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Starting a small business is hard work. Joseph Callaway has been there, and he shares twelve unexpected tacticsā€”all centered on putting clients firstā€”that will help your company to succeed.

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The Bootstrapperā€™s Dirty Dozen: 

Twelve Not-So-Obvious Tips to Help Small Business Owners Prosper

So, youā€™re building a small business from the ground up, with only the proverbial wing and prayer to keep you aloft. What are you most intensely focused on? If your response is ā€œstretching my shoestring budget,ā€ ā€œestablishing processes that work,ā€ or (the biggie) ā€œmaking money,ā€ youā€™re not alone. But according to Joseph Callaway, all of those answers are wrong. Anything that takes your focus off the customer, he says, puts your fledgling business in harmā€™s way.
 

ā€œWhatever industry youā€™re in, success boils down to this: attracting enough customers, and keeping them coming backā€”with interest!ā€ says Callaway, who, along with his wife, JoAnn, is the author of the new book Clients First: The Two Word Miracle. ā€œWhen youā€™re growing a small business, you canā€™t afford to disappoint customers, or even offer them a good-enough experience. You have to ā€˜wowā€™ them every time, which means giving them the first fruits of your time, energy, creativity, and focus.  ā€œAnd hereā€™s the payoff,ā€ he adds. ā€œWhen you succeed in putting your clients first, you will find that everything elseā€”growth, a positive reputation, and financial securityā€”all fall into place.ā€


Callaway speaks from experience. He and his wife built their thriving businessā€”Those Callawaysā€”in a tough industry thatā€™s had more than its share of challenges. To date, theyā€™ve sold over a billion dollarsā€™ worth of homes. Their book describes their late-in-life entry into the world of real estate, how they had their ā€œClients Firstā€ revelation, and how it has impacted their professional and personal lives. It also gives readers step-by-step advice on how to put their own customers first, as well as why each one works. ā€œLiving and working this way is not easy,ā€ Callaway admits. ā€œPutting your customersā€™ interests ahead of your ownā€”every timeā€”will seem counterintuitive, risky, and sometimes even frightening, especially at first. Eventually, though, keeping your commitment to Clients First will start to feel more natural. And by that point, the benefits, rewards, satisfaction, and success will be rolling inā€”and youā€™ll be proud of the person and professional youā€™ve become.ā€


Here, Callaway shares a ā€œdirty dozenā€ tips that might not be obviousā€¦but that will help you to put clients (and competitors, and employees!) first so that your small business can grow and prosper:


Change your thinking about why you exist. If you go into work thinking, How do I make money? youā€™re already off on the wrong foot. As Callaway has pointed out, what you need to be thinking is, How do I serve others? Callaway admits that taking your focus away from the bottom line may feel uncomfortable at first. Yet, ironically, it changes everything for the better.ā€œConsciously putting your own best interests in second place goes against the grain of human nature,ā€ admits Callaway. ā€œBut you will find that when you focus on how best to serve clients, tough decisions make themselves. If it serves the client, you do it. If it doesnā€™t, you donā€™t. This neutralizes moral dilemmas and really simplifies your life. And it almost always has a miracle effect on your growth and success.ā€


Take your business personally. Never let the words ā€œitā€™s just businessā€ cross your mind (and certainly not your lips). This old standby phrase is simply not true, especially to a client who feels as though he has been belittled, treated coldly, pushed away, or used. Remember, to truly serve, you have to care. When you keep yourself at armā€™s length, you canā€™t give your clients 100 percentā€¦and you give them an incentive to take their business elsewhere.
ā€œDo you see your clients as sources of income, or do you see them as actual human beings with likes, preferences, quirks, and stories?ā€ Callaway asks. ā€œPeople want to do business with individuals they likeā€”and they like people who like them! Make a deeper connection with your clients by asking about their kids, their pets, their hobbies, and their jobs or businesses. Youā€™ll find that most of them are just like you: filled with worries, hopes, and dreams. Once you get familiar with and invested in these things, youā€™ll work that much harder on each clientā€™s behalf, and youā€™ll earn their loyalty in the process.ā€
Little things matter more than you think. Especially when youā€™re trying to get a small business off the ground, itā€™s easy to get caught up in pursuing the ā€œbigā€ goals: growing your company, expanding your client base, hiring more employees, and making a profit, for example. But donā€™t become so fixated on the forest that you fail to see the trees. In other words, stop being so distracted by the ā€œbig grand ideasā€ and start getting the small details right. Promises kept, deadlines met, little extra flourishes, and small acts of kindness add up to happy clients. ā€œThis principle definitely includes the simple act of communication,ā€ Callaway comments. ā€œOne of the things we do with clients in escrow is to call or email them every day, even if nothing is happening. This simple message of ā€˜nothing happening, wanted you to know,ā€™ is a huge stress reliever and an even bigger business builder.ā€


