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More on Making Technology Changes

In my last post I talked about what to consider when moving to the cloud – and by the time I finished my first sentence or two I realized that the things you need to consider when deploying cloud applications are much the same as when you make any large technology change in your business.  I also realized I had more to say about this topic than would comfortably fit in one post (or even two!) so let’s chat some more about making large application, architecture or platform decisions, shall we?  Today let’s focus on some more factors that can make a large implementation harder or easier.

 

Technology by ismh_, on Flickr
Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 2.0 Generic License  by  ismh_ 

Are you adding new functionality?

You may find that adding new capabilities with a new system is somewhat easier than upgrading or replacing functionality that already exists.  Let’s say, for example, if you have a service business like an HVAC company and you decide to implement click to chat functionality on your website for the first time.  You don’t have replace something that already exists and retrain your staff.  You will still have to train them and create new processes but is often easier than changing old habits.  You will likely add interfaces to your other systems but that is almost always easier than mucking around with existing interfaces.  Contrast this click to chat example with swapping out your accounting system.  My head just hurts thinking about all the spaghetti that likely has to be unraveled!

 

How many other systems does it need to interface with?

If the technology you are adding is standalone then woo hoo!  It sure is nice not to have make sure systems talk to each other.  Oh, wait, this is the real world and I can’t think of anything that is truly standalone.  Let’s use our click to chat example – you’ll certainly have to integrate with your website.  You’ll likely want to interface to your CRM too – at the least the person chatting is a new contact.  They may also be a sales prospect or be trying to open a service ticket.

The more integration points a system has, the harder it likely is to implement.

 

Is it strategically important?

Are you adding technology that is going to be a game-changer for your business?  Then it will be harder because you absolutely, positively have to get it right.  The system has to work correctly, it has to integrate seamlessly with the rest of your business, and your staff (and possibly your customers) have to understand the implications of the new system and how to use it.  Our click to chat example is one that, while it will add customer service benefits, is likely not to be strategically important.

 

What are your regulatory constraints?

Is your industry free of regulatory constraints?  Or are you implementing a system that falls outside of these constraints?  Accountants, lawyers and medical professionals have constraints around client records and files.  When they are implementing systems that affect those records or files they have to tread carefully to make sure they remain in compliance.  In these cases technology change is harder.  If however, these same professionals are implementing an online appointment system, they are likely to have an easier time since this is outside the regulated areas.

So why is it so important to know what is easier or harder?  I’m not trying to talk you out of making technology changes – far from it.  Small businesses have a lot to gain by leveraging technology to their advantage.  It is critical to realize, however, what you are getting into and to make sure you plan for enough resources – mostly time and money – to do the job right.


Head in the Clouds? Is your Business Ready?

Everyone is talking about cloud computing – heck I’ve written a good bit about it myself.  How do you know if your small business is ready?

First off, I’d argue that making any large technology change requires readiness – not just moving to the cloud.  So keep the following in mind when you consider any major infrastructure or application change.

 

Small business technology in the cloud
Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic License  by  zolierdos

 

What Business Need Does it Fill?

What are you trying to accomplish by making a change?  Save money?  Open up new revenue opportunities?  Allow your staff or customers new functionality?  Improve processes and inefficiencies?  Any of these could be good drivers for making a technology change but be sure you know which it is and that you can clearly articulate why you want to make the change.  First of all, you want to make sure you aren’t chasing the latest bright, shiny object.  Second, any change will something your company will have to work through – it is never magic – so you want to make sure you can clearly articulate the business benefits.  Finally, going through the cost/benefit exercise, even if informally, will help you determine whether the benefits are worth the costs, both in hard dollars and in internal change costs.

 

Does it Support Business Processes?

Does the new toy support existing business processes?  How ingrained and mature are these processes?  On one hand if they are mature processes, it is easy to define those processes and map them to what will need to be done in the new environment.  On the other hand, if they are mature processes and don’t map well to the new functionality, your level of complexity in the change management arena just went up – a lot.  The same goes if you have no existing business processes or if they are ill-defined or ill-understood.  Things just got harder.

Here are some examples:  Let’s say you want to bring in a CRM tool.  Do you have a sales process?  A support process?  Are you going to try to teach your staff a new tool AND a new process?   Or is your current process inefficient and the tool will help streamline it?

 

Do Your Employees (and You!)  Have the Skill Sets They Will Need?

How tech savvy are you guys anyway?  I’ve found that many of the new applications are fairly easy to learn if a) you understand the underlying business process and b) you are reasonable comfortable with most common business tools (Word, Excel, email, etc.).  If even these basic tools are difficult to use then once again your level of difficulty score has gone up.  You’ll have to add time and effort to training and support.  Do you have an IT staff?  If so, are THEY comfortable with the new architectures and environments?  How much training and support will they need as well?

