Monthly Archives: July 2009

How to Follow Your Own Act

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Here’s an article published today in “The Portable Business™.” If you’d like to subscribe, go here:

magicianshatOne of the attorneys I’ve worked with over the years is a wonderful fellow. Family man. Very personable. Knows his stuff. Gets done what he’s hired to get done. A real credit to his profession. So what was always so disconcerting after he’d finish a matter for me was this utterly abrupt end to our communication. And I mean abrupt. Every time. It’s crazy, because whenever I’d contact him again on something new, we’d pick up as if we’d just spoken yesterday.

Yet, at the end of each project, I couldn’t help feel as if I’d done something wrong. Was I a horrible client? I don’t tend to think so because being an independent service provider myself, I’m always very conscious about how I treat other service professionals. I know what I don’t care for in clients and I make sure I am the kind of client I would want for myself. I clearly communicated my needs, made sure I understood what to expect and I always paid on time (and as you know, attorneys are not inexpensive). But I’d never get so much as a thank you for my payment. All communication would just end completely until the next time I had need to call on him. And then it would be, “Hey, Danielle! How’s it going?”

So I got to thinking… how many of you business owners out there are failing in your end game? What are you doing to nurture your relationships? Are you making sure clients and customers feel welcome to contact you again? How are you helping them in between services? Well, here’s a list I drew up that I think will be very helpful to you if you are neglecting your all-important follow-up act.

1. Thank your customers and clients. It seems simple enough, right? I mean, it’s just good manners. But as I shared in my story above, sometimes it’s the most obvious things that fall through the cracks. So be sure and thank your clients and customers. And I mean something beyond simply typing a line on your invoice template. Automate it or delegate it if you have to, but do go to the extra effort to thank people in a more deliberate way for their business. Each and every time.

2. Ask them what’s next. Find out what projects or goals they’re thinking about currently or that are on the horizon. Not only is this good relationship-building, but it’s also a great way to find out where opportunities for more work are.

3. Be a knowledge center and resource. When you make the effort to know a bit more about your clients and customers and where their interests are, you can pass on information that you think will be useful and of interest to them. You can do this individually and/or use the information to come up with relevant topics for your blog. Better yet, provide a regularly published ezine for your clientele. “The list is the thing!” as they say, and I can’t stress enough how perfect an ezine is for this job. As long as you are providing content that is of value to your clients/customers/audience, this is a fantastic way to keep in touch, maintain connection and create your own marketing pipeline. While you are delivering all this great, helpful information to subscribers, it also gives you a platform to keep them informed about the goings-on in your business and remind them about services you provide that they might not know or remember (hint, hint, refer back to #2).

4. Invite them into your networks. Hey, you’re not the only one looking to make connections. Inviting your clients and customers into your social/business networks is a nice gesture, gives them opportunities to make new contacts, and keeps them in your pipeline as well. They might even extend the favor back.

5. Be a referral source. Know what your customers do. Ask your clients what makes a good referral for them. And then spread the word. One good turn always deserves another.

6. Get their feedback. Clients appreciate the opportunity to be heard. It shows them you care. Of course you want to know what you’re doing well, but don’t be afraid to look in the mirror if clients point out areas where you can stand to improve. This is pure gold to your business and you should be grateful for having those blindspots illuminated. Let them know how much their input means to you and that it will be used to make improvements whenever, wherever needed.

7. Let clients know how to refer business to you. Clients are people and most people like to help others. Clients who love their vendors and service providers enjoy spreading the word on their behalf. Tell them what makes a great referral for you and exactly who you are looking for. The more clear and specific you are, the easier you make it for them to send others your way and the more frequently they will do so.

RESOURCE: If you’re looking for a fantastic, comprehensive feedback form that can be adapted to any business, check out FRM-04 at the Virtual Assistant Business Forms store.