Hard times donā€™t justify stinginess. Weā€™ve all heard the expression ā€œThe more you give, the more you get.ā€ And you may be willing to put it into practice when it comes to giving your clients things like honesty, competence, and care. But if you give away your expertise, time, energy, and (gasp!) money, wonā€™t you just go broke? Not necessarily, says Callaway. It may take time, but whatever you give will usually come back to you with interest.
ā€œI remember being very apprehensive about donating a large sum of money to build a Habitat for Humanity house as a Christmas gift for our clients. I thought Iā€™d never see that money again. But in the years since, Iā€™ve learned that new clients chose usā€”and even that a bank gave us all of their foreclosures to sellā€”because they had learned of that donation. Now, you might not always give and get on such a large scale. But the principle works for all amounts of money, and it also works when youā€™re giving over-and-beyond service.ā€


Donā€™t lieā€”even if it makes you look better, makes you rich, or keeps a client from walking. Sometimes, itā€™s tempting to tell white lies, exaggerate, misdirect, omit, and cut corners to make life easier. Generally, itā€™s also easy to justify these things to yourself (Sheā€™ll never know, and itā€™ll save me hours of work, for example). But when it comes to putting clients first, Callaway says, these ā€œlittleā€ lies are just as bad as the whoppers. Yes, honesty can be tough in the moment, but in the long run youā€™ll gain a reputation for trustworthiness that will change your life. ā€œTrust the truth,ā€ Callaway instructs. ā€œWhen you cultivate a reputation for rock-solid honestyā€”for laying out all your cards even when it doesnā€™t benefit you, for telling the whole truth, for never holding back or sugarcoatingā€”youā€™ll gain customer loyalty that money canā€™t buy. Clients will trust, respect, and refer you, and your own life will become easier. When you have only the truth, you wave goodbye to moral dilemmas and sleepless nights. You donā€™t have to worry about getting the story straight or remembering what you have and havenā€™t shared. You know youā€™re doing the right thing.ā€


Be honest with yourself, too. As Callaway has already established, you should never lie to a client (or to anyone else). But honesty shouldnā€™t stop there. Ask yourself, Am I lying to myself about where my priorities lie and how others perceive me? Try to see your business as your clients and customers see you. Are you putting them firstā€”or putting yourself first?ā€œSmall businesses start off with the best intentions and with a clear picture of what the customer wants,ā€ Callaway acknowledges. ā€œBut soon, most of them drift off the path. Little by little, they start making it all about them and their growth, and poof! No more ā€˜Clients Firstā€™ā€¦and no more of the benefits living by this philosophy brings.ā€


Treat employees at least as well as you treat your clients. While (of course) you donā€™t treat your employees like dirt, you may feel that you donā€™t owe them any special favors, either. After all, youā€™re paying themā€”isnā€™t that enough? Well, no. Whether you realize it or not, the way your people treat customers reflects the way you treat them. Are you courteous? Kind? Polite? Enthusiastic? Do you listen when they talk to you and try to accommodate their needs? Or are you short, perfunctory, and even (sometimes) rude?ā€œYour job is to serve others, period,ā€ Callaway says. ā€œYou canā€™t do that by making distinctions between the people who work for you and the people to whom you provide a good or service. Realize that you set the tone for your companyā€™s ā€˜personality,ā€™ and that youā€™re creating a tribe of people who will beat the drum for your message. Going at it alone is too exhausting!ā€


Make sure your highest praise comes from your competitors. Yes, you read that correctly. You canā€”and shouldā€”strive to win the approval, goodwill, and admiration of your competitors. If possible, get to know their leaders and employees, and help them when you can. You donā€™t have to give away trade secrets, but you can offer advice, for example, or refer a customer whose needs are better matched to what another business has to offer. Donā€™t do these things manipulatively, but in the spirit of givingā€”your efforts will come back to you with interest. Have faith that there is enough business to go around. ā€œEvery Christmas, JoAnn sends personalized ornaments not only to our clients but also to the thousands of agents with whom we have done a cross-sale,ā€ Callaway shares. ā€œWe get incredible responses from them. Last month Brian Choate, who works for a competitor firm, went so far as to video a ā€˜mini book reviewā€™ for Clients First in which he shared how much these ornaments mean to him. Trust me, the respect of your peers and especially your competitors is priceless. If you have little contact with them, now is the time to change that. Go to industry conferences. Join associations. Remember, itā€™s a big world but a small communityā€¦so make your mark in a positive, memorable way.ā€


