication to follow through. The rewards however can be amazing. Your leaner, stronger company will be better able to compete and adapt effectively in an increasingly demanding, competitive, and ever changing world market. So, get back into the gym!

February 2014 UPDATE: Change means introducing new behavior.  The longer it is practiced the less it becomes 'new' and the more it becomes the norm.  But this requires a certain level of forced discipline over time.  My friend did not engage in this new behavior long enough to make it a habit - the new norm.  First his visits to the gym dropped off.  Then less running.  And yes, he was loaded with excuses for why.  Then the old eating habits returned.  At first these were exceptions, then the violations became
more forgivable.  Then no forgiveness was necessary.  The weight came back. The strength faded.  All progress was lost.

Change is hard for an individual.  It is even harder for a business because of the multitude of individuals (employees) who have to become both believers and practitioners of the new way. As the CEO, you set the tone. Are you sticking to the plan? Are your employees? What are the repercussions for failing to hit goals and milestone? As you can see here, it is easy to revert to the old way.

Need a personal trainer to get your metro Atlanta business back in shape.  Let's talk over a cup of coffee.  Contact me here.

About the author. Mike Gomez is President of Allegro Consulting, a growth specialty firm helping turnaround businesses wrestling with stagnant growth. He grew his very first client’s business from $8M to $35M in just two years. Mike is also a prolific speaker, writer, three-time marathoner, a former military officer and pilot of both aircraft and helicopters. www.allegroconsultant.com

Friday, January 24, 2014

Before you consider Going Global, Go Louisiana and Go Texas

Going global can be a very smart and lucrative part of any growth strategy. But dealing with foreign trade laws, logistics, business practices (formal and informal), languages, and time zones can introduce substantial risks to your business model. It is because of these risks I advise my Georgia-based clients, “Before you go global, prove you can go Louisiana and Texas.” 

Why do I suggest this course of action?  By setting up the processes and procedure necessary to be successful in another state you mitigate several of the inherent risks of going global.

Delivering a product or service locally should be quite familiar to you.  If you are a successful company then you likely know your target customers well, you know the competitors you face, and how to get product to their door or how to deliver the specialty services you are known for.  All of this is familiar territory.  Now what would you do if I challenged you to be equally successful in a state a time zone away.  How would you pick the state, how would you sell your product or service there (direct or through distributors), how would you specifically deliver the product or service? How would you support those sales from Georgia?  How profitable would you be doing this?

Now what if I were to challenge you to do this yet again in a state say two time zones away?  What I hope you will do is develop documented processes for analyzing new markets.  This can be done on your own or by engaging a service provider.  And with each new state you will apply lessons learned and fine tune these “export” processes.  The same holds true for processes governing customer support, logistics (delivery of the product or service), employment, quality control and accounting procedures (state taxes).

By going Louisiana and then, say, Texas before going global you will have put in place and exercised many of the same processes and skills necessary to be successful abroad.  These include:

  • new market analysis
  • competitive analysis
  • logistics
  • new territory marketing
  • new territory sales
  • learning and adapting to new tax laws
  • learning and adapting to local business laws
  • learning and adapting to new accounting procedures (taxes)
  • providing customer support after local business hours

The good news is you will be mastering these new skills in an environment where the language is the same, the business culture is quite common, the sales techniques similar, and the overarching governing business and tax laws something you are familiar with.

If, after you succeeded in doing business in Louisiana and Texas, you still feel going global is right for your business, you will only need to master a fairly small number of processes still unfamiliar to your business. Some of these include:

  • doing business in a foreign language
  • Foreign Corrupt Practices Act
  • currency exchange
  • foreign and U.S. trade laws

Don’t get me wrong these can be quite intimidating challenges to overcome and will require expert assistance.  But by now your company will have already proven to themselves it can adapt and succeed in new environments. This is just one more evolution. 

So remember my phrase, “Before you go global, prove you can go Louisiana and Texas.”  Your success will be that much more assured.

