By: Michael Gerber
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When you become an entrepreneur, there are many predictable frustrations you'll run into:
And the list goes on. Finding your way out of those predictable problems is difficult, if not impossible, without a system that predictably produces the opposite of those issues.
That's where The E-Myth and the Entrepreneurial Model it promotes comes in. According to Michael Gerber, the solution involves thinking about your business like a franchise - which is a proprietary way of doing business that successfully differentiates every extraordinary business from their competitors.
This is the classic "work on your business rather than in it" advice you'll hear repeated by business gurus. The difference is that Gerber has created step-by-step instructions on how you should get there.
Through this book and summary, you'll find the answer to the following questions:
Here are the rules you'll need to follow in order to get your business running like a franchise that produces predictable results:
There are 7 distinct steps to get there, which we'll cover in turn.
Every entrepreneur starts a business for themselves. But we often get so tied up in the business that we forget that the ultimate aim of the business is to serve ourselves.
Here are the questions you need to answer with 100% clarity if you want your business to serve you, and not the other way around.
Your Strategic Objective is a clear statement of what your business ultimately has to do in order to achieve your Primary Aim.
It's a list of standards you can use to measure your progress towards hyour ultimate goal.
There are many standards you could include, but Gerber suggests that the first two on the list should be as follows.
First, you need to be clear on how much money your company will make when it is ultimately "done." Will it be a $1 million a year company? A $500 million a year company? Something else? How much after-tax profit will it make? That's the money you are going to use to build the life that you want through your Primary Aim.
Second, you need to build a business that can fulfill the financial standards you've set with the first standards. It tells you what kind of business you are creating and defines who your customer will be.
From there, there are no specific number of standards that need to be created. But it will help if you answer some of the following questions:
The standards that you create for your business will ultimately become the business you strive to create. Many entrepreneurs skip this step when they start, and never climb their way out of day-to-day operations of their business.
Gerber reminds us that most companies organize themselves around personalities rather than around functions. And the result, he suggests, is almost always chaos.
The next logical step in building your business prototype is to determine the exact organizational structure you'll need in order to execute on your strategic objective.
Here's how you'll do it.
Build an organizational chart for what your business will ultimately look like. For instance, you might need a CEO (which may or may not be you), a COO, a VP of Sales, account managers, and so on.
Put your name in all of the positions that you currently fill. When you are starting out, this will likely be all of them.
Create very detailed descriptions of each one of the positions, which Gerber calls Position Contracts. This is a summary of the results that need to be achieved by each position in the company, the work the person is responsible for, a list of standards that the results are to be evaluated against, and a line for the signature of the person who agrees to fulfil those responsibilities.
Sign your name to each of the contracts you currently fill.
The insight here is that you should create the system inside your business based on the standards you want to set, rather than letting other people do it for you.
In order to free yourself up to work on the strategic parts of the business, you need to rest easy knowing that the tactical parts of the business are being taken care of.
For instance, you don't place an ad for a salesperson until you've created the Sales Operations Manual for the company.
Once you've created the position contracts for each of the roles in the company, you'll know exactly which standards you need to be hiring against.
Now that you have your organizational strategy created, you can move on to your management strategy.
Gerber suggests that our management strategy is the system we create for the business. It shouldn't and can't rely on expensive and talented people. The more automatic and specific your system is, the more effective it will be.
At its core, it is a series of checklists for everything that needs to be done inside the business.
For example, a hotel would have a series of checklists for the people who clean the rooms. And another series of checklists for the people responsible for checking guests in. And so on.
Finally, you should have a mechanism built into your system for following up on making sure that the work in the checklists is done properly.
For instance, you could have your people sign a checklist at the end of each job letting the company know that the work had been completed based on the steps required. And then make it a fireable offence for signing off on work that hadn't been completed.
The benefits of a system like this are clear. You'll be able to hire and train new people so that they'll quickly be performing the tasks and producing identical results to people who have been doing them for a long time.
At the heart of your people strategy is creating an environment where "doing it" is more important to them than not doing it.
One of the key parts to making this happen is to ensure that the people you hire understand the reason behind the work they are being asked to do.
As Gerber points out, people do not simply want to work for exciting people. They want to work for people who have created a clearly defined structure for acting in the world. A structure through which they can test themselves and be tested.
In short, a game. The key, of course, is to make sure you are creating a game worth playing.
Gerber describes the "game" a hotel owner had created where his hotel become a world in which the sensory experiences of his customer were greeted by a profound dedication to cleanliness, beauty and order.
This went beyond the commercial justification and extended into the worldview the owner of the hotel had. It was then communicated to his employees in both words and actions.
He communicated his idea through the systems they documented for running the business, and through his warm, caring manner.
Importantly, he set the tone for this game at the beginning of his relationship with his employees - before they were hired.
There were 5 distinct components to the hiring process:
A scripted presentation communicating the Boss' idea in a group meeting to all the applicants at the same time. It described his idea, but also the history of the business and their success in implementing the idea, and what would be required for the successful candidate for the position.
Then he met with each applicant individually to discuss their reactions to his idea, and ask them why they thought they would be a good fit to implement the idea.
He notified the successful candidate by phone with a scripted presentation.
He notified the unsuccessful applicants, thanking them for their interest.
On the first day of training, the boss did the following:
This is how you bring the core values of your business to life.
Your marketing strategy lives and dies with what your customer wants, and how you deliver it to them.
And understanding what your customer wants depends on you understanding the two pillars of a successful marketing strategy - the demographics and psychographics of your customers.
When you first start your business, you'll already have defined the demographics of your customers. Your next job is to figure out as much of the psychographics for that segment of the market as possible.
What other brands do they buy? How are those companies - who are already successfully selling to those people - sell to them? What colors do they use? What messages are they sending? What values do they seem to be promoting?
Then, you'll take all of that information and figure out what your business must be in the mind of those customers in order for them to choose you over everybody else.
Finally, you'll make a promise your customer wants to hear, and then align your entire organization around delivering on that promise better than anyone else on the block.
Of course, as your company continues to grow, you'll continue to learn about the demographics and psychographics of your customers, and continue to iterate on your marketing strategy over time.
The last piece of the puzzle in building your business is your systems strategy. There are 3 kinds of systems.
Hard systems are inanimate, unliving things. Soft systems are either living things, or ideas. The core of the book and summary so far have been a combination of those two systems.
The third system is the information system, which provides us with information about the interaction between the other two.
As an example, if you have a sales system that tracks the sales steps from beginning to end (you should), you would be tracking some or all of the following items:
In short, the information system should tell you everything you need to know about how your people are performing, so that you can meet your strategic objectives, so that you can meet your primary aim.