Look for chances to do something fun and special. Itā€™s true: All work and no play make Jack a dull boy. However, injecting a little lightheartedness and creativity into your business gives your customers something to look forward to and provides them with a memorable reason to stay engaged and loyal. Whether you give free popcorn to moviegoers, throw an outdoor tent party to celebrate each yearā€™s new product line, or give a gorgeous framed print to your interior design clients, you make clients feel special. ā€œThese special touches will keep clients coming back,ā€ Callaway promises. ā€œEvery Christmas we send personalized ornaments to our clients and other business associates. We put a lot of effort (and money!) into this yearly treat and people love it. It sets us apart, and our investments always come back to us with interest!ā€


If you arenā€™t driven to be ā€œnumber oneā€ with your clients, you might as well close your doors. Many business owners will admit that they just want ā€œto do a good jobā€ or ā€œmake a living.ā€ This isnā€™t good enough, says Callaway. Especially if your business is smaller and less established, being the customerā€™s second choice (or third or fourth or fifth) means youā€™re on the road to eventual failure. Why? When times get toughā€”or when a new flavor-of-the-month company shows upā€”customers will have no qualms about abandoning a company they donā€™t love above all others. Talk about a compelling reason to never (ever!) accept mediocrity. (Not to mention the fact that, by definition, you canā€™t take the best care of clients when youā€™re content with being good-enough.) ā€œHowever, donā€™t make the mistake of thinking that being number one is about competing with other businesses,ā€ Callaway cautions. ā€œIf your focus is on competing, then it isnā€™t on the customer. Instead, think of yourself as being in a contest to fulfill each clientā€™s dreamsā€¦and youā€™ll automatically be competitive with other companies! Also, donā€™t buy into the belief that you have to win over a client only once. You must do so every single day. A good experience last month usually wonā€™t be enough to keep a customer coming back this month if he or she believes that your level of service has slipped.ā€


Never, ever fire a tough client. When a client is needy, moody, picky, overly emotional, combative, or something else, itā€™s tempting to write him or her off. And if you canā€™t wave goodbye in reality (after all, most small business owners need to get paid!), you do it mentally and merely go through the motions of serving the client. Thatā€™s a mistake. If you arenā€™t meeting a clientā€™s needs, itā€™s their job to fire youā€¦not the other way around.
ā€œClients First means all clients,ā€ Callaway insists. ā€œIn over fourteen years, my wife and I have never gotten rid of a single clientā€”even when we secretly wished we couldā€”and we believe this no-fire strategy has contributed significantly to our ultimate success. Hereā€™s the payoff: When you make the choice to stand by all of your frazzled, frustrated customers, you will eventually reap financial and personal rewards. You may become known in your company or industry as the guy or gal who can handle the toughest customers. And chances are, your clients themselves will be grateful that you didnā€™t give up on them and may even send others your way.ā€ A ā€œClients Lastā€ attitude leaves a long legacy. By now, Callaway has established that having a Clients First attitude can benefit you and your small business in numerous ways. Heā€™s also adamant that the opposite attitude can have just as tremendous of an impactā€¦a negative one. Never, ever underestimate the damage that putting your clients last (taking them for granted, not listening to their concerns, patronizing them, putting your own interests first, etc.) can do, and how far it can spread.
ā€œA fellow real estate agent shared this story with us,ā€ Callaway recounts. ā€œWhen he was growing up in Buffalo, NY, every time his family drove past a local department store his father would never miss the opportunity to say, ā€˜I donā€™t go there.ā€™ As our friend grew up and drove by that same store with his teenaged friends, he found himself saying, ā€˜I donā€™t go there.ā€™ This agent never knew how the store had slighted his father, but regardless, he continued the tradition generationally. This is the damage ā€˜Clients Lastā€™ can wreak.ā€


ā€œNo matter what industry youā€™re in, and no mater what good or service your small business provides, these twelve tactics will help with the task of bootstrapping your company,ā€ Callaway concludes. ā€œEven if putting clients firstā€”no matter whatā€”seems counterintuitive at first, give this way of doing businessā€”and living lifeā€”a chance. If you take care of your customers, they will take care of you.ā€

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Joseph Callaway and JoAnn Callaway are coauthors of the New York Times bestseller Clients First: The Two Word Miracle and founders of the real estate company Those Callaways. JoAnn sold more than four thousand homes totaling in excess of a billion dollars. She accomplished this in her first ten years selling real estate and she did it one client at a time. She is proud to be a REALTORĀ® and believes her fellow agents share her heart for helping others. She loves flowers, art, books, and Joseph. JoAnn lives in Scottsdale, Arizona, and wishes it had a beach.
Joseph is the author of countless advertisements, newspaper pages, magazine layouts, fliers, blog posts, manuals, property profiles, and thousands of real estate contracts. He surfed Dana Point, California, before the Army Corps of Engineers built the breakwater and he loves JoAnn very much.
To learn more, visit www.clientsfirstbook.com.

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