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Purity of Heart is to Will One Thing.
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| Guest post by: Keith Hanna |
Article Overview: The job of entrepreneurs is to lead change.
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Free Download - Lag Time By Keith Hanna |
Purity of Heart is to Will One Thing.
The job of entrepreneurs is to lead change. We build high-performing
companies that bring valuable innovations into the world. This job
starts the moment an entrepreneur decides that the way something is, is
not the way that he or she would like it to be. Innovation starts with
the faint sense of opportunity and ends when the vision has reached
full fruition and has created wealth for everyone involved.
How
do we know when we've won this game or are even in the process of
winning it? How do we measure success? Certainly there are many
intangible definitions of success (which are really definitions of
happiness) but these are internal and not that useful to marshall a
team around a vision for something new. Business is a commercial
enterprise and so the tangible measure of success will ultimately be
economic.
The philosopher Sören Kierkegaard said: "purity of
heart is to will one thing". To me this statement underscores the need
to focus on a single external, tangible, measurable definition of
success. Innovation is a challenging and risky enterprise. A single
number focuses an entire team on applying its creative resources on
cracking the problem.
From the entrepreneur's perspective, and
this includes all owners of the business, the ultimate financial number
is personal networth: a portfolio of financial assets that generate
residual income outside of the efforts of the entrepreneur. This
definition of financial independence is the ultimate entrepreneurial
success. It does not mean the entrepreneur is happy by any means–that
is a different issue altogether–it only means that the entrepreneur is
successful in classic terms.
Networth is the ultimate lagging
indicator of the financial success of an entrepreneur. It's the number
leftover after every other business and personal deduction. It means
that the entrepreneur has created a business that generates net
earnings and that the entrepreneur has learned to live below this
means, paying off personal debt and saving the leftover money to invest
in income-generating assets outside the main business. A high,
diversified networth is less useful as a team performance metric
because it is personal to the entrepreneur and less relevant to the
rest of the team who may not care if the owner gets rich off their
efforts.
The bottom line in business is either net income
(earnings after business taxes and all other expenses) or ebitda
(earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization). The
first is essentially the personal income of the owners which they
either take as personal income or retain in the company to fuel growth.
The second is essentially the net cashflow from business operations.
Personal income and cashflow are also somewhat lagging indicators as
they occur somewhat after the successful operation of the business.
Gross
profit occurs after the effective and efficient production of the
products and services (revenue minus the cost of good sold) but before
the effective and efficient administration of the business (general and
adminstrative costs). Thus a focus on net income/net profit forces good
management of the entire business, while gross profit places more
emphasis on the creation of the service itself. If the team has some
influence on total operations, an earning target may be effective; if
they don't, then a gross profit or gross margin (gross profit expressed
as a percentage of sales) target may form a better metric.
Further
up the income statement is the top line (revenue/receipts and sales,
depending on whether they've been collected or merely billed.) Focus on
a top line team goal can result in cash in the door, but may not place
any attention on the cash going out of the door and therefore whether
there is any left at the end. There are several interesting ways to
present a top-line metric. One is in absolute terms: total revenue for
the company; or it can be revenue per store or revenue per employee or
revenue per customer.
Participation volume is a number that
appears off sheet but is more leading than revenue. Revenue is made up
of two main numbers: the number of customers (participation) times the
price each is paying. Revenue increase as either of those numbers
increase but there is not necessarily a linear correlation between
price and volume. Sometimes as price goes down, volume goes up and
somewhere in there is an optimal amount of revenue relative to the cost
of servicing the revenue.
Participation volume is a leading
indicator but it is not at the front. Other metrics such as new sales
leads, advertising impressions and outgoing cold-calls are further out
but are also most relevant to the members of the team working on sales
and marketing. The ultimate leading indicator is the number of new
opportunities that the team identifies as possible future value
propositions. Some of these opportunities trigger major research and
development efforts to create new products, services and entirely new
lines of business for new customers.
What separates the truly
successful entrepreneurs from the less successful one is leadership.
Innovation is not a solo activity. It's teams of people who create the
really magnificent contributions to humanity. Teams win together when
they work together and what brings a team together is a common focal
point: a shared goal.
Somewhere in the value creating chain from
opportunity identification to networth building is the best way for a
team to target its immediate (leading) and ultimate (lagging)
definitions of success: The best metric for immediate individual
success is the leading indicator that tends to focus a team member on
making a great contribution and performing at his or her best. The best
goal for the team is the lagging indicator that tends to focus each
team member on working together. One number for the team and one number
for the person creates focus. One leads into the other as the two
numbers are separate only in timing.
Article Tags: change, entrepreneurs, innovations, job, purity
Referred by: http://www.infinity-pr.com
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About the Author: Keith Hanna RSS for Keith's articles - Visit Keith's website Keith Hanna’s experience as a coach spans over 15 years and includes helping entrepreneurs and growing companies identify and implement the changes needed to take their success to the next level. With a commitment to creating tangible value for his clients, Keith has worked with leaders in a wide variety of industries and at every stage of their careers and personal lives. His career as a coach began as a natural extension of his work as a product designer helping entrepreneurs turn their vision into innovative products. Through that work, Keith realized the most important innovations entrepreneurs had to make were inward focused. Those who were able to deal with the stresses caused by personal and business changes around them were able to make those changes work for them, and were able to live greater lives and build greater businesses. Keith holds a Master’s Degree in Environmental Design from the University of Calgary, with a specialization in industrial design and new venture development. He is author of two books, StepUp and Higher Purpose, Higher Profit, as well as an accomplished speaker and facilitator. Keith lives with his wife and two children at the foot of the Rocky Mountains in Bragg Creek, Alberta, from which he makes mountain climbing excursions in the summer and dog sledding trips in the winter. Click here to visit Keith's website The Joy of Repetition In The Right Changing One Habit At a Time Random Acts of Success From Me to We |
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