Apr 17 2011
Set Your Assets On Fire!
Before you throw all your
tech stuff on the BBQ . . .
Recognize, first and foremost, that your greatest assets are your people. If you’re a one-man-band, maybe “your people” are a loving spouse, partner, children or parents who assist you, or a reliable friend or two who consistently refer(s) others to you . . . or a hotbed of talented interns.
If you’re the owner of a small to medium-size business, perhaps “your people” are account or department or office or branch managers.
The point is that I am NOT suggesting you run around torching these folks, or even giving any of them a baseball-dugout-style “hotfoot.” I AM suggesting that you ask yourself (and answer) the following questions:
Can you readily identify and easily separate your internal and external customers?
What percentage of each day are you actively marketing to each group?
In other words:
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How much and how often are you (externally) marketing your people?
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How much and how often are you (internally) marketing TO your people?
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How much and how often are you (internally AND externally) marketing THROUGH your people?
Do you think the meaning of Customer Service is to have a Customer Service person or department?
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If each and every one of your internal customers know how to relate to and respond to external customers, why would you have to pay someone or a group to perform this function?
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Ideally, anyone in your organization whom I might reach by phone or meet in-person should be able to handle my customer service needs.
Your marketing people or your own marketing sense tell(s) you how to motivate external customers. You surely have a strong idea of what sells and what doesn’t sell them on your product(s) and/or service(s). Do you have a sense of confidence about the best ways to motivate internal customers?
Do you apply Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs?
If you try (or have tried to) apply Maslow’s Hierarchy, are you (or have you) doing (done) it from a position of strength — by first being a detective to understand individual “hot spots”? Has this approach helped you to realize that the best internal customer rewards are not (in spite of all popular beliefs) not always cash, raises, and bonuses?
As a leader who is heavily invested in growing the loyalty, respect, and receptivity of both internal and external customers, are you making a conscious effort to breed entrepreneurial thinking accompanied by reasonable risk-taking behaviors? Or are you breeding investment in the status quo?
Are you fostering and nurturing innovation. Do your people come to you with just ideas, or do they fully exploit the ideas they propose with well thought out paths for implementation that include all possible operational, financial and marketing applications? Do you get a thorough and complete picture instead of just a quick sketch?
Having great people behind you is great for your ego. Having great people behind you who are inspired and highly motivated, who deliver comprehensive plans of attack, is great for your business.
Which is more important?
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302.933.0116 or Hal@BusinessWorks.US
Thanks for visiting. Go for your goals! God Bless You.
“The price of freedom is eternal vigilance!” [Thomas Jefferson]