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Name of author Rick Baker, P.Eng.

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How To Increase Profits

by Rick Baker
On Sep 18, 2012

After meeting with and investigating 100's of businesses that have been unable to achieve their profit goals, it is clear there is need for a simple process for profit-improvement. The simple process needs to work for all sizes of businesses and work across a broad range of business sectors.

Here is a simple profit-improvement process that works:

The RAISE Process

Review your issues, objectively

Assessment of situation, people, & process

Insight, to create options & best practices

Support, of your solution implementation

Evaluation against agreed benchmarks

 

More details...

Review your issues, objectively:

There are 2 ways to be objective. (1) be a possibility-thinking master of self-discipline and (2) obtain unbiased 3rd party input. Definitely, there are ways to expand open-mindedness, possibility thinking, and creative thinking. Here are 2 examples: Edward de Bono's 'Six Thinking Hats' and John C. Maxwell's 'How Successful People Think'. 

Assessment of situation, people, & process:

These are the 3 basic elements of business. They inter-play with one another. Of course, it is all about people. Yet, the differences in people are often underestimated. People create the process. Yet, sometimes they do not do a good enough job explaining what they have created. And, people regularly underestimate the impact situations have on people's behaviour....especially, tough situations.

Insight, to create options & best practices:

Some people appear to possess a natural gift of insight; some people rarely exhibit insight; any person who works at it can develop skills for insight. Business leadership and business development [sales & marketing] are two areas where insight is most essential. Here is an illustration of the importance of insight - the Entrepreneurial Dilemma

Support, of your solution implementation:

It is impossible to implement a solution if your people do not buy into it. It is difficult to make a good consensus decision; it is really tough to implement any decision without people buying in. For some people - and you will need their help - the path to change must contain small steps...at least, at first.

Evaluation against agreed benchmarks:

Business is an iterative process: building things you believe contain value and testing to determine those things actually do contain value. Here, I am talking about value for clients, value for owners, value for employees...i.e., value, as seen from these and other [different] perspectives. And, all these perspectives must be understood and used as performance benchmarks...to define success and guide behaviour. Then, with benchmarks understood - measure, report, adjust, etc.

Thought Tweet #566

by Rick Baker
On Sep 17, 2012

Thought Tweet #566 If you are spending too much time fighting fires at work, your career is getting doused.

 

The Thinking Behind The Tweet

The economy would get a serious boost if 10% of business people would apply the 80/20 Rule and spend more time doing work directly linked to building value [planning the work and working the plan] and less time fighting fires.

Tags:

Change: Creating Positive Change | I'm too busy! - I don't have time! | Thought Tweets

Accurate? One of the inherent flaws in the minds of nearly all salespeople is something resembling an inferiority complex.

by Rick Baker
On Sep 15, 2012

Do you agree or disagree with this quote?

"One of the inherent flaws in the minds of nearly all salespeople is something resembling an inferiority complex."

Frank J. Rumbauskas Jr.
'Never Cold Call Again', (2006)

Tags:

Sales

Thought Tweet #565

by Rick Baker
On Sep 14, 2012

Thought Tweet #565 While physical force has lost prominence, conflict has not.

 

The Thinking Behind The Tweet

Human beings are creatures of conflict. Internal conflict. External conflict. Big and small conflict. 

Tags:

Beyond Business | Thought Tweets

Layering On Business Achievement

by Rick Baker
On Sep 13, 2012

If you want to ensure your business is solid from top to bottom and from bottom to top, consider building a solid 3-layer pyramid:

 

 

The first layer to build is: Solving Problems. There are 3 major considerations:

  1. People: you and your people must have the right attitude and the right strengths...analytical, creative, experiential, etc
  2. Process: you and your people must have access to good problem-solving systems and tools...as one example, P=2S+O 
  3. Situations: you and your people must be able to not just analyse but also anticipate situations 
 
The next layer to build is: Growing Profits. There are 3 major considerations:
  1. People: as above and remember, people have radically different views about money and many handle it poorly
  2. Process: key considerations are finger-on-the-financial-pulse measures and metrics, performance tracking models, and cash-flow forecasts 
  3. Situations: as above and work to look at things from different perspectives...including your banker's perspective
 
The final layer to build is: Increasing Value. Again, there are 3 major considerations. In fact, Business Contains Only These 3 Things:
  1. People: as above and business value increases as value delivered to clients, employees, suppliers, & owners increases
  2. Process: as above and more - the process must fit the people, and vice-versa
  3. Situations: as above and more - the business culture must be constructed so situations are easier to anticipate and it is the responsibility of the leader to guide people and guide processes so situations are constructed
 

Tags:

Entrepreneur Thinking | Solutions & Opportunities | Vision: The Leader's Vivid Vision

Thought Tweet #564

by Rick Baker
On Sep 13, 2012

Thought Tweet #564 Seeing the forest and understanding the workings of the veins in the trees' leaves: that's genius at work in business.

 

The Thinking Behind The Tweet

Many people possess skills for understanding and doing the technical details of business.

Some people are visionaries...they accurately see the big-picture of their business.

Few people, perhaps less than 1% of people, possess the ability to do both.

Tags:

Thought Tweets | Vision: The Leader's Vivid Vision

Copyright © 2012. W.F.C (Rick) Baker. All Rights Reserved.