Start Your Own Successful Business Consulting Service
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Based Business Ideas Part 5
A consultant works with the management of
a business to improve the profitability of the business. Working
with the top management, you can rest assured the consultant is
a very highly paid individual. Some consultants charge $100 per
hour. Others charge $1,500 per day for their services, and still
others work on an annual retainer fee of $12,000 to over $30,000
per year from any number of large corporations.
Until a few years ago, the title "consultant"
was more or less limited to retired diplomats and top corporate
officers. In other words, until recently, the consultant's position
was more honorary than actual. But that has all changed dramatically
in the past
few years.
The number of consultants for almost any
problem in life has increased by tenfold or more during the past
ten years! And the field of consultants is continuing to grow.
In fact, independent consulting is one of the fastest growing
businesses in the country today!
A consultant is an expert at recognizing
problems and shaping solutions to those problems. The need for
business problem solvers - among large and small businesses worldwide
- has never been greater. The ever changing moods of the buyer
plus the myriad of crisis situations businessmen face almost daily,
have created this "seller's market" for the alert consultant.
Reaching for a consultant when problems
arise is as natural as looking for the sun to come up every morning.
When you're not feeling well, you call for the services of a doctor.
If your car isn't running right, you take it to a mechanic. And
so it is with a businessman when he encounters a problem - whether
it be in the field of accounting, legal, sales or customer relations.
Another side of this need for consultants
is in the case of the over-enthusiastic entrepreneur who rushes
headlong into a business in which he has little or no experience.
Many such dreamers invest their life savings in questionable projects
without even considering the idea of bringing in a competent business
consultant to analyze and evaluate their plans.
Even experienced people are prone to overrate
their own ideas. The image of the end result, and dedicated enthusiasm
toward the attainment of one's goal are the prime prerequisites
for success; however, unmerited enthusiasm and dedication can
also be very
dangerous as well. Unless it is based upon solid research, it
may cause people to chase headlong after nonexistent rainbows.
And that's where you can fit in as a business consultant.
It is not necessary for you to have owned
or operated a successful business to become a successful business
consultant. Nor is it imperative that you have been in management
or have held a titled position. You will, however, need the ability
to sell yourself, and an up-to-date understanding of the area
in which you intend to assist others.
The first step is to make an honest evaluation
of your own training and experience. You might be an ambitious
tax consultant who was never recognized for your abilities. You
might be especially good in such general areas as systems design,
marketing, advertising, distribution, sales, or even efficiency,
time management, scheduling, expediting or productivity. There
are hundreds of consultants across the country specializing in
Direct Mail and Mail Order operations. Most of these people enjoyed
some measure of success in those fields, and then discovered the
easier way - advising others on how to operate successfully. There
are consultants for people who want success with a garage sale,
party plan merchandising, or even multi-level operations. The
important thing is to choose an area in which you've had some
experience; an area that you have spent some time learning about
and of course, an area of work that you enjoy.
Almost everyone is afraid of the responsibility
involved. They claim they don't have the experience or the knowledge.
Such was the case of a young lady we know who was seeking work
as a personnel clerk. She had worked five years as assist ant
to the
personnel manager of a large manufacturing plant, yet when we
advised her to become a consultant to people looking for work
or to start her own resume writing service, she pleaded lack of
knowledge, experience and ability.
Just about everyone has had special training
in a certain line of work, and they've gone on to absorb special
studies or education along the same lines, and most people have
worked all their lives along or very close to a specific line
of endeavor. So, why shouldn't a woman who has worked 20 years
as a waitress represent herself as a consultant to the training
program for waitresses within a restaurant organization? A shipping
and receiving clerk would be a natural for setting up efficient
operations and for solving problems for businesses just beginning
or expanding their production output.
The point is, most people don't realize
how much expertise they really have, or the probable marketability
of their training, knowledge and experience. The important thing
is to look over your educational strengths, combine that with
any special training or on-the-job experience, and then offer
your expertise to help others with their problems along the lines
you know best.
