CRACKING THE BILLABLE HOURS CEILING
C.J. Hayden, MCC
How
many of you made as much money as you wanted to last
year? Don't be shy; raise your hands. Hmm, I don't see too
many hands out there. What would you say is the cause of
this gap between your goals and your earnings?
While you could certainly name the economy or inadequate
marketing as the culprit, I'd like to suggest a third
alternative. It may be the constraints of the billable hours
model that keep you from your financial goals.
Let's face it, there are only so many hours you can actually
bill to clients. For example, the national average for
consultants is 22 billable hours per week. You can only
raise your rates so high and still find enough customers.
And if you spend more time on marketing, that's less time
you have available to bill.
But there's a way out of this trap.
No matter what type of
business you're in, you can use intellectual property to
crack the billable hours ceiling. Here are just some of the
ways to start tapping into this resource today:
1. Package your process. What if
every time you began work
with a new client, they paid an up-front fee before you
spent even one hour with them? If you sell a process rather
than your time, clients will pay for access to your
previously developed materials. Examples are workbooks,
forms, assessments, surveys, games, self-paced programs, and
train-the-trainer packages.
2. Give a class. When you assemble
a group of people to
learn together, you can earn more per hour than working with
them separately. Classes can be given at your office, at a
rented (or borrowed) facility, on the phone, or on the web.
Your market for classes is not just your clients -- think
about what you could teach your colleagues as well.
3. Record a tape, CD, or video. The
simplest way to make
recordings is to capture your live classes or speaking
engagements on audio or video. Make your unedited recordings
available immediately on the web or by phone. More polished
recordings can be made with the help of a local studio or
editor, or you can learn to do this yourself with the right
equipment.
4. Write a white paper, workbook, or booklet. Short
publications like these are easily within your reach, even
if you don't consider yourself a writer. A simple 20-page
booklet might have as few as 4000 words in it. If you've
written four articles to promote your business, you've
probably already written this much. These are perfect
formats for e-books, which cost you nothing to print.
5. Author a book. This might seem
an impossible task, but if
you write one page a day, five days a week, at the end of a
year you'll have a full-length book. If writing isn't your
strong point, find an editor, ghost writer, or even a
co-author who has the skills you lack. You don't have to
wait until your book is finished to start selling excerpts
as articles and white papers.
6. Market other people's products.
If you don't yet have
your own product, don't let it stop you. You can begin
earning passive income by selling other people's books and
tapes, becoming a re-seller for software or assessment
tools, licensing someone else's process, or joining
affiliate programs.
Any of these products can be marketed in conversations with
prospects and clients, in your standard marketing kit, in
mailings or newsletters, on your outgoing voice mail
message, and on your web site.
If you've been counting on hourly
fees for your entire
income, you may be surprised at the impact developing your
intellectual property will have. It will add not only to
your revenue, but also your professional credibility. And in
poor economic times, you will find that prospects who
hesitate to pay for personal service will still purchase
classes and information products.
Copyright
© 2002, C.J. Hayden
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