About the Author: Danielle Keister is a business advisor and innovator in the Virtual Assistance profession. An administrative professional of 20+ years and veteran Virtual Assistant of 12+ years, her logical, no-nonsense approach to business development has gained her recognition as one of the leaders in the field. She loves what she does and is passionate about sharing her knowledge and know-how with the world. She’s all about inspiring others to reach for their highest excellence. When not taking care of clients in her own Virtual Assistant practice, she is busy leading the Virtual Assistance Chamber of Commerce and helping Virtual Assistants create six figure businesses.

© Copyright 2009, The Portable Business™. All U.S. and International rights reserved. You may print this article for personal use or republish it online only if it is left unaltered and used in its entirety, including bylines, links, copyright notice, resource and author information. Contact the author for any other permission.

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Just STOP!!!

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One of our members was feeling disheartened today after reading yet another blog post from an industry outsider miseducating OUR marketplace. In that post, the fellow spoke of Virtual Assistants in not very professionally respectful terms, indicating that Virtual Assistants are to be trained and supervised.

(SIDE TANGENT HERE: Sorry, buddy, you got that flat-out wrong. And clients, do yourselves a favor–STOP listening to these ya-hoos. They have NO business telling you how WE run our businesses and work with clients. They are doing you a HUGE disservice because you’re going to be in for an awakening when you contact us and we tell you that’s not the way it is.)

And then in another video post, she said the speaker was ranting about yet another Virtual Assistant who had disappeared on them.

Our member was lamenting that with all the miseducation that goes on, is there any hope of finding clients who “get it” anymore?

I say, emphatically, YES! But it requires some shifts in thinking and how we educate our marketplace. First, you have to understand the problem on both sides of the fence. 

On one side, it is unfortunately the Virtual Assistant world itself that is largely responsible for creating this thinking in clients that is insulting to us. It is Virtual Assistants themselves who are misinforming these people, creating unrealistic expectations, wrong understandings, and working with clients as if they were employees.

On top of that, the term “Virtual Assistant” has been completely bastardized by virtual staffing/team VA/secretarial service businesses. It doesn’t even mean what it is intended to mean anymore. I would argue that it wasn’t a good term to start with in the first place because it focuses clients on a role (and a subservient one, at that) rather than what we do. It does nothing to convey the sense that they are retaining the services of a professional administrative expert.

On the other side of the coin–and they will deny it and make excuses all over the place–but I guarantee you that most clients who complain about Virtual Assistants not having the skills they advertise or who disappear on them hired those Virtual Assistants because they were cheap (or cheaper than the alternative).

They will vehemently argue, “$X/hr isn’t cheap!” But ask those clients, why didn’t you hire Virtual Assistant X who charges $65-75/hr and up, who has an established, committed business (and not a fly-by-night, project-oriented freelancer), who demonstrates her competence on her website and in her interactions with you and all that she does, and who has a track record of dependability, qualification and service? Why didn’t you hire that person?

The answer is because they were trying to save a buck and/or were engaging in magical thinking. Why hire a Virtual Assistant who clearly knows her value and conveys her skills and qualification in demonstrable ways when I can hire someone cheaper? Why hire a real web designer when I can get a Virtual Assistant to do it cheaper? Why hire a real copywriter when I can get a Virtual Assistant to lump it in with administrative support as if it was the same thing and not charge me extra for it? Those clients have no one but themselves to blame. They had the wrong priorities, were depending on the Virtual Assistant’s devaluing of themselves, and they hired based on price instead of value/skill/demonstrated competence/quality.

And we can’t change them. We can only continue to steadily put out information that educates clients on how to choose, on what their priorities should be if they want Virtual Assistants with professional-level skills, qualification, dedication, who can do what they say they can and who won’t disappear on them (because they weren’t operating a committed business in the first place or they weren’t charging profitably enough in order to a create a reliable business). If they want X, they need to be prepared to pay $X. They need to shop based on value and stop cheapskating out.