Mike Gomez is the founder of Allegro Consulting, an Atlanta-based business growth specialty firm.  He has served as a program manager and business development executive in both Fortune 100 companies as well as small businesses. He has conducted business in over 20 countries. Mike is a guest lecturer at GaTech on international business and at UGA on business planning and sales strategy. He can be reached by phone at 678-908-8433 or by e-mail at m.gomez@allegroconsultant.com. Visit http://allegroconsultant.com

Thursday, November 21, 2013

The Formula for a Successful Start-up



Towards the end of an engaging coffee meeting with Harold Brown, a well known and self defined serial entrepreneur and investor in the rising tech community of metro Atlanta, he made this observation, “As I am getting to know you Mike I’ve come to the conclusion you are not a ‘creator’ you are instead a ‘doer’ and I bet if we paired you with a good creator we’d get one heck of a start-up.”   

I wasn’t insulted by that observation at all.  In fact he captured me perfectly.  I am a doer and always have been.  My consulting company is all about helping business owners become more disciplined doers.  There is no doubt the aircraft engineering degree (process orientation) and military upbringing (Dad was career USAF) contributed to these traits.  The whole conversation got me thinking about what the necessary ingredients are for a successful start-up – outside the risk taking, free spirit characteristics you hear about most often. Here’s what I concluded:

(C + D) + Fr = SSu
or
(Creator + Doer) + Financial resources = Successful Start-up

Leave it to a former engineer to turn an observation into an equation. Let’s take a moment to dissect this formula.

Financial resources:  The inclusion of this in the equation should not be a surprise to anyone. It takes money or equivalent to start a company.  We all know that - whether that means going without pay for years or writing checks for website, business cards, office space, travel, capital equipment, etc…. I read somewhere that one of the top three reasons for a start-up failure is being under-capitalized.  In other words they simply run out of money before sales revenues are sufficient to support the business.  Now I will argue that a vast majority run out of money because they spent unwisely namely because they lacked a Doer who would ensure a plan was in place to control precious cash.

Creator:  This is the passionate idea person who can see a problem or need as well as the business solutions to address it.  Though there are common traits between a creator and an inventor the difference is dramatic.  A creator in this case conceptualizes a business solution before a technology solution. Sadly an inventor‘s approach is exactly opposite, which explains why so many inventors are flat broke.  Jeff Stibell wrote this in a Harvard Business Review article titled, Are you an Inventor or an Entrepreneur?

“But don’t confuse being an entrepreneur with being an inventor. Great ideas are a dime a dozen. Action is what differentiates an entrepreneur from an inventor. If you want to focus on ideas, become an inventor — not an entrepreneur.”

Guys like Henry Buckley typify the definition of a creator. He conceived and started 10 businesses, the latest a jogger-based door-to-door pamphlet delivery service called JogPost.

Doer:  This is a person (a) with the discipline and skills to develop and execute a credible business plan, (b) who possess fundamental selling and marketing skills, and (c) who is versed enough in financial balance sheets to make critical and timely decisions, (d) who knows how to find, hire and motivate a talented workforce, and (e) who knows when and how to engage outside experts (legal, accounting, etc…). 

Now don’t get me wrong, I am not suggesting that this is an entirely different person from the creator.  Though quite rare, a creator may in fact possess some or all of these traits.  The important message is a business cannot make it without a well thought out plan, good marketing, strong sales and a disciplined approach to how capital is being utilized.  Take away any one of these and you’ve significantly impacted your chances of success.

Jim Flannery, Founder of the Four Athens technology incubator, reinforces this formula when he shared with me the reason the word “Four” is in his incubator name.  His experience says that you need the following four things to make a successful start-up:
  • A business person
  • A marketing/sales person 
  • A technical person that can implement an MVP (software/hardware start-ups exclusively) 
  • A service provider (legal/accounting) 
“I am very fearful of solo founders,” Jim says.  “My advice, rather than say "do you possess these traits", is "can you find two other people that possess one of these traits each AND believe in your (creator) vision"  

My strong message to those creators is to be brutally honest when assessing your skill-sets and if you lack any of those under the category of doer don’t make the mistake of thinking you can get by without it. I’ve seen enough to confidently say you can’t and won’t.

