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> Get Articles > Time Management > Saying No To Good Opportunities

Saying No To Good Opportunities


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Kimberly Stevens
kimaskthebizcoach.com

Ask The Biz Coach
http://www.askthebizcoach.com


Tracey started her video production company 2 ½ years ago,

and after struggling through the start-up phase, she was finally

reaping the fruits of her labor. When we talked, it was clear

that she was ready to move onward and upward but didn’t

know how to go about doing it.



“I am so busy these days, but I’m still not getting the level of

work I want,” Tracey told me. “I really want to get in with

some bigger companies, but I’m always scrambling to get

my current projects done.”



“When I first started my business, I just wanted to get some

clients, any clients. Now, I have people calling me up to do

jobs for them, but those aren’t the jobs I want anymore. I

mean, I need them, but I also want to start doing bigger

projects for bigger clients.”



“All the people calling me are small business owners I’ve

met at the networking meetings I attend. I know we talked

before about the fact that I’m not going to meet the reps

from the big companies there, so I need to develop a

different marketing strategy to reach them, but I just don’t

have the time. I keep thinking I’ll reach a point where I’ve

got things under control, so I can start pursuing the bigger

guys, but I never get there.”



It was clear that Tracey was exhausted from going through

the same cycle over and over again, so I thought I would

give her brain a reprieve by taking her back in time. “Do

you remember when you told me about that guy that you

met at a networking meeting last year? He was hounding

you about making him a video, but you really didn’t see

the opportunity there. He didn’t seem to have any money

budgeted for it and didn’t have a clear concept of why he

needed it and what he would use it for. You just didn’t feel

like he was a good prospect, so you told him that you were

too busy to take on his project.”



“Yeah, what about him?”



“Well, there was a time when you would have seen him as

a viable prospect. You would have set up a meeting, spent

a few hours going to/from the meeting, spent a few more

writing up a proposal, placed numerous follow-up calls

only to learn that there was ultimately no chance of

getting a dime from this guy. Over time, you learned to

qualify prospects, so you didn’t waste your time. By the time

you met that guy, you already knew how to spot a bad

opportunity and had developed the ability to say “no” to

them.



“He was easy to turn down. He just didn’t have a clue. There

was no way he would have ever turned into a paying client,

so it wasn’t hard at all to tell him that I couldn’t help him out.

But, I’m not talking about people like that. The people

calling me are good prospects, but the projects they need

me to do are just small. I just want to start getting some

bigger projects too.”



“Well, you say you’ve been trying to get around to marketing

to bigger companies for the past eight months, right? But yet,

you continue to go round-and-round hoping that you’ll

suddenly find the perfect moment to work on your marketing

strategy to reach the bigger companies. It hasn’t happened

yet so, just for a moment, let’s assume that this cycle will

continue indefinitely. What do you think it will take to break

it?” I asked her.



“I don’t know. I keep waiting for the right time when things

slow down, so I guess the cycle will end when things slow down

enough for me to think about it. I was hoping the summer

would give me a break, but it didn’t. Maybe the holidays?”



Tracey was doing what a lot of us have done at some time

or another. She was letting her business run her instead of her

running it. So, the summer didn’t break the cycle and the

holidays won’t break the cycle. SHE needed to break the

cycle.



What I asked her to do is to start to distinguish between good

opportunities and great ones. She’d learned awhile back how

to say “no” to bad opportunities. What she needed to learn

to do now is how to say “no” to good opportunities, so she

could say “yes” to the great ones.



Most of her incoming phone calls were good opportunities,

but the great ones were ones that she would need to put

effort into pursuing. There was an opportunity lost during the

eight months she filled with small projects. She lost the

opportunity to be making contacts at the bigger companies,

to be doing jobs for the bigger companies, and to be adding

higher level projects to her portfolio.



Over the next month, we assessed the reasons behind why

she was letting her business run her. Was she ready for the

transition or was she rushing it? Maybe she really wanted to

just stick with doing what she knew she could do well. Bigger

clients could potentially require her to do things she didn’t

have experience doing yet. Is that scary, I asked her.



It also takes a different approach to reach and pitch bigger

clients. Was she uncertain about what marketing methods

to use to reach them? Or did she know that cold-calling was

the best way to reach her target market but didn’t want to

have to make the calls? Or maybe she was afraid of meeting

with some big executive of a multi-million dollar company.



After working through some of the potential blocks, Tracey

laid out a plan for marketing to the big companies in her area.

She contracted an assistant to make the preliminary phone

calls to qualify prospects and set up meetings. Once the

meetings were set, Tracey felt fully confident in presenting

her services to the decision-makers. Within 2 ½ months, she

had two new “bigger” clients and was outsourcing some of

the smaller jobs to colleagues she had met through her

networking meetings.



Take a note from Tracey -- learn to say NO to good

opportunities, so you can say YES to the great ones!



Are you saying “yes” when you should say “no”? Here’s

how to find out. Ask yourself the following questions:



* What is your vision for your business?

* What is missing where you are now?

* What needs to happen in order for your vision to become a

reality?



The process to follow is to:

1. develop a crystal clear vision of what you want your life

to look like

2. use your life vision to create the vision of what you want

in your business

3. make a list of what actions you need to take in order to

go from where you are now to where you want to be

4. take consistent actions toward your vision

5. evaluate every new opportunity to determine if it moves

you closer to your vision



It’s a BAD opportunity if:

* you don’t feel good about the work you’d have to do

* you wouldn’t be paid fairly

* you don’t like the people you’d have to work with



It’s a GOOD opportunity if it:

* gives you good experience but pays poorly

* pays well but doesn’t fit with your vision

* you’d enjoy the type of work and pay but not the

people you’d work with or place you’d do the work



It’s a GREAT opportunity if:

* you love the work you’re doing

* get paid well for what you do

* feel inspired and invigorated by the people you’d

work with and the place you’d do the work





Happy Opportunity Hunting!



~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~



Kimberly Stevens is a Business Life Coach and creator of the

FastTrack MBO (Mastering Business Ownership) Program.

She supports business owners and entrepreneurs in their pursuit

of a fulfilling life and profitable business by offering individual

and group coaching, ebooks, teleclasses, and live workshops.

To learn more about creating a richly rewarding life as a

business owner, visit www.askthebizcoach.com or send a blank

email to mailto:kim4-20129autocontactor.com for an automatic reply.





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