The CEO as Sculptor
By Chuck Chrissis, The Growth Coach®
Equally important to thinking and acting like a CEO is the opportunity to become a sculptor of your business. Make time to craft and mold your business so it will run more effectively and deliver more consistent results. Actively shape and re-shape it to make operations smoother and more efficient. Turn chaos and confusion into order and discipline. Rising customer satisfaction and more predictable profits will follow. It’s time to standardize and document your business.
Challenge old beliefs about how your business should work. It’s never too early or too late to shape or re-shape your business. It doesn’t matter if your business is 20 years old, 2 years old, or still on the drawing board. Begin to mold the company to run without you being woven into its very fabric. Design it to run without you supplying all the energy and effort. You can’t control everything and everyone, nor should you. In short, behave like a strategic business owner. Let go!
Do this by creating more than simply a job for yourself. The ultimate goal of starting a business is to sell it one day at the highest possible premium to your employees, family members, or an outside buyer. You deserve an acceptable return on your time, talent, and capital.
No matter the size, age, or industry, every business should be prepared to be sold. Yours is no different. This “start with the end in mind” strategy should help focus you on building an effective business model that doesn’t have you at the center of its universe and doesn’t rely on your presence, personality, and perspiration for its success. In other words, you should not be the business and the business should not be you. This work-in-reverse approach not only maximizes your selling price, but minimizes the challenges and headaches while you own and run the business.
As mentioned earlier, your goal is to design and re-design your business to work without you. Your business model should be sculpted in such a way that it can be replicated easily and often in cities across the country and around the world. All that’s necessary is your vision, not your physical presence and exertion. Whether you intend to expand or not, such a goal will help focus you on building a systems-dependent, not owner dependent business that will generate repeatable performance and consistent results. And you must get others to help. Without them you don’t run a business – you work a job.
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What is an effective business system? It is simply an integrated web of separate processes, procedures, and policies. A business system is your documented instruction manual for “this is what we do, and how we do it” at our company. A business system allows you to get consistent results through other people. What tremendous leverage and freedom that can give you!
Some typical operating processes are:
- Selling
- Marketing
- Manufacturing
- Inventory Management
- Order Processing and Fulfillment
- Customer Service
- Billing and Accounts Receivable
- Procurement and Accounts Payable
- Facilities Management
- Accounting and Finance
- Human Resources
- Information Systems
With such processes fully identified and explained, your employees will deliver amazing consistency by minimizing employee discretion. Such a system will also free you from having to touch every transaction, make every decision, answer every question, and solve every problem. You can manage by exception! Such a carefully crafted approach affords you breathing room to think and behave like a strategic business owner. You will also have time for the personal activities that matter most to you.
Without a business system in place, it’s unlikely you will be able to obtain a premium price for your business. A potential buyer may be unwilling to invest in an enterprise that is dependent solely on you for its day-to-day operations and survival. If it’s obvious that you are held hostage to your business, you may not realistically expect to achieve a sale price you find acceptable. If it’s obvious the business is systems-deficient, then it’s unlikely an objective third party will offer you a price that reflects the time and effort you have put into your business. Rather, emotion, not reason will come to rule the transaction and may very well derail it.
To maximize your company’s eventual selling price, realize that buyers want to acquire a smoothly-running, money-generating machine. They want to purchase a business system that runs on near autopilot. They want to buy a fully documented and organized business system that gets predictable results. They desire an asset with a proven track record, predictable revenue stream, and growth potential. Give them this by first taking the opportunity to step back, let go, and become a sculptor of your business.
Let us know your insights by commenting on our blog post below.
By Chuck Chrissis
The Growth Coach®
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By Holly A. Magister, CPA, CFP®