Are
You a Prisoner of Your Business?
True Story: “Life’s
not much fun these days” said the businessman
to his accountant surveying his latest annual figures.
The accountant tried to sympathise as he focussed
on the profit figure, which exceeded £200,000. “I
haven’t got time to do anything here and
our social life is non-existent”. His wife
scowled across their half-decorated living room.
Makes you weep doesn’t it?
But it is actually very typical even if the profits
for a small owner-managed business are exceptional.
The first few years are hard, much of the profit
stays in to help grow the working capital and then
finally things start to take off. And they all
lived happily ever after….
Well no they don’t actually.
They drive a much better car and their wife shops
in a better class of clothes shop but their stress
levels have gone through the roof. They can never
find good staff, customers are far more demanding
these days and there seems to far more red tape
and bureaucracy around than there ever was when
they started.
But there is a solution and it
can be summed up in one word. Systems. Of course
you have them, every business does but half the
staff don’t follow them and they don’t
have the common-sense to deal with the unusual
things that crop up. Back to the true story: The
accountant coughed and decided to discuss the lack
of documented systems in the business. “You
really ought to start getting your systems and
procedures documented, you know. Not everything
in one go, just start with the things that go wrong.” “That
is everything then” replied the businessman.
So where do you start? Well first
you need to be able to stand back from your business
and identify the critical processes. What are the
systems that make things tick? More importantly,
what tasks are being done because “that’s
the way we’ve always done it”?
It’s not easy and increasingly
external advisers are being brought in to take
a fresh look at some of the problems. So should
you bring in outsiders for your business or should
you do it yourself? The answer is probably both.
You are almost certainly too close to see things
clearly but without your input the solutions won’t
be relevant. One of the reasons you went in to
business was to have more freedom. It’s time
to make it happen.
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