Some Steps To Plan For Profits

May 2nd, 2011 by admin No comments »

Some Steps To Plan For Profits photoStep #1 Get Ready To Say Goodbye Before You Say Hello

Assuming you are intending to make a profit from your membership site, an exit plan will be an integral part of your business plan right from the beginning. Every step you take to develop your business will take you a little closer to selling your membership site. There are three elements that make up your exit plan;

1.  Timescale for exit.

2. Exit option. For most membership sites this will be a simple trade sale. For offline businesses, other options may be a family succession or a sole trader merger, but these are not common with online businesses.

3.  The identification of potential obstacles to selling your site and how you intend to deal with these.

Step #2 Preparing to sell your membership site, successfully.

Before you put your site on the market, it is worth spending some time drawing up a detailed memorandum of sale. This may take some time and effort, but it prepares you for the selling process and answers many of the questions your potential buyers are going to ask. Here are some of the elements that you might include in your memorandum of sale:

  • Business description
  • What is included
  • Requirements for business
  • Breakdown of profits
  • Asking price
  • Statistics

It may be difficult to consider selling your site before it’s even begun but consider this. YouTube was launched in 2005, and within two years was bought by Google for an alleged $1.65 billion. I bet they had an exit plan in place!

Knowledge Worker Relationship Management

April 30th, 2011 by admin No comments »

Knowledge Worker Relationship Management photoKnowledge workers bring certain competencies—combinations of skills, knowledge, and attitudes—to the corporation in exchange for pay, benefits, recognition, a sense of contributing to something greater than themselves, an increased sense of self-worth, the opportunity to work with and learn from others, and, in many knowledge organizations, formal educational opportunities. Within the constraints imposed on hiring and firing practices by unions and the government, companies are free to manage the relationships with their knowledge workers.

For example, in boom times, it’s a simple matter to attract and hire the best talent that money and, more important, stock options can buy. In leaner times, when downsizing is necessary, the challenge is developing and growing the best knowledge workers—those who can contribute most to the value of the organization—to maintain competitiveness and to have resources available when the economy rebounds.

Successful companies actively manage their knowledge workers in good times and more challenging times as if those workers were customers. They practice employee relationship management (ERM), a process though which knowledge workers who demonstrably add significant value to the company by contributing more value than the company is investing in them are enticed to stay and contribute their skills and knowledge in exchange for compensation. In a knowledge organization, ERM, which applies customer relations management (CRM) techniques to the knowledge worker-company relationship is defined as a dynamic process of managing the relationship between knowledge workers and the corporation such that knowledge workers elect to continue a mutually beneficial exchange of intellectual assets for compensation in a way that provides maximum value to the corporation and they are dissuaded from participating in activities that are unprofitable to the corporation.