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http://jimsmarketingblog.com/2009/03/13/blinded-by-the-light/ -
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Nice one. The reason I place this comment is that I see similarities with small business owners from my country - I have to say I'm surprised - I thought that this kind of thinking doesn't appear in countries that are much more evolved from any aspect are you looking. I thought that competitive economies would polish the business owners and force them to THINK.
Being indifferent to clients will lead you to money loss and maybe missing some great business opportunities.
Thanks for the article
It's this kind of thinking that explains why so many small businesses use home-made or outdated websites.
They would rather look cheap than invest in a professional image. They see every investment as a cost. Its like a business form of natural selection.
Your outlook at the scenario is spot on Jim and if only the owner could take the same outlook, I am almost positive that this would prove an investment long term and would probably find the finance spent on blinds would pay for themselves in such a short matter of time anyway.
Thanks for sharing.
Jane
A simple and brilliant illustration. Thanks for writing about it.
What if the owner were to utilise the space in a cost effective manner to his advantage? Fix thin black or dark boards to the top half of these huge windows - advertising to the public through the glass on the outside and shielding the tables on the inside?
Just a thought.
I bet we could write a book with them all!
Lack of commercial awareness is rife in today's business environment. Come to think of it, it isn't even commercial awareness - it's common sense but common sense is not common practice.
The problem with most business owners is that they are, as Michael Gerber puts it "A technician suffering from an entrepreneurial siezure". The optician opens up a glasses and eye test business, the cook opens up a restaurant etc so they simply do not have the right mindset.
And they view any spend as a cost.
Sean McPheat
Thanks Jim, for the informative and entertaining read.
Before real growth is possible, we need to stop thinking about how much things cost and start thinking about how much growth potential they bring in.
Case in point: I was part owner of a health care business. Early on in the business I proposed to my partner that we bring in a manager. Yes, it would be costly, but that manager would allow the two of us to travel outside the area and open another branch. If we were constantly working in the business--instead of ON the business--we would never really grow.
I have since moved on from the business to focus on my marketing business. My partner still has just one location and still works 80 hours a week trying to do it all himself.
I was talking to a guy the other day about bookkeeping. He moaned how much time it took him and how he never felt he got it right. The solution (to get a professional bookkeeper in) would have cost him about a third of his hourly charge out rate and would have freed him from the worry, leaving him to earn what he was worth. However, he was too focused on the bookkeepers price to think about the value he would have got from employing her.
I've been in that situation at times too - spending way too much time on a project doing it myself just to save a few bucks, refusing to outsource.
But once I've done outsourcing once, I realise how much more enjoyable (and profitable) business can be!
Btw: Why is it that so many people these days don't seem to appreciate the sun? We actually need many hours of sun everyday to produce sufficient Vitamin D! If it blinds you just put on your sunglasses...
User experience is everything, that's not just a web 2.0 term!
You make some excellent points about how people view money differently, depending on what they are 'investing' or spending it on.
Also, on a personal note, as someone who has achieved stunning results with my chiropractor, (for a trapped / pinched nerve) I am very aware of the value of a chiropractor's services.