From Accountingnet.ie In Business
This year will bring changes, opportunities and dangers for your business. Industries are collapsing, careers are converging, and work is migrating or disappearing altogether. Each of us must orient ourselves in a world of constant disorientation, and find new ways to create value and provide service to others. Make the right choices and this year will be your best year yet. Make these 5 mistakes and things will be more difficult for your business and your life. Mistake #1: Hide Inside Your Box In today’s world, over-specialization without healthy diversification can be dangerous to your health. Remember Kodak? Remember the property flippers? Remember how the US depended on imported oil? Breakthroughs are called breakthroughs because something familiar is being broken. Black swans emerge. Unusual quirks surge into huge cascades. Who would have believed that rating female faces in college would lead the world to Facebook? You can knuckle down, dig deep and learn more about your specialization. But don’t let the comfort of familiar turf keep you from roaming far afield for new perspectives and ideas. Read outside your normal genre. Visit stores you’ve never set foot in. Ask your friend in another industry to show you how they do whatever it is they do – and then return the favor. Mistake #2: Surrender to Technology Sending an email, online survey, link or file to a customer may help you keep contact. But picking up the phone, scheduling a video call, or meeting in person is a more intimate and enduring way to keep in touch. If your life is increasingly bound to digital screens, don’t make the mistake of thinking that writing or sending something in real-time is the same as investing yourself in face time. Take a step back from the screens to connect, person-to-person, with those you serve, work with, and care about. Make the coming year a bounty of richly rewarding rendezvous and precious conversations. Mistake #3: Believe that Games are for Kids The key elements of this massive trend include measurable actions (points, scores, levels, likes), social reputation (platinum, Top 50, five star, badges), and monetary and non-monetary incentives (bonuses, red carpet treatment, special discounts and offers). Gamification can be used at work to improve employee behavior, increase customer engagement, engage and align your partners. To learn more, start here. If you think games are only for kids or for enjoying “after work”, you will miss an important trend and make a serious mistake. Leading companies are shaping the behavior of customers, employees, and partners through successful gamification. Mistake #4: Believe the Advertising Become a connoisseur of reviews. Don’t just count the stars, read and reflect on the actual reviews. Is this reviewer merely splattering an opinion, or is the review a gem of reflection, thoughtfulness, recommendations or advice? See the stunning contrast between this one-star review by Jorge Montalva and the remarkable reply from Paul Uduk. In the year ahead, become a creator of your own strong reviews. When you have well-considered point of view, contribute comments, comparisons, and analysis for the benefit of others. It’s our world to create together as collaborators for the future. Advertising is still important. Prospects need to know who you are, what you stand for, and what you have to offer. Good advertising can promote your identity with clarity and power. But don’t be seduced by the beauty of your own expression. In the world of advertising and promotion, it’s what others say about you that matters most. Mistake #5: Sell, Sell, and Sell Some More Pharmaceutical companies face patent expiration cliffs that turns blockbuster drugs into dogs. But they are discovering that investing in family support services leads to better patient compliance and brand loyalty that lasts a lifetime. Konosuke Matsushita famously said “After-sales service is more important than assistance before sales. It is through such service that one gets permanent customers.” And he was right. If you spend this year ignoring your customers and chasing your prospects, your customers today will belong to your competitors tomorrow, and you’ll spend 2015 chasing all over again. One More Mistake: Focus on the Past At the American Chamber of Commerce, Flores spoke about his remarkable life and in one phrase summed his extraordinary ability to create new insights and new worlds. “I have never been a victim of my past. Who I was is not who I am.” My wife and I recently met with Marshall Goldsmith, Jack Canfield, and Tony Buzan in Dubai at the 20th Anniversary of Right Selection, our longstanding event partner in the Middle East. Marshall shared an important tip at dinner: “Don’t focus on the past you cannot change. Focus on the future that you can.” These two quotes make good sense, and make for good living. Ron & Jen Kaufman
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