Pricing profitably absolutely has a direct impact on a Virtual Assistant’s ability to create the kind of true business and systems and foundations that will allow her (or him) to stick around and deliver a superior level of service. No Virtual Assistant can create a real, solvent business at anything less than $35/hr. No one. The Virtual Assistants living off that are either broke, don’t depend on the money to live on (it’s just hobby/side income or extra pocket change for them) or they have other income (e.g., a day job, a spouse, another business). And when that is the scenario, clients risk their investment because that Virtual Assistant hasn’t created the kind of profitable foundation that will allow them to stay in business, be committed and focused, and deliver consistent, quality support and service. On top of that, if their interest in the work is only as “some money on the side,” why on earth would a client expect any kind of professional-level of commitment and reliability?

We also have to continue to steadily put out information that educates Virtual Assistant themselves on how to market themselves better. Virtual Assistants have got to get off of this marketing message that focuses almost exclusively on issues surrounding money. Just the other day I saw a new Virtual Assistant’s website and that’s ALL she talked about. Not how she improved the client’s life and business and how she does that, or what things she helps clients with, or helps them understand the ongoing, collaborative relationship so they can see it in the context of how it helps clients move their business forward. NOTHING about that stuff whatsoever. Just money and comparisons to employees and how much they would save and how little it all costs and how they could get a discount….

It’s no wonder a lot of clients are cheapskate-minded. Virtual Assistants like that are TRAINING them to think like that, FOCUSING them on exactly those things. We’ve GOT to change the focus of our conversations with clients. Stop talking about money. Period. Talk about how you improve your client’s lot, the ways in which they can move forward, how your work can help them achieve their goals and objectives.

We also have to break this connection with the brick and mortar admin/employee thing we have in our head. We are service providers now. Completely different animal. If you want to stop being treated and approached like an employee, stop making these comparisons (in all forms) to brick and mortar secretaries and administrative/executive assistants. Focus clients on the concept that you are an administrative expert–that is, a professional who specializes in providing administrative support and expertise. Show them how you help clients move forward in their businesses and take the burden of wearing all the hats off their shoulders. Focus on painting a picture of how you help them improve their life/business and achieve their goals/objectives. THAT’S the value. Leave all the other comparision (to employees, to admins in the real world, etc.) and price out of the conversation (on your website and marketing, that is) completely.

None of this will ever completely go away. There will always be cheapskates in the world who want something for nothing. And the Virtual Assistant industry isn’t unique in having this issue (both with cheap clients and not knowing how to market itself). But you can help yourself by supporting organizations like the VACOC that is helping to better educate clients in ways that make it easier for you to find the right-thinking ones out there. Focus on concentrating your energy on creating your client message in the ways I described above, stop talking about money and price and costs and discounts and incentives and seductions, and you will begin to attract the RIGHT clients with the RIGHT mindset to you.

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Dear Gritty VA: Quitting My Day Job

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Dear Gritty VA:

I have wanted to start my own Virtual Assistant business for a while now. I’ve been with the same large corporation for 12 years. Some of that time spent in the Medical Law department, as a human resources assistant, and about six years as an executive assistant juggling mulitple managers. Prior to that, I worked from a woman’s home as her assistant as she ran her own company bringing in over $400,000 gross per year. I’m a bit nervous about taking the jump of quitting my secure job and starting my business. What is the best way to get support from the industry of Virtual Assistants so that I don’t jump in blindly? –KC

This is an easy one… join Virtual Assistant organizations and networking forums. While you’re employed is a great time to do your homework and due diligence, as well as learn about and set up the foundations in your business.

I never recommend new anyone jump into this business without being properly capitalized or with at least some kind of income to live on until you get established. You might get clients right away, but for many new Virtual Assistants, these are just project work, nothing that is going to create regular, dependable cashflow. It often takes many months, sometimes over a year, to develop a roster of retained clientele (that is, clients who pay an ongoing monthly fee for a package of administrative support) that you can live on.

Good luck!

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Who Are You?

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You would not believe the amount of email I get from Virtual Assistants and others (or maybe you would, LOL). As I was cleaning out my IN box, I realized that the Virtual Assistants whose email accounts clearly identified who they are, were the folks who generally got my attention first. Alternatively, it’s often the folks who haven’t configured their email identification clearly or personally whose messages get deleted or end up in the spam/junk mail folders most frequently.

