If you have your own agency – PR firm, marketing consultancy, graphic design agency, career coach, etc.) – there are three practices that must be in alignment. Before I tell you what my best practices are, think about what’s most important in your
business and let’s see if we are on the same page.
Photo by Liz Cezat. Meijer Gardens, Grand Rapids, Mich. |
Here’s a rundown of the trio.
1. Discipline. If you have your ducks in a row – business
plan is set, client base is steady, office systems are up and running – attend
to client work first. Whether you do it yourself or assign it to a partner,
associate or freelancer – get the project in the works and manage it. Take care
to produce the results that the client has specified. No surprises. Fulfill the
need – on time, within budget and meet expectations.
2. Focus. There are so many distractions in a day. If you
are focused on what you do best, then you shouldn’t have a problem getting the
work done. Focus can make the hours seem like minutes. Work on your most challenging client projects
at prime time. Are you most productive at 7 a.m., noon, 2 p.m. or 5 p.m.? Know
your cycle. Once you can accomplish your client work in a focused manner, try
to use that strategy for the work that you don’t like to do. Establish a specific time to do billing, make prospecting calls, and organize your projects, and then focus solely on
that. It then becomes routine.
3. Connections.
Set aside time daily, weekly and monthly to fortify your connections and meet
new people. How can this be readily achieved? Reach out on social media – that
can be a daily practice. Attend one to two meetings a week to get the word out
about your business and forge new partnerships. Make calls – no robocalls
please – or send personalized e-mails. Attend meetings that your clients and
prospective clients attend. Learn what matters to them and what they want from
your company. Follow up with a LinkedIn invite or ‘nice to meet you’ note. Then,
stay engaged. Be pleasantly persistent.
Set up appointments based on interest and the need to see clients
face-to-face before they sign up for your services. If you can build trust via
your brand (website, white papers, blog, collateral marketing pieces), a phone call or e-mails, a
meeting may not be needed.
Follow this triad of business practices and your agency or
solo practice will be humming along.
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