 

Don’t go into any big technology change without thinking about these three factors.  It is worth getting help from a professional to do a simple readiness assessment so you know the true cost of the change you are contemplating.


Buy vs build?

Construction by edgeplot, on Flickr
Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 2.0 Generic License  by  edgeplot

Back in the day, I wrote a lot of custom software.  First of all, that is what I DID and second, finding good software that met the business needs in a flexible way was hard.  Ok, I know I am showing my age now!

As time has passed and technology has advanced we have more and more technology options to support our business and these options have great functional capabilities.  At the same time, access to these technologies has become easier, especially for smaller businesses.  I find it remarkable that I can have, at my fingertips, the same business capabilities of a large corporation.  Gotta love the cloud!

With so much to choose from I would find it hard today to ever recommend “build it for yourself” to a client unless they had a very specific, niche need – a need that was their competitive advantage, something that set them apart.  You can get inexpensive development resources today but you still have fundamental issues with “roll your own” applications:

  • you may be using developers inexperienced with building bullet-proof  applications
  • you may be building with a technology that it is hard to find developers for
  • you will have to do your own maintenance and changes
  • you may be using a technology that won’t be supported long term.
That said, I see companies running their entire business on Excel, MS Access, Filemaker and other, much more esoteric tools.  These tools have their place, certainly, but perhaps not for key business functions like accounting, inventory, CRM, etc.  Should you dump them?  Maybe not…yet anyway.

 

If they work and you have reliable development resources, this may not be where you want to spend your money in this economy.  Even if you find something that will work for a good price you still have switching costs (training, conversion, etc.) to think about.  What I would do in this situation is plan for the next step now – if you were to switch to an off-the-shelf application, what would it be?  What will you need in the next stage of your company’s growth?  What are the costs and resources involved?  Have a plan, complete with budget allows you make the change quickly when the time is right.  There is nothing worse than suddenly being unable to change your application functionality – maybe because you lost your developer or your business has changed dramatically – and having no Plan B.


More flavors of CRM

Ice Cream Flavours by gordonramsaysubmissions, on Flickr
Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic License  by  gordonramsaysubmissions

A last month I wrote a post explaining about the different types of CRM.  A recent client project made me realize that I had left a few “flavors” off the menu.

This client is a marketing firm that wanted to implement a system that kept track of customer/prospect interactions and  client projects – customer relationship management (CRM) with project management (PM).  This was a new flavor.  They want to track contacts thru the sales cycle to proposal and then when a proposal was won, track the activities required to complete the proposed project.  What businesses would need this functionality?  Any business that performs multi-task activities for a customer – marketing and design firms, architecture and engineering, builders and remodelers, attorneys and CPAs.  The list is quite large and definitely includes technology consultants like myself!  So I updated the graphic from that last post:

Which tools support this kind of functionality?  Definitely the big names do – Salesforce.com, SugarCRM, Microsoft Dynamics CRM.  There are specialty niche products like Clients and Profits which is geared towards marketing agencies.  Then there are applications with broad functionality that can appeal to wide range of small businesses.  These include WorkEtc, Solve360, ZohoCRM and Zoho Project along with a host of others.

What came out of the evaluation I did for this client?  First, we choose Solve360 for their business and we’re implementing it now.  I also now have my eye on WorkEtc. for my next CRM, for when I outgrow Batchbook (which I love).

The price points and functionality vary and the list of companies here is far from exhaustive- it is worth getting some help evaluating these tools to determine which is right for your business.  In this article I talk about some of the success factors.  Get with your technical advisor to find out more.


Tips for Small Business CRM Success

Implementing a CRM (customer relationship management) system can be a huge undertaking for a small business. Done poorly it can create more work and inefficiencies for an already small staff. Done well it can revolutionize a business by improving workflow and make it easier to touch customers regularly and meaningfully.

I’ve written some other articles on CRM here and here so if you need a refresher pop over to those and pop back.