You don't need a big, fancy executive type
office in order to get started, especially if you start your consulting
business on a part-time basis. A spare bedroom, a section of the
basement, or even a corner of the dining room, will do very nicely.
If you handle your own bookkeeping/filing, you will need a ledger
of some kind, and a file cabinet or two. You will need a good
typewriter if you plan to do your own correspondence. An alternative
is to do all letters, etc. in longhand and hire someone to put
them in final form for you. Check the local high school or college.
They may be happy to post your ad for a young lady looking for
part-time work.
Instead of going to the expense of paying
for a business phone, use your residence phone and train all members
of the family to answer it in a business-like manner during normal
working hours. Save copies of all the sales letters you send out,
and of course, all job proposals you submit. Set up your file
system with your final plan in mind, and you'll save a lot of
time as well as frustration. Get the kind of file folders that
hang from the sides of the file cabinet's drawers, allowing you
to position the file folder title anywhere across the top of the
folder. Then as you add clients to your file, you can keep them
in alphabetical order without having a jumbled-looking file drawer
in which you have to search for each title. It's also a good idea
to keep your active accounts in one drawer, your "hoped for"
accounts in another, and master copies of all your letters, proposals,
business contact information and records in still another drawer.
You'll also need business cards. You nearest quick print shop
can usually order these and help you in selecting wording and
design.
Whether to rent, lease or buy a copy machine
is up to you. But virtually no business can get by without file
copies. Carbon paper means a loss of efficiency, and running over
to the corner shop to get copies is going to cost you time and
money, so be sure to fit some sort of copier into your business
start-up costs. If impossible at the very first, use the old carbon
paper - you must have a copy for your file.
Just how good a typist are you, well you
can write sales letters, and how busy you want to be, should be
the deciding factors about the typewriter. If you type at all
- and there will always be at least a few letters that you should
type personally - we suggest again that you go for the long haul
probabilities and rent, lease or buy the best and most modern
typewriter you can afford. Later on, when you do move into that
"dream" office, hat will be one less piece of equipment
you will have to be concerned about.
Once you've decided what area of business
consulting you want to be in, and have your office or working
space set up, the next thing is to let people know you're available
for work. Definitely use some common sense and applied knowledge
before spending any
money on advertising. Generally speaking, you will pick up some
customers, regardless of the problem area you specialize in, by
advertising in your area's most popular newspaper. However, we
wouldn't recommend much more than a small ad in the Sunday editions,
unless you're a direct mail, multi-level or garage sale consultant.
Check with your Chamber of Commerce for
a list of trade and specialized business publishers in your area.
Either pick up a sample copy of the business journal at the local
newsstand or write to the publisher and ask for a sample. Look
through those catering to the type of business you want to serve.
Check the editorial styles and types of advertising they carry,
then select the one that corresponds with your needs. Basically,
unless a publication reaches the people you are trying to sell
to, don't advertise in it regardless of style, quality, or advertising
rates.
Radio or television would probably be a
complete waste of ad vertising dollars, unless you're offering
help with direct mail, multi-level marketing or garage sales.
The best time for any broad cast advertising in order to reach
you best prospects seems to be in the evening hours after the
late-night news, when these people are either still laboring over
their special projects or relaxing before going to bed. If you
do use broadcast advertising, the commercial is very important.
Really concentrate on this, and use a lot of common sense in writing
the message. Even if you engage the services of an experienced
broadcast
copywriter, make sure the message speaks to your potential customers,
and convinces them that you can help solve their problems or improve
the profit picture of their business.
Finally, where to advertise. Go with a quarter-page
ad in the yellow pages of your telephone directory. The space
salesman will help you with the ad, but remember, you want it
to catch the eye of your particular client, and offer a promise
of an end to his problems. Always talk to your kind of people,
emphasizing the benefits of your services. It's not good practice
to quote or even discuss prices in either your advertising or
on the phone when people respond. Always get name, address and
telephone number, then explain your services in general. Set up
an appointment to look over their operation, analyze their needs,
and make a written proposal to solve their problems.
