How do I keep business fresh? I’m hesitating to jump on a new business opportunity? Will it be a distraction or a serious opportunity? Wondering if it will lead to profits and more customers in the future, or be a bust?
Thoughts of the Day: Keep it fresh and relevant. Every business needs a new opportunity to keep it from getting stale. The trick is figuring out the risks you’ll be taking and comparing them to the likely payoff. Put aside a budget to experiment. Don’t be afraid to walk away if it’s not likely to pan out. Have a number of experiments going on every year. Try thinking in three- to 10-year horizons.
Keep business fresh and relevant
A steady flow of new business ideas is essential to keep any business fresh. Some will work, some won’t, some will turn into other ideas, some will get tossed. Set aside part of every week to work on the future of your business.
In order to better evaluate risk and payoff on each idea, consider the following:
- How much will I need to put in to find out if the idea has merit?
- Can I re-purpose the opportunity if it doesn’t go as expected?
- Is the idea far out, or very similar to other ideas that have worked?
- How long will it take to pay off?
- Are there investment funds available to try out the concept?
- How much of the outcome depends on variables I can or can’t control?
- Is there an established marketplace need?
- Is someone available who can be freed up to take charge of this project?
- What barriers to entry exist, to keep me out, to keep out the next player?
- Do we know anything about this?
- How strong is the competition?
- If I’m buying an up and running product or service, is the company I’m buying from making a profit? Why or why not?
Customers top of mind
Write out an answer to each question, and then score each answer from 1 – 4 (1 = high risk, 4 = low risk). Add up your scores and divide by the number of questions to come up with an average. The lower your average score, the riskier the proposition. Below 2.5 the risks increase significantly. Be careful.
Once you’ve decided to pursue an idea, figure out the cost to explore and turn it into a revenue and profit generator. Think in phases: investigation, build the concept, launch, promote, get it into regular production, break-even, make a profit.
Start with a small project in order to get some experience. Line up outside resources who can help when you need it. Build a team of marketers who can take you from the initial concept to online testing and then full-blown promotion. You’ll need help with planning and analysis, market research, marketing concept, social media, copywriting, marketing campaign.
The cutting edge of change
Understand what sunk cost is. If you put money in, and all evidence says that it’s not going to work, call it a failure and walk away. The money you put in isn’t going to turn into a return. It’s gone. That’s sunk cost. Know when to stop pouring more money in, and move on to try something else.
While not every idea is going to work, all you need are one or two good ones to shape the future of your business. Part of your job as an owner is to keep your eyes and ears open for new things to try, to keep your business fresh. It’s generally easier and less risky to buy a proven concept than it is to start from scratch. Keep a list of possibilities and periodically pick one to try. Based on budget and available resources, you can probably take a preliminary look at 2 – 4 new things every year.
Some years may be more fruitful than others when it comes to experimenting with new ideas. Try to have a roster of several ideas you could pursue if the time is right. Set a goal to launch one or more new business ideas every couple of years. Look at the business’ last 10 years, the next 10 years. How fresh or aged is your business? Use that evaluation to determine how many ideas you need to pursue and how fast you need to move to keep things up to date and forward-looking.
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