Archive for July, 2009

31st July payment on account

Saturday, July 25th, 2009

the 31st July represents the deadline for paying your second payment on account towards your 09/10 tax bill if you are self employed.  If this payment is submitted after the 31st, interest will start to be charged by HMRCE.

If you are unable to make the full payment on time, I’d suggest calling the HMRCE payment support line, who are very helpful.  They’ll be able to help you put a suitable payment plan together, which will avoid you going into arrears.

You should be aware that they will only help you with a plan, if you are currently not in arrears already.

They can be contacted on 0845 366 1204

For more information, please see the HMRCE website

Choose your attitude

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

I attended our institutes annual conference dinner at the end of June where the after dinner speaker was Debra Searle MBE.  Debras story of how she rowed the atlantic single handidly was really inspiring.

During her talk, Debra made reference to a message that she wrote on her boat, “choose your attitude”.  Her view was that even though there was lots going on around her that she couldn’t control (like the weather and even giving up), she could control her attitude to dealing with it all.

How true is this?  How often have we all thought about throwing the towel in when things get a bit tough in our business.  How often do we come into work in a morning feeling fed up and spending the rest of the day taking it out on our teams and our customers.

You can choose your attitude.  You can choose to be positive about things, you can choose to pick the phone up and contact that prospect list with a smile on your face and you can choose not to!

If Debra Searle can spend 3 1/2 months in a row boat by herself and get attacked by sharks, whales and even a giant turtle, and come out of the other side full of positivity about life, shouldn’t we all take some lessons from her.

Not all new business is good new business

Monday, July 20th, 2009

I was reminded whilst talking to a client this week of the phrase “not all new business is good business”. It was taught to me very early in my career and has been one of the best pieces of business advice I’ve ever received.The client in question (let’s call him Bob) had taken on what looked (on paper) like a great project from ABC ltd. Looking purely at the levels of revenue it would bring, his company’s turnover would be up significantly. They were as happy as happy could be.

Then the problems started…

The emotional Vampire

Initially, everything went well. Bob started working for ABC and did a really great job of keeping ABC happy for the first few weeks. However, ABC became more and more demanding and started to “scope creep” in the project. (Scope creep is the term used to describe when someone adds what they hope will be ‘free extras’ to what they originally agreed to, with a supplier.)

At first, Bob didn’t mind throwing in the odd extra to keep the client happy. However, as time wore on, ABC started to become an emotional vampire to Bob – they sucked his energy right out of him.

Their demands became ever more ridiculous. They’d call him at all hours, demanding changes and updates, all at no extra cost! His existing clients became increasingly frustrated, as the levels of service they received dropped, now that Bob was concentrating more and more on ABC limited.

Bob and I sat down and reviewed the project. He’d done quite a lot of the right things at the beginning of the project. He’d worked out a price based on the resources he thought he’d need for the project (this is in an industry where hourly rates are the norm). He had analysed the time that would be needed and when he would need to be working on the client. He told ABC ltd what the end date of the project would be, what the different stages where in getting to that end point and what input would be required from them.

What he hadn’t done was to be specific enough about what wasn’t included in the project and how any extras would be billed!

Turnover is vanity, Profit is sanity

When we looked at the profitability of the project, Bob would be very lucky if he were to break even. In fact, if you include the opportunity costs of potential work he missed out on and factor in the unhappy existing clients, he will have made a LOSS.

Bob still protests that ABC brought him in so much revenue that he couldn’t refuse the work, but accepts that he made a number of mistakes along the way. His primary mistake was not being specific enough in the contract terms. His second mistake was to focus too much on the revenue, without factoring in profitability.

Judging from the number of emails I receive, it seems many businesses have had similar experiences to Bob. More importantly, how can you ensure this never happens to you and your business?

Here are a few suggestions:

• Listen to what potential clients say at opening meetings very carefully. If they try and barter on price then there could be warning signs about future behaviour
• Put together a list of what is included for the price and equally what isn’t. Explain how extras on a project will be billed
• When a client phones with scope creep, make sure you use the line “last time we did that for a client, it cost an extra £x, is that ok with you?”
• Invoice the client as you go for both extras and the original project fee. It’s amazing how extras add up and clients could be shocked with a big bill at the end.
• Get as much as you can in writing. Yes it’s easy to take down some additional details over the phone, but if the client comes back and claims that he didn’t ask for that doing, you’ll be left high and dry
• Always focus on the profitability of a project. Turnover is vanity and profit is reality. So what if a project adds £100,000 to your turnover. If you don’t make any money on it, why bother. It’d be much better for you to spend the day at home!