If you were to draw a
picture that visually represents your role in your business, what would it look
like? Are you at the top of a traditional Christmas-tree-like organizational
chart, or are you stuck in the middle of your business, like a hub in a bicycle
wheel?
As anyone who has tried to
fly United when O’Hare has been hit by a snowstorm knows, a hub-and-spoke model
is only as strong as the hub. The moment the hub is overwhelmed, the entire system
fails. Acquirers generally avoid hub-and-spoke managed businesses because they
understand the dangers of buying a company too dependent on the owner. Here’s a
list of nine warning signs you’re a hub-and-spoke owner and some suggestions
for pulling yourself out of the middle of your business:
1. You sign all of the
checks
Most business owners sign
the checks, but what happens if you’re away for a couple of days and an
important supplier needs to be paid? Consider giving an employee signing
authority for checks up to an amount you’re comfortable with, and then change
the mailing address on your bank statements so they are mailed to your home
(not the office). That way, you can review all signed checks and make sure the
privilege isn’t being abused.
2. Your mobile phone bill is
over $200 a month
If your employees are out of
their depth a lot, it will show up in your mobile phone bill because staff will
be calling you to coach them through problems. Ask yourself if you’re hiring
too many junior employees. Sometimes people with a couple of years of industry
experience will be a lot more self-sufficient and only slightly more expensive
than the greenhorns. Also consider getting a virtual assistant (VA), who can
act as a first line of defense in protecting your time. You can find a VA by
filling out the request for proposal at http://www.ivaa.org/.
3. Your revenue is flat when
compared to last year’s
Flat revenue from one year
to the next can be a sign you are a hub in a hub-and-spoke model. Like forcing
water through a hose, you have only so much capacity. No matter how efficient
you are, every business dependent on its owner reaches capacity at some point.
Consider narrowing your product and service line by eliminating technically
complex offers that require your personal involvement, and instead focus on
selling fewer things to more people.
4. Your vacations suck
If you spend your vacations
dispatching orders from your mobile, it’s time to cut the tether. Start by
taking one day off and seeing how your company does without you. Build systems
for failure points. Work up to a point where you can take a few weeks off
without affecting your business.
5. You spend more time
negotiating than a union boss
If you find yourself
constantly having to get involved in approving discount requests from your
customers, you are a hub. Consider giving front-line, customer-facing employees
a band within which they have your approval to negotiate. You may also want to
tie salespeople’s bonuses to gross margin for sales they generate so you’re
rewarding their contribution to profit, not just chasing skinny margin deals.
6. You close up every night
If you’re the only one who
knows the close-up routine in your business (count the cash, lock the doors,
set the alarm), then you are very much a hub. Write an employee manual of basic
procedures (close-up routine, e-mail footer to use, voice mail protocol) for
your business and give it to new employees on their first day on the job.
7. You know all of your
customers by first name
It’s good to have the pulse
of your market, but knowing every single customer by first name can be a sign
that you’re relying too heavily on your personal relationships being the glue
that holds your business together. Consider replacing yourself as a rain maker
by hiring a sales team, and as inefficient as it seems, have a trusted employee
shadow you when you meet customers so over time your customers get used to
dealing with someone else.
8. You get the tickets
Suppliers’ wooing you by
sending you free tickets to sports events can be a sign that they see you as
the key decision maker in your business for their offering. If you are the key
contact for any of your suppliers, you will find yourself in the hub of your
business when it comes time to negotiate terms. Consider appointing one of your
trusted employees as the key contact for a major supplier and give that
employee spending authority up to a limit you’re comfortable with.
9. You get cc’d on more than
five e-mails a day
Employees, customers and
suppliers constantly cc’ing you on e-mails can be a sign that they are looking
for your tacit approval or that you have not made clear when you want to be
involved in their work. Start by asking your employees to stop using the cc
line in an e-mail; ask them to add you to the “to” line if you really must be
made aware of something – and only if they need a specific action from you.
If you are curious to see if
you're a Hub & Spoke manager and if you have a business you could sell one
day, take the 13 minute Sellability Score questionnaire: http://www.sellabilityscore.com/sunbelt-advisors-bay-area/joan-young
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