There is a lot of literature about CRM success and failure and frankly it would make any small business owner go screaming into the night – most stuff has been written for large businesses that have to implement CRM across huge sales teams, whole marketing departments and a 24×7 support staff.  Most of these articles have very little to offer a small business and what is meaningful is hard to find.  Today I’ll share my top tips:

  1. Make sure you understand your overall business goals.  What goals do you want a CRM application to support and what business issues are you trying to solve?
  2. Choose a technology that fits your business.  Price and features, though critically important, can’t be the only criteria.  Does the tool fit how your company works?  Is it a cultural fit – a free-flowing, unstructured application might fit a design firm better than one with strict linear processes.
  3. Before implementing the tool, define the processes that support the goals in the first bullet.  Don’t just dive face first into the deep end – take the time to figure out the new processes and to configure the tool for those processes.
  4. Figure out how and where the new tool will integrate with your other systems.  For example, if you want the contacts in the CRM to update in your accounting system, get that working.  Or if you want your sales folks to see aging data when they look at a contact, get that working too.
  5. As you are implementing the tool, be sure to promote the processes.  That is a nice way of saying “make folks use the process”.  I’m not saying to throw them into the pool (another pool metaphor – hey it is summer and it is hot) – they need help, support and training.  At the same time, don’t let them circumvent the new way of doing things.  You’ll only slow down adoption and perhaps create a culture of “we really don’t have to use this”.
  6. Finally, even though I am saying you should make folks use the new processes, make sure you allow time to revisit and revise the processes.  You won’t know everything when you start and it makes sense that you might have to make some tweaks.

Small businesses, from professional services to retail establishments to service organizations, can benefit from a well implemented CRM.  Take your time going through these steps.  In many cases it makes sense to get some help; find a technical advisor who can help lead you.

Have you implemented a CRM in the past year?  What went well and what went poorly?


How Small Businesses Can Educate Themselves on Technology

Thinking frog

Earlier this week there was an article on SmallBizTechnology.com about how the biggest problem small businesses have in using technology is lack of education.  I absolutely agree with the sentiment – who has time to learn about technology when they have a business to run?  In the article Ramon Ray recommended spending an hour or two a week learning about technology.  From there, however, he talked a lot about technology that boosts a businesses online presence – Facebook, blogging, Twitter and local search.  These are all important but there is so much more!

So what else should a small business owner educate themselves about?  There are so many topics that it can seem like a maze but if you take a look at this list you can concentrate on a few topics at a time:

  • How can you make things easier for your customer?  (easy online access to content and services)
  • How can you make things easier for your staff? (remote access, simple processes, collaboration tools)
  • How can you touch more prospects, close more sales and increase revenue? (CRM, email newsletters)
  • How can you streamline your internal processes and maybe save money? (better integration, fewer but more powerful systems, remote hosting, cloud services)
  • How can you get a better handle on your business? (reporting, analytics)

So here is a short round-up of good sources for technology information – these are examples but they should give you somewhere to start:

What technology topics would you like to know more about?  Where do you go to get your technical education?


Is your order-to-cash cycle too slow? And getting slower?


Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 2.0 Generic License by  Lynchburg College Archives

Invoice, Chas M Stieff Manufacturer of G by Lynchburg College Archives, on Flickr

In today’s installment of my series on small business growing plains I am going to talk about the order-to-cash cycle.  When a business is new it is easy to get so excited about the first sale that as soon as an order is received or a contract signed the business owner immediately sends out the associated invoice or statement.  Those simple documents are full of symbolism for the nascent concern – you are for real!  You have real customers and can bring in real money!  Woo hoo!

The Order-to-Cash Conundrum

As you get bigger and busier it is easy to put off creating those all-important documents that a)represent potential income to your company and b) signal your customer to pay you.  Maybe you don’t have time to create them more than once a week, or worse, once a month.  All of a sudden getting paid is taking longer and longer.  Even if you get administrative or bookkeeping help you’ll likely settle on a set schedule for billing, perhaps once a week, that doesn’t jive with when you actually sold the order or the contract.

When you get even bigger and busier it can get worse – let’s say now you have sales people to sell orders or contract work.  Or that you have field service technicians that have to do the work that in turn leads to an order.  These guys have paperwork to get filled out and they may not be in the office every day so it is easy for that paperwork to be delayed and then, when it is finally turned it, it may be incorrect and require a cycle of rework.  Now your invoices and statements are even MORE delayed.  Add that to the fact that your customers aren’t always in a hurry to pay you right away and you suddenly have a cash flow problem.

How can you avoid or rectify this ever-lengthening order-to-cash black hole?