Are you setting up your email accounts in a way that clearly identifies who you are? I would also make the case that identifying yourself as a person first and business second is the way to go in this day and age of social networking.

I still remember with chagrin the uproar my own email address caused on a listserv one time. I was new to the list and there were only one or two people I already knew. Folks on the list were very suspicious of new members and there was a bit of an uproar over my email address. At first I had no idea what on earth they were talking about. I’d had my email address for years and years. I wasn’t something I ever thought about and definitely not something that anyone had ever had a problem with. 

But then it was pointed out to me what all the furor was about–I was using my business name instead of my personal name. So when my emails showed up, it said “The Relief” instead of “Danielle Keister.” The list was used to people using their personal name in their email account rather than a business name. They didn’t like it when someone used a business name rather then their personal name. To them it felt impersonal and like they were being instantly marketed to by sheer virtue of the name on the account.

So maybe you have set your email address long ago, too, and not given it a second thought since then. Perhaps now is a good time to do a little email housekeeping. Remember, people do business with people. They connect with people, not anonymous, impersonal entities. If you want to be more personable in your online networking, set your email address up so it shows your personal name (first and last) rather than your business name. I willing to bet you’ll make way more friends that way. :)

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What Does d/b/a Mean?

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Heather James, a Virtual Assistant based in Australia, let me know something really useful. Heather purchased one of my Virtual Assistant agreement templates and in her feedback to me, she indicated that she wasn’t familiar with the term “d/b/a” and had to do some research to find out what it meant.

First, I want to thank Heather so much for this insight. Although we work in a global marketplace, it’s not always easy to know whether certain terms are consistent or understandable in different countries. So thank you for bringing that to my attention, Heather!

In answer to the question, d/b/a means “doing business as.” It is used to denote a sole proprietor’s business trade name rather than his or her personal name (e.g., Jane Doe d/b/a Jane’s Administrative Partnering) or one or more of a parent entity’s business trade names (Smith Companies, Inc., d/b/a/ John Smith Administrative Consulting).

Some countries use “trading as” for the same purpose. Our templates are based on U.S. based business so if you operate in a different country, you’ll want to check for and replace with the correct term for your location. And as always, have your own attorney check any legal documents before you use them in your business.

If you have any similar questions, please do let me know!

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Dear Gritty VA: How Do I Find My Target Market?

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Dear Gritty VA:

I understand the need and benefit of having a target market. I totally get that. My problem is I don’t know how to choose one? Do you have any suggestions? –SL

There really isn’t a formula or scientific way to choose a target market. Ultimately, it comes down to just deciding: choosing a place to start and moving forward from there.

Lots of Virtual Assistants start with a target market they are familiar and/or have experience with. Perhaps you worked in a certain industry before you started your business and therefore know what that industry is about, can already speak their language, know what administrative work is involved, how you can help and so forth. This is a great place to start because there isn’t as much ramp up time as far as getting to know and understand your desired audience and marketing appropriately to them.

On the other hand, perhaps there’s an industry that you’ve always been interested in. And as you study and research that industry, you find there are lots of opportunities and avenues for networking with people in it, the needs and pains they have fit perfectly with what you are in business to do, and it’s generally a healthy industry where, in general, most people in it charge enough and make enough to be able to easily afford your service. This can be a great, adventurous place to start, although there is going to be more upfront research involved.

Sometimes our target market find us. For example: perhaps you draw a wild card and take on a client from a profession you have absolutely no experience with and you discover you really, really enjoy the work and the people. You find the industry really interesting and you have an affinity for all that is involved. This is often how Virtual Assistants arrive at a new target market. And what could be more perfect–finding your kindred spirits and doing work you love each and every day.

Choosing a target market is a process. You might switch target markets several times throughout the life of your business, but the point is to start somewhere. You can always change and refine anywhere, anytime along the way.

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