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Friday, October 28, 2005

Strategies for Becoming

Strategies for Becoming
A Successful Consultant

Fifteen years ago, working as a consultant was considered an unusual career choice. There were few consulting firms and even fewer individual practitioners. Instead, professionals preferred the stability of corporate employment, with its fringe benefits, so-called "job security" and promotions.

Now corporate life is different: With limited opportunities to advance and little if any stability at large companies, consulting has emerged as a viable alternative to traditional career paths. Unlike permanent executives, consultants create their own employment opportunities by selling their services to multiple clients.

Corporations love this trend since it allows them to hire experts on a contractual basis instead of incurring the costs associated with recruiting full-time employees and paying compensation and benefits. Companies can pay a fee to receive highly specialized functions, knowledge or operating support only as long as they need it. As long as companies aren't locked into long-term commitments and consultants enjoy brisk demand, it's a quick deal benefiting both parties.

The prospect sounds great: Hang out your shingle and go to work for yourself (or so some professionals think). Unfortunately, many overlook a factor that's vital to long-term success -- a marketing plan.

With consulting practices now numbering in the tens of thousands, you'll hardly be the only one trying to capitalize on experience in your chosen niche. Developing a reputation as an expert in your field will help.

Consulting is all about positioning yourself as an expert, says Betsy Gooding, president of Practice Advantage, a Charleston-based consulting firm specializing in healthcare management. "If you can demonstrate that you have the knowledge and expertise that your clients need, and powerfully communicate that information, you'll consistently outperform your competition," she says.

Pitching Your Services

The issue now becomes whether you understand how to market your practice in the face of increasing competition.

Laurie Szczutkowski is a business and personal-success coach in Forest, Va. Her specialty -- life coaching -- was virtually unknown several years ago but now is expanding rapidly. "Being talented and offering a consistently superior service is, of course, essential," she says. "However, it's just as critical that you be able to market yourself, establish your credibility and build your reputation."

Market visibility and a unique message are key, she says. To distinguish herself from her competition, she takes every opportunity available to speak before professional audiences, publish articles and engage in other "image-building" activities.

Kevin Skarritt, co-founder and vice president of AcornCreative.com, a Brentwood, Calif.-based technology consulting group, has a similar challenge. With so many Internet companies vying for business, he had to find a way to stand out from others. His research quickly showed potential customers want more than simply a Web page designer. They need a new media expert.

"To meet the needs of the narrow niche market I'd identified, I created a team of Internet technology and design professionals that could meet the diverse needs of my clients," he says. "Then, I designed a portfolio of print and electronic marketing communications to promote our unique services."

Indeed, every consultant must be a keen marketing strategist, able to parlay chance opportunities into consulting assignments. Consulting engagements won't knock at your door. You'll need to plan a strategy to position yourself and increase your visibility in your niche market.

To promote his consulting firm that specializes in international development for U.S. corporations, Mike Florimbi, president of Florimbi Partners International in Dallas, used a range of marketing resources, including print brochures, e-mail, a Web site and personal networking. "Marketing has made the difference between a mediocre attempt at consulting and a really successful venture," he says.

Marketing Tools

But which marketing tool is best for you? Should you develop a resume, brochure, flier, print-ad campaign or other promotional material? What about the value of a Web site in today's rapidly emerging e-commerce marketplace?

Unfortunately, there's no single answer. Your choice will depend on the market you're trying to penetrate and how much you're willing to spend.

For instance, whether you choose a Web site, brochures, fliers or a resume depends on your initial budget. Multicolor, multipage brochures cost thousands of dollars. Web sites can run in the hundreds, even thousands of dollars. Instead, you might select a one-page flier that's well-presented and visually attractive at a fraction of the cost.

Either way, it's best to have your print and electronic marketing materials professionally prepared, experts say.

Regardless which promotional vehicle you choose, it should:

  • appear upscale in its visual and graphic presentation
  • effectively highlight your expertise and specific accomplishments
  • include your professional and academic credentials (e.g., degrees, certifications, teaching experience, public speaking expertise, media experience, publications)
  • describe the full scope of your services
  • promote your past consulting assignments (if appropriate)
  • use testimonials where possible (prospective clients likely will be interested in what others have to say about you

Where to Get Business

Also remember that you can't deliver your services until you've developed a client base. To generate a list, use the following resources:

Contacts. Networking is the single best method to build business relationships and identify consulting opportunities.

Past employers. They already know the quality of your work and achievements. Notify them that you're now a consultant and available on a contractual basis.

Professional associations. Become an active participant in as many associations as possible. Attend meetings to network with other members and promote your practice. Get the membership list and do a targeted direct-mail campaign. There's often a strong affiliation between members which can benefit your marketing efforts.

Civic and community associations. Through these organizations, you can connect with other professionals who have similar volunteer interests.