Order or Contract Entry

There are a number of ways to improve the order or contract entry process :

  • Keep your sales customer information in sync with your accounting customer information.  This can make it quicker and easier to set up a new account for billing and make sure you apply the order or contract to the correct billing customer.  You can keep them in sync thru manual processes or by integrating your customer relationship management system with your accounting system.  Some applications integrate easily, others may require some help from a technical resource.
  • Provide mechanisms to allow your sales or field service folks to enter contracts or sales orders online.  This can be as simple as having them upload a spreadsheet to a specified place to as fancy as an application that they can access remotely, maybe even from a mobile device.  The quicker you can get the contract or order entered into your billing application the faster you can get invoices out.  Where possible cut out paper altogether; if it isn’t possible to go paperless try to change your process to match paper to online records on the back end.
  • Incent your sales and field service folks to enter their information online quickly and correctly.  Quite simply, if you can’t bill your customer maybe they shouldn’t get paid.  Hmm, just a thought.

Invoice Creation

  • Simplify invoice or statement creation.  Avoid “special” invoices for customers and make sure any invoice or statement can be easily produced from your accounting software.  If your accounting software doesn’t do this you might want to look for a system that does or look for a billing system that integrate with what you have.
  • If you can put invoice creation on “auto-pilot” where it runs on a regular schedule all on its own, do so.  If you can’t, adjust the back office processes to create invoices on a regular, frequent basis.  How regular and frequent?  It depends on your cash flow needs but daily, if it isn’t a complicated process, might not be too often.

It is easy for the order, contract and billing processes to get in the way of getting the customer a timely invoice.  Beyond prolonging the time until you get paid, what kind of message does a tardy invoice send your customer?  That you are unorganized?  That their business isn’t important?

If you think there are ways to improve your order-to-cash cycle, contact your technical advisor.  He or she can help you review your current processes and talk about where improvements, both manual and automated, might be in order.

If you thought this post was helpful you may want to check out the rest in this series so far.


What I Use For My Small Business – Evernote

A few months ago I wrote a post about a tool I use in my business – I use Batchbook as my CRM tool.  Today I want to talk about another tool I use on a regular basis.  This one is Evernote.  Essentially Evernote is like an electronic notebook and filing system all rolled into one.  Their tagline is “Remember Everthing” and that is exactly what this tool helps me do.

See an article online that interests you but you don’t have time to read it?  Cut the URL and paste it into Evernote.  Think about something while you are away from your computer?  Make a note on your smartphone.  Get an annoying error message on your computer that you want to include in your email to support?  Grab a screenshot and save it.  See a great billboard while you are driving around town?  Take a picture and file it in Evernote.

To me there are a number of really cool things about Evernote:

  • You can make notes on one device, say your computer and pull them up on another device, for example your smartphone or iPad.
  • There are many ways to make “notes” – text, pictures, screenshots, voice messages, etc.  You can choose whatever method works for you at any given time.
  • You can create “folders” to store your notes, just like in the paper world
  • You can also tag your notes in any way you want so you can search on topics across folders.

What do I do with Evernote?

  • I keep a log of all my blog posts, the URL and topics so I can easily find them and use the URLs for linking.
  • I also use it to keep ideas for future blog posts and newsletter articles.
  • I have folders on topics I am researching.  The folders have notes as well as saved URLs so I can find reference articles in a flash
  • I also use it for non-work stuff too – it is my new recipe/cookbook tool.  I read a lot of food blogs and cook a great deal and I use Evernote to keep track of the recipes and the URL where I found them.  I can use tags to identify what sort of dish it is, what part of the meal it would be applicable for, etc.

I have found this to be a great tool for my small business and it really helps me cut down on the amount of paper I shuffle.  Oh, and it is free!  Give it a try and let me know what you think!


How can a CRM (customer relationship management) system help my business?

Note:  this article was originally published last week in our newsletter.  If you’d like to receive the newsletter you can subscribe here.

CRM = business

Have you ever thought that you need a better way to keep track of your customers or clients? Have you heard about CRM systems but not really understood how they could help your business?

If you have a service-based business…

If your business provides a service then a CRM system can help you in several ways. First, it becomes the single repository for all of the information about your customers or prospects – you and all your employees are keeping notes about emails, phone calls, quotes, deals and everything else in the same place. In that place you can make ticklers to follow up with contacts, create reports on who is calling on who and keep an eye on your pipeline. In one place you have all the information about the work you’ve done for a customer, making customer support much easier. Having lunch with a prospect you haven’t seen in a while? In your CRM you can look up references to his website, LinkedIn profile or Twitter account – won’t he be surprised when you are up-to-date on his business and congratulate him on his recent wedding anniversary!

Or if you are in the retail or hospitality business…

You can keep track of your vendors and suppliers. Create and newsletter and keep track of subscribers. To that list of subscribers you can provide special offers and incentives – and better yet, measure the effectiveness of those offers and incentives. You can create a relationship with your customers and reward their loyalty.