Want some growth advice for your metro Atlanta start-up from a proven "doer"?  Let's chat over a cup of coffee.  Contact me here.

Mike Gomez is the founder of Allegro Consulting, a business growth specialty firm.  He has served as a program manager and business development executive in both Fortune 100 companies as well as small businesses. Through the use of sound yet simplified business processes he has helped Georgia companies achieve remarkable sales growth. Mike is a growth strategy and complex sales expert, prolific writer, speaker, guest lecturer at GaTech and UGA, and a mentor at FourAthen technology incubator and Atlanta Tech Village.  http://allegroconsultant.com

Monday, November 4, 2013

“I’ve fallen and I can’t get up!” - Staffing needs and the early stage start-up.



So you have this great idea for a business.  You are prepared to make the sacrifices to self finance until sales can support the company.  You’ve analyzed your personal strengths and weaknesses and recognize you lack some of the critical skills required to get the business off the ground.  You need help.  But you can’t afford the full time salaries to hire the talent your business demands. 

What do you do?

This is one of the recurring scenarios I have seen with start-ups.  It’s an ugly sight really; watching a founder run full speed into this brick wall of reality.  And my advice is always the same.  If you do not have a solution to overcome this particular weakness then STOP. Don’t continue to build, or develop or spend time or money on this business idea because you will fail.

The staffing shortfall I see most often is the role of sales – sales strategy and implementation. Most founders first believe that selling is the easy part, that it’s something they can do themselves.  Or, there are those who attempt the, “if I build it, they will come” philosophy of sales. And finally, the last group, believing that social media and email blast will be a sufficient sales force.  They eventually learn that selling is crucial to the business and requires a level of expertise and experience. 

So, assuming you need more talent than is available through a free intern, what are the options for securing such talent? Let’s run down the choices.

  1. Commission only.  This approach will have the least impact on cash flow because you only pay when sales are generated.  Yes, you might have to pay upfront for car allowances, cell phones and computer charges but that’s about it.  However, you’ve heard the saying, “you get what you pay for”?  This applies here.  Those who will take a commission only job are no doubt self starters but they will also ditch you in a heartbeat for a better offer. Their bottom line is the driving concern not your company nor your customers. If your product or service is a fairly easy sell and the rewards flow quickly this may be a good option for your start-up business. On the other hand, if it is a longer more challenging sales cycle and pay-out of commissions will take longer, I have found that more time will be spent by your new salesperson revising his or her resume and looking for a better gig than actually selling.
  2. Base pay plus commission.  This is by far the surest method for hiring the exact talent you need – qualifications, industry experience, past performance.  The downside of course is impact on cashflow. You will be writing checks before any sales are generated.  Striking the right balance between the amount of base pay necessary to secure talent while keeping the motivating force of the commission will be one of your tougher challenges. 
  3. Deferred pay plus commission.  This is an interesting variation of the base pay plus commission approach.  Here you and the candidate agree upon a market base pay and commission structure.  Then, predicated on current and future cash flow projections, you decide how much of the base pay you can afford to pay now and how much you will ask the prospect to defer to a specific date or milestone. The prospect is basically letting you use his pay as operating capital until there is sufficient cash flow.  Here are the four areas available for negotiation (flexibility) with this approach:
    1. the length of the deferral,
    2. the interest rate applied to amounts deferred,
    3. the amount of compensation deferred, and
    4. the pay mix or combination of cash and noncash forms of compensation that are ultimately paid.
This can be a particularly compelling tactic if there is a milestone on the horizon that will trigger an influx of new capital (meeting a performance standard, venture capital infusion, achieve positive cash flow status). As you might expect significant trust in the business idea, the business model and most importantly the management team to execute and monetize the idea is critical. As founder it is your job to instill that trust and make absolutely certain you pay the deferred amounts with interest as promised.  