Chambers of Commerce. A great source for networking and identifying opportunities in your local market.

Colleges and universities. Many schools help start-up ventures in need of specific operating, financial and technological expertise. Establishing an affiliation with one or more may lead to promising referrals.

Small-business incubators. Another great source for networking with entrepreneurs in need of specific consulting expertise to launch their ventures.

Venture-capital firms. These firms often engage consultants for specific projects, start-ups, acquisitions and other high-profile engagements. Once you've established an affiliation, engagements can become routinely available as the firm acquires additional holdings.

Banks and lending institutions. Bankers know everything about their business clients. Most important, they are aware of companies that need strong and effective management support (particularly in turnaround and reorganization situations).

Marketing Rules to Live By

Once you open for business, never forget the basics:

Marketing and building a professional image are critical.

Don't confuse marketing with sales. Clients want to feel helped, not just sold on your services. So anchor your campaign in your ability to solve problems and provide expert insight. To that end, tout accomplishments rather than your credentials. Clients are interested in results.

Play it cool -- even if your cupboard's bare, let prospective clients think business is knocking down your door. Clients may lose confidence in your abilities if you seem hungry for business.

Sell information in the form of books, manuals, software, audio and videotapes or databases. You'll educate people and promote your business indirectly as you familiarize prospects with your expertise.

Individualize your consultations. If you provide help that appears formulaic or packaged, clients may feel cheated. They believe their circumstances are unique and worthy of special, custom treatment and solutions.

Never cut your fee to get business. Instead, focus on the quality of your service, not your price. Whether clients retain your services will depend more on the quality of help you provide than on the fees.

Even if you need the income, cutting your fee without reducing your workload suggests that your fees were inflated to begin with. If suspicions arise, a contract may be lost.

Thursday, October 27, 2005

Developing a reputation

Developing a Reputation
Part I: A Consultant's Most Valuable Asset
By Scott Allen

• Part 2: Be Prolific
• Part 3: Be Ubiquitous
• Part 4: Be Generous
• Part 5: Be Dependable
• Part 6: Be Credible
 

 From Other Guides
• Choosing a Business Trainer or Consultant (Small Business Canada)
• Ten Low-Cost Ways To Promote Your Business (Small Business Canada)
 
 Elsewhere on the Web

• Creating a Reputation
• Overcome Negative Perceptions
• Strategies for Becoming a Professional Consultant

 

Consulting is perhaps the most accessible entrepreneurial business one can undertake because there's basically zero start-up cost. There's no office to rent, no inventory to buy, no special equipment, no franchise fees, no incorporation costs, and you can spend as little or as much as you want on advertising and marketing. Simply put, all you really need is to know how to do something that most people don't know how to do and would be willing to pay money to either learn how to do or have it done for them. Just about anyone can hang up their shingle and say, "I'm a consultant".

Of course, that's why consultants have developed a bad reputation in some ways. Jokes abound about it:

  • "A consultant is someone you pay to tell you what you already know."
  • "I got laid off last week."
    "So you're unemployed?"
    "No, I'm a consultant."
  • Q: How many consultants does it take to screw in a light bulb?
    A: Let me do some research and get back to you on that.

Many professional organizations have popped up, both for the consulting field in general and for particular areas of practice, in order to address these issues. They provide standards of practice and certifications to raise the level of professionalism in the industry.

Some would argue that knowledge is a consultant's most important intangible asset, but in reality, reputation is. Knowledge can be easily bought, or even sub-contracted, while reputation can't. You could know everything in the world, but if no one knows you know it, you're not going to make a living with it. The most effective form of marketing is still word-of-mouth referrals, and that relies entirely on reputation.

Some consultants are fortunate enough to start out with an established reputation in their industry. If you're fortunate enough to be one of those people, then congratulations to you - you've already got a huge head start! But in either case, there are several things you can do to build reputation when you're first starting out, even before you have referenceable clients:

  • Be prolific.
  • Be ubiquitous.
  • Be generous.
  • Be dependable.
  • Be credible.

diary of a start up

Diary of a Startup
Alane Ebner is starting an architecture practice. She has set the rather ambitious goal of going from launch to thriving practice in just 82 days. In order to do that, she has brought in a team of experts to deal with bookkeeping, contracts, graphic design, real estate, web design, etc. -- 22 experts in all.

What makes Alane's story so fascinating, though, is that the whole process is being recorded daily in a group blog written by all the team members called AlaneByDay.com. They're currently on day 25 of 82. If you'd like to see a step-by-step narrative of how a business is launched by a team of experts, this is your chance. While it's particularly applicable to a professional services business, many of the lessons here are applicable to any business.

One word of caution... remember the basic scientific principle that by observing something, we change it. Alane's business is getting far more attention than the typical architecture startup as a result of this unique approach. That won't be easily duplicated, although it certainly should get you thinking about some unique approaches you might take to call attention to your business.