There may be a number of factors involved
in establishing your fees, but starting out with beginning and
small businesses, and until you line up 50 regular clients, your
best bet would be $50 per hour. Count on two to three hours per
clients per day, and devoting 10 days per months to work on their
needs, you're talking about $1,000 to $1,500 per month from each
client. Multiply that times 50 clients, and you'll be grossing
$5,000 to $7,500 per month. As a one-man operation, you'll be
plenty busy.
Insiders in this business say a person can
leave his regular job on Friday, start a consulting business on
Monday, and within six months, have an income of more than $100,000
per year. Suffice it to say that a beginning business consultant
should earn from $30,000 to $60,000 before taxes and office expenses,
in his first year in the business.
There's still another very important method
of finding new clients, and that is via Direct Mail solicitation.
This is done either by postcard or sales letter mailings. For
a mailing list of local businesses, check the yellow pages of
your telephone directory, under the heading "Mailing Lists."
Tell the advertiser the kind of mailing list you need - if they
don't have it, ask them for the names of suppliers who might be
able to supply your needs. Alternately, you could compile your
own mailing list of prospects most likely to be interested in
your services. Mark the names you want in the area business directory,
and pay someone to input these names onto a computer for you.
The computer should be able to supply you with peal-and-stick
address labels at a nominal cost. Putting your list on computer
from the start will save you thousands of dollars in money and
count less hours of work.
Your postcard solicitation should basically
be an elaboration of your printed advertising. In other words,
an ad or a Direct Mail Consultant might be transferred to a postcard
along these lines:
ARE YOU HAVING TROUBLE GETTING RESULTS
WITH YOUR DIRECT MAIL BUSINESS???
I can help you! Show you how to double,
maybe even triple the response from your mailings! Expand your
market! Increase your profitability!
Whatever your needs, I can HELP! Whatever
your problems, I can SOLVE THEM! Call now, and let me explain.
After the message on the postcard, add your
telephone number and your name, followed by your identification
as Direct Mail Consultant.
A direct mail solicitation sales letter
simply uses more words than the postcard, reads smoother, and
forces the reader to respond as you direct him. Your sales letter
can be any length needed to tell your story and achieve the objective.
To be successful, though, it must embody and follow the "AIDA"
form: A = Attention; I = Interest;
D = Desire; A = Action on the part of the reader.
Another point to remember when writing sales
letters: Always appeal to the needs and wants of the person who's
going to be reading the letter. He will start reading to see if
your services can benefit him. He is greatly interested in more
profits, reduced production costs and higher efficiency. He is
looking for answers to his most pressing problems. Keep these
elements in mind when you write a sales solicitation letter, whether
for yourself or for a client.
People receiving sales letters are somewhat
more responsive to a letter that is typed, as opposed to one that
is typeset. But the typed letter must be "letter perfect,"
and not of a different or unusual style of type. As a consultant,
your letterhead should be simple while still conveying to the
reader a sense of class. Your paper should be the best quality
you can afford - not flamboyant, but sending a subtle message
of success. Direct mail surveys show that slightly better numbers
of responses are received when a light beige or off-yellow paper
is used.
Basically, your letter should do what the
postcard does for you - move the recipient to call you and allow
you to set up an appointment to discuss his needs as your client.
Whether you're writing an advertisement or a sales letter, it's
important that you have the objective clearly in mind - what you
want the reader to do. With this in mind, you needn't use the
"hard sell" approach quite as forcefully as someone
asking for money on the first contact.
All that's left is meeting with the prospect,
listening to his problems, and hearing what he wants, then write
out a proposal to solve his problems and satisfy his wants. This
means selling yourself to the prospect - assuring him you know
what you're talking about, and that you can make him more successful.
There you have it - a plan that can lead
you to success as a Business Consultant. Remember, though, no
amount of research, reading, listening or investment can make
you successful until you do something with them. Action on your
part is the absolute ingredient that must be added, and that's
up to you. Your future is in your own hands.

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