BUSINESS WHIRLPOOLS
Rolling River, trickling stream, tsunami. All of these could describe business. What about a whirlpool? Sometimes the business model that you are using can create a circular pattern. In other words, the same clients, same patterns and same techniques create the pooling effect. On the inside of this pool there seems to be activity, motion, movement and speed. But on the outside looking in you discover that there lacks perpetual forward motion. If the pool is big enough you might miss going in a circle but eventually all activity moves into the center where the water is stagnate. Center is where business ends up if you do not redirect the flow of marketing, resources and time. A whirlpool is self-contained and if you lack the initiative to move away from the comforting flow another business will absorb the water around you watching you die out. Are you floating or swimming? To find out ask these simple questions:1. Am I adding value to my clients this year more than last year?2. Is my staff getting better?3. What new technology can I implement to cut costs, increase productivity, and decrease mistakes?4. Should I eliminate an area of my business that is not profitable?5. Have I added new clients in the last week from a new referral source?6. What are my 6 month goals for business activity?7. Should I replace myself with a manager, technician or chief operating officer?8. Am I doing what I love?AH

Cris on 07 Apr 2008 at 3:05 pm #
Great post, thats an interesting way of looking at business. http://www.411bringsdeals.com
Mike on 07 Apr 2008 at 8:34 pm #
Good way of looking at it, I feel the whirlpool big time, especially when things arent going your way, its easy to pull everyone and everything in there with you