Of course, a CRM system isn’t one thing for one sort of business and something else to another. All businesses can be more effective, efficient and even more profitable by doing a better job of keeping track of customers and contacts. It is a smarter way to do business.


Cloud Computing Made Sock Puppet Simple

It appears that a) a lot of small business owners don’t know what “cloud computing” is and b) regardless of whether they know or don’t know they are wary of it. In this post I will clearly and simply explain what it is and hopefully clear up some of the myths and misunderstandings about cloud computing.

Wikipedia defines cloud computing as “cloud computing” is Internet- (“cloud-”) based development and use of computer technology (computing)”. Clear as mud, huh? This is simplest way I can think of to explain what cloud computing is: if you are doing something without installing hardware on your computer or a computer on your local network, you are involved with cloud computing. A great example is email – if you use Gmail, Hotmail, AOL mail, Yahoo mail or anything similar you are using cloud computing. You are using computers and programs that live in the cloud we call the Internet.  Facebook, Youtube, Flickr, Twitter – yep, all in the cloud.

But what does this have to do with business, especially small business?    Essentially it means that as a small business owner you have lots of opportunities to choose whether to buy software (and likely hardware) or choose a vendor to supply services virtually over the Internet.

What are some concrete examples?  What about (lists not inclusive):

  • file storage and sharing.  You can buy and install  file server and connect it to your network or use a cloud-based solution like Egnyte, Dropbox, Google Docs or Box.net
  • email.  Too many examples to mention, starting with our friends at Google.
  • accounting.  Good old friends Quickbooks can be run online as well as newcomers like Freshbooks
  • CRM.  Salesforce.com is a pioneer of cloud computing; other entrants to the fray include Batchbook (I talk about them here), SugarCRM, Zoho and Highrise
  • Word processing and spreadsheets.  In this post I talk about Google Docs, Zoho and the like
  • Document Management.
  • Reporting and analytics.
  • and the list goes on and on.

What are the pros and cons of using cloud computing?

  1. It can be fast and inexpensive to get started.  Whether you have a new business or an existing business, using a cloud-based solution can dramatically cut down the time to get up and running and reduce your initial capital outlay.  If your business needs change rapidly, using cloud-based solutions allows you to add features quickly or even move to another solution more easily.  On the flipside, as your business grows you may find that the capital outlay of in-house applications is less expensive than ongoing costs of a cloud application.  You should always read the fine print and make sure that you can easily retrieve your data and move it to another provider should you outgrow your first choice or if you are unhappy with the service you are getting.
  2. Your systems and data are easily accessible.  Wow, this is a big one; think about it, you can access your data from anywhere, anytime.   Using the business center in the hotel where you are vacationing and want to check your Quickbooks?  No problem!  Your salesperson drops their pc in the lake?  Don’t worry, their contact information is safe in the CRM system in the sky.  Cloud-based applications support virtual offices and working from home “out of the box” so to speak.  Downside?  You only have access to your applications and data thru the Internet.  No Internet access?  Internet down?  Have a slow internet connection?  All of these can affect, in some cases dramatically, your access to your business information.  As a business owner you have to weigh the risks of not having access to the costs of controlling your own access (and remember, if you don’t have electricity you are likely SOL anyway).
  3. Your information may not be secure.  On one hand, it may not be secure in your office either.  Is it backed up regularly and is that backup in an offsite location?  Is it on a computer or server that is secured properly on the Internet?  Is it physically secure from theft, natural disaster, etc?  Many small business owners don’t pay attention to these factors, making their systems and data LESS secure in their own office than it would be anywhere else.  Most of the companies that provide cloud-based services have shelled out a lot of dough to make sure their systems are secure, safe and stay up.  That said, not all of them do it the same way or in the same degree.  As a small business owner you should sit down and assess the level of risk you are willing to take and with which kinds of data.  Then, as you look into cloud-based applications, make sure you understand each suppliers security precautions and service level agreements.
  4. You can concentrate on your business, something you are probably pretty good at.  You can leave the care and feeding of computers and systems to the highly trained and compensated personnel that work for the service providers.  It can be distracting and expensive to maintain technology; most small businesses are better off spending their energy and money somewhere else.

Bottom line? My take is that most of the cloud-based applications are good, safe and secure and are getting more so every day.  While you should certainly thoughtfully assess your individual needs, especially where accessibility and security are concerned, I believe small businesses should seriously consider cloud-computing for many of their needs.  Determining where it makes sense and how to transition your applications should be part of your technology plan.

How do YOU feel about the cloud?

Photo attribution:  http://www.flickr.com/photos/8769295@N07/ / CC BY 2.0


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