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Tapping Your Unseen Business Potential Fall 2009 Meeting October 1, 2009
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Copyright Materials This presentation is protected by US and International Copyright laws. Reproduction, distribution, display and use of the presentation without written permission of the speaker is prohibited.
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Presentation Topics 1.Where Business Potential Hides 2.Quantifying Your Potential 3.“Tapping” That Potential
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Employee retention rates are a good indicator of corporate health Where is Your Potential Hiding?
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High turnover in sales and marketing indicates a heavy reliance on new customer acquisition or a reactive sales environment High turnover in sales and marketing may mean a heavy reliance on new customer acquisition or a reactive sales environment Where is Your Potential Hiding?
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High turnover in operations indicates a too diverse product and service offering portfolio Where is Your Potential Hiding?
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Low Turnover in Finance and Administration Indicates A Bloated Infrastructure Where is Your Potential Hiding?
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Most contracting firms are only achieving 6% of their revenue potential Startling “Facts”
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20% of your customers are responsible for 80% of your revenues Startling “Facts”
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Your offerings portfolio ensures that at least 30% of possible customer revenues are left for your competitor Startling “Facts”
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Very few contractors are achieving the optimal chargeability rate of 80% Other Places to Investigate
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Shared compensation programs may be paying some employees too much. Other Places to Investigate
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Most contracting firms are only achieving 6% of their revenue potential The 6% Performance Barrier
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Take the largest 2-3 customers and multiply their average revenue by the total number of active customers to calculate Optimal Revenue Potential The 6% Barrier
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Compare the actual revenue realized by the potential revenue amount – this represents your upside revenue gap The 6% Barrier
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It is possible to double the size of your business in 12-24 months without adding one new customer! The 6% Barrier
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The Revenue Per Customer Metric allows for you to “measure” effective customers – helping you break the 80/20 Rule Customer DNA
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Take the total revenue for a stated period of time and divide it by the total number of active customers to calculate your revenue per customer metric Customer DNA
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Extract the common characteristics of your “best” customers Customer DNA
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Compare this “DNA” Overlay with all active customers Customer DNA
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What customers are under-utilized and should aggressively be “marketed”? Customer DNA
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The value of the calculation is in the trending of the information – not the snapshot Trends
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Revenue per Customer Penetration in Optimal Revenue Potential Scenario #1
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Resolution is to increase the number and diversity of offerings available (horizontal acquisition) Scenario #1
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If you are in a niche market – this might be impossible to overcome Scenario #1
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Revenue per Customer Penetration in Optimal Revenue Potential Scenario #2
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This is the “death spiral” scenario – created, in part, by the recession Scenario #2
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Only innovation – looking at a new way of doing business will lift you out of this scenario Scenario #2
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Revenue per Customer Penetration in Optimal Revenue Potential Scenario #3
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Resolution is to “fire all the salespeople” Scenario #3
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Conduct an offerings audit to determine relevancy Scenario #3
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Penetration in Optimal Revenue Potential Revenue per Customer Scenario #4
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This is the best scenario because it fully leverages both customers and offerings – the two “hidden” components of every business Scenario #4
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Offerings are sold based on a “reaction” to a customer’s request Portfolio Destinations
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The goal is to create an offerings portfolio that focuses on a customer destination Portfolio Destinations
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AIM is the foundation for creating a comprehensive offerings portfolio Portfolio Destinations
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Assessments are quantitative studies that “show” the monetary value of a current or improved condition (e.g., water conservation audits) Portfolio Destinations
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Implementation offerings are your core services and should represent 60% - 70% of total revenue Portfolio Destinations
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Maintenance offerings allow you to interact with the customer throughout the entire business cycle Portfolio Destinations
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Many contracting firms do not calculate chargeability correctly – leading to high levels of “opportunity” Quick Hits - Chargeability
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Excluding the non-chargeable personnel from the calculation can drag down the overall score Quick Hits - Chargeability
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Not charging the time of the owner is the same as giving away your most valuable asset Quick Hits - Chargeability
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Shared compensation programs are great for rewarding deserving employees Quick Hits – Shared Compensation
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For sales people – reward on the deal’s profitability – not, as many owners do, the gross revenue of the deal Quick Hits – Shared Compensation
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For operational staff reward chargeable hours and beating fixed price estimates but deduct hours needed for re-work Quick Hits – Shared Compensation
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Administrative personnel can take an active role in reducing your G&A expenses – a basis for their shared compensation Quick Hits – Shared Compensation
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Reward Reinvest Review The Business Cycle Release Research Portfolio Destinations
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Most contracting firms have inherent value that is never realized – much of it being found in customer rosters and offerings portfolios. It is possible to double the size of your firm without adding one new customer – while, at the same time, significantly reducing your cost of sales. The recession has created a “chaotic environment” that is ideal for implementing sweeping business changes. Are you ready to “tap” your unseen business potential? Final Points
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Thank You! Contact Information: Brad Dawson LTV Dynamics 703-753-2886 BLDawson@LTVdynamics.com
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