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Article Title:
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When Your Business Gets Beyond 'start-Up'

Article Description:
====================

As surprising as it is inevitable, your business will eventually
find itself beyond the 'start-up' phase. You'll have gotten
the knack of marketing, creating offers and products, and you'll
have a steady flow of customers and clients and cash. And more.
And more.  


Additional Article Information:
===============================

923 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2007-07-16 11:48:00

Written By:     Mark Silver
Copyright:      2007
Contact Email:  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]



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When Your Business Gets Beyond 'start-Up'
Copyright (c) 2007 Mark Silver
Heart Of Business
http://www.heartofbusiness.com/



As surprising as it is inevitable, your business will eventually
find itself beyond the 'start-up' phase. You'll have gotten
the knack of marketing, creating offers and products, and you'll
have a steady flow of customers and clients and cash. And more.
And more. And the momentum beings to build on itself. You used to
be able to make leisurely, thoughtful replies to every email and
every phone call. And now you're a week behind your inbox, and
that little blinking message light on your phone has been there
since... yesterday? the day before? And you still haven't
listened to it. Congratulations, my friend, and welcome to
success.

Your business has never been more at risk.

You'd be surprised at how long a business can limp along. I've
been a part of organizations, and watched other businesses that
have skated perilously close to the danger zone for years,
decades even. And then, for some reason, the business has a
breakthrough and starts to experience success. And one to two
years later, the business is gone. What happened?

Success requires teamwork.

If your business is ever going to expand beyond 'limping along'
you will need the support and efforts of others. You will. No,
stop arguing with me, it's just true. ;-) There's just too much
to do. One of my clients asked me recently: "Wow, Mark. I've
watched your business grow so much over the last few years. I'm
amazed- just getting my own business going this past year has
taken so much. I'm imagining you have so much more to do - how
do you do it all?" The answer? I don't. I can't do it all.
Heart of Business would be a pipsqueak of a business without the
efforts of at least eight other people that I can count off the
top of my head. No, we don't have eight full-time employees.
But, we do hire out quite a bit of help, including:

 * Bookkeeping

 * Web design

 * Audio transcription

 * Admin tasks

 * Newsletter formatting

 * Article distribution

 * Packaging and shipping

 * Accounting

Sounds nice, doesn't it? And obvious. When your business starts
to get

going, of course you want help. Except that "nice" doesn't
cover it. "Intimidating" is more like it. And, if you have a
heart, how can you want to become a hard-driving, whip-wielding
boss? And, would anyone actually want to help you?  Besides, if
you had an honest-to-God live employee or contractor standing in
front of you, what would you do with them? How does it work?

First Step: Admitting you are powerless over your business.

Alcoholics Anonymous had a great insight here: the first thing
you need to admit is that you can't do it yourself. That your
business has become unmanageable with just you, and that you need
help. Period. That's the first step. If you can come to accept
that step, truly and deeply, you will be amazed at how different
your business will look to you. And, how much mercy and
compassion and lightness you can feel in your heart when you
realize that you aren't a screw-up, there's just more here than
you can honestly handle alone. If you've gotten this far,
you've traveled further than most people in your position.
You're now ready to step into actually seeing some help come
through. How? Keep going.

Keys to Beginning to Outsource.

 * Start with a small project. Pick one project that is important
enough that you need help, but not so important that your
business will crumble into little bitty pieces if it doesn't
come through. Yes, I know that everything in your business looks
like that, but some things are less important. Take some time in
your heart to ask: What *can* be outsourced?

 * Start with a Virtual Assistant. A virtual assistant is someone
who does admin and business support work for your business, but
they have their own business doing it for more than one client.
Advantages are that you are part boss, and part client. A good VA
will help teach you how to direct them, and so it's great
on-the-job training for learning how to direct others to help
you. Even more, you are a client of theirs, so they will (oughta)
treat you really well.

 * Be the student master. You may have become an expert at your
business, but you're probably feeling like a novice as a boss or
employer. Another hard transition is going from a place of
mastery in one moment, to 'beginner's mind' in the next. This
is what I said to the first assistant I ever hired: "I've done
management before, and I've been managed before, and neither
worked very well. I want to tell you directly that I need help.
But, I don't know how to be a good boss. I need you to help me
direct you."

Make sure you allow for the learning curve as you take your
project to a new assistant. Don't expect instant, amazing
results. This is a new skill and relationship to have with your
business, give yourself a good six months to a year to step into
it more and more. Although hiring and outsourcing can be bumpy at
first, once you do it, you'll never go back. And neither will
your business. As one of my clients told me: "I was nervous as
heck, but the year I finally starting hiring and outsourcing, my
business doubled. And I've never looked back." Okay, boss, you
tell me: when are you going to start outsourcing?

The best to you and your business,

Mark Silver




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Mark Silver is the author of Unveiling the Heart of Your 
Business: How Money, Marketing and Sales can Deepen Your 
Heart, Heal the World, and Still Add to Your Bottom Line. 
He has helped hundreds of small business owners around 
the globe succeed in business without losing their 
hearts. Get three free chapters of the book online: 
http://www.heartofbusiness.com



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