Having the right talent on hand to support your start-up is crucial to success.  Attracting that talent can be a challenge with limited cash flow.  It starts with identifying the roles and responsibilities you expect that person to fulfill.  Follow that with writing down the qualifications and experience you feel are necessary for that person to be successful. Lastly is outlining a cash flow appropriate compensation plan that you will use to attract that individual.  

Mike Gomez is the founder of Allegro Consulting, a business growth specialist.  He has served as a program manager and business development executive in both Fortune 500 companies as well as small business. Through the use of sound yet simplified business processes he has helped Georgia companies achieve remarkable growth. Mike is a guest lecturer at GaTech and UGA and a mentor at FourAthen technology incubator. He can be reached by phone at 678-908-8433 or by e-mail at m.gomez@allegroconsultant.com. Visit http://allegroconsultant.com

Monday, July 1, 2013

Why 'AboutUs' Matters?

So how much thought did you put into the "About Us" tab on your website?

A new client called to tell me they were having problems getting any traction with their new start-up. They are a tech company specializing in a certain field.  They acquired a list of qualified prospects and proceeded on a phone and email campaign to try to garner interest and an invitation for a more formal presentation. Though feedback to the email and phone inquiries was positive they were only able to secure a handful of appointments and those meetings produced no tangible results.    

Before meeting the two principals I pretended as if I received one of their calls or emails and began doing some relatively light due diligence about their company - something you should expect any prospect to do before you meet.  I looked up their Linkin profiles. Scanned their Facebook page. Read some of their Tweets. I then perused their website to learn about their product and services paying particular attention to the "About Us" page.  In this case it explained their brief history and offered links to the leadership biographies.  It was here where I became puzzled.

Let's say, for example they are a company who specialized in selling back-up generators for skyscrapers.  Let's say they not only supplied these generators but they also installed and integrated them into the building's electrical system by providing project management services. In this case one might expect to see something in the 'About Us' tab that tells me not only when the company was formed but also the depth of experience they have in this field.  One might also expect to see this case further reinforced by notable accomplishments/experience in project management and/or expertise in large generators when reading their leadership biographies. 

What if you don't see any of these attributes?  How would you react?

I imagine this is what happened in their case as well. There was nothing in their bios or in the company story that showed me they deserved some of my attention - that I could learn something or benefit from their expertise. Nothing!

I have this simple phrase I use when coaching salespersons, "Keep them nodding up and down, because the second their head goes side to side your work just grew substantially."

Anytime you cause a potential customer to pause the selling process because something is "just not right" with your story you make his work substantially harder as well.  But in the case of the customer he will more than likely abandon further interest than put the effort into uncovering why there was a disconnect.

The "About Us" tab is a sales tool.  It should complete the story of your website by answering the question "why shop here?"   If you specialize in a certain field, here is where you show your credentials.  If your company holds patents or retains a renowned expert, brag about it here.  This is not the page to be humble.  This is the page to boast and make a compelling case for why a potential customer should want to do business with you and your firm.

Was this helpful?  Want to see what else you can do to improve your metro Atlanta sales win-rate? Let talk over a cup of coffee.  Contact me here.

About the author.  Mike Gomez is President of Allegro Consulting, a growth specialty firm helping to turnaround privately-held businesses wrestling with stagnant/slow growth. He grew his very first client’s business from $8M to $35M in just two years.  Prior to Allegro, Mike sold military fighter aircrafts to foreign allies for aerospace giants, Boeing and Lockheed.  He is a prolific speaker, writer, three-time marathoner, a former USAF officer and pilot of both aircraft and helicopters.  www.allegroconsultant.com