Tune up your business

"When is the last time you checked under the bonnet of your business?" asks Kellie D'Andrea. "Checked for leaks, outdated business strategies & inefficient process? After time, many businesses run on autopilot. The operating systems would probably benefit from a tune-up.

In today's age of rapidly moving technology, educated consumers, an increasing competitive environment and an unstable economy, businesses need to adapt to survive. Many business owners who fail to incorporate "tune-ups" into their businesses often find themselves in a reactive position when challenges arise.

Here are some suggestions to tune up your business:

1. Experience "The Customer Experience"

To ensure that your customer's are being treated at you expect them to, it is a good idea to go through the entire process exactly as your customers do and take notice of the details that make up the experience. Is it what you intend it to be and what can you do to improve it?

2. Look for ways to automate

Evaluate what your employees are doing and the tasks that they perform every day. Often, there are ways to automate that will bring your business significant efficiencies and a streamlined process. Look for things like keystrokes - how many times a piece of information is entered into multiple systems. Look for reports and paper and a way to use digital files. Look at your accounting systems, can you easily get downloads from your bank to easily populate your system or can you pay on line and eliminate checks and postage.

3. Integrate your efforts

As technology continues to move forward, the ability to integrate your efforts becomes easier. Look for ways to eliminate tasks from your operations and sales efforts. If you use outside providers or business partners, can your system talk to theirs? In your marketing efforts, can you integrate information from your sales efforts thru to your operations and to your accounting and follow up processes?

4.Watch your spending

In an economic downturn, many business owners immediately begin to slash budgets often resulting in a poor customer experience, loss of market share and missed marketing
opportunities. Since most of your peers have pulled their
marketing effort, here is a time for you to amp yours up.
But if you do need to cut back, look for the best approaches to pulling back such as, marketing tactics that do not yield you desired results or business non-essentials.

5.Don't cut price - add value

Successful business starts with value and do not succumb to market pressures by cutting prices. Price reductions are difficult to recover from especially when the market rebounds. Your brand message is created by the value you bring to your customers; do no commoditize your brand by immediately cutting your pricing. Instead, see how you can add more value to your customers and create marketing messages that show your customers you care and what you are doing to help them weather the economic storm.

Taking the time to tune up your business at least once a year, will assure that you are moving with the times , keeping your business fresh and ensuring the relationship you have developed with your customer is being nurtured how
you intend it too. If you don't alter the way you do
business, you risk not being in business in the long term.

How is your business running?

Kellie D'Andrea, The Positioning Coach, teaches small businesses how to attract, convert and retain more customers. She is the creator of the BLAST Marketing System, a program designed to teach you how to brand, lead and sell your products and services so you attract the right clients to your business. To learn more and to sign up for her free weekly marketing class "Marketing Mondays" go to www.kelliedandrea.com