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Why You Should be Able to Articulate Your Values

Business Concern

Release Date: 02/01/2024

Where to Find Help show art Where to Find Help

Business Concern

As the owner of a small to medium size business, you may have felt the need to ask for help but not felt comfortable doing so. Owners of businesses are often skilled in the business they own and enjoy the respect of their family and friends. If their businesses are successful (profitable), it is usually based on their leadership and good fortune. But things change and sometimes the successful are faced with difficulties and even poor results. The humility it takes for an owner to recognize that business is a team effort and that the policy-making group of a business needs help is a principal...

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Business Concern

Among the common goals of members of a capitalistic economy is the creation of wealth. This is often a reason why people own businesses. For an individual, the concept of wealth creation is the escape from dependence on earning funds for current expenses to live a certain lifestyle to building up assets and resources that appreciate over time and are of a magnitude to sustain that lifestyle or a better lifestyle without the need to earn funds for current expenses. Creation of wealth is a reference to accomplishing financial independence through the creation of passive income from investments....

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When Planning Becomes Dynamic show art When Planning Becomes Dynamic

Business Concern

Traditional planning is static. If there is a written plan, we see the plan formulated, documented in writing, presented at a meeting, and then put on the shelf to be consulted for next year’s retreat. This is the opposite of a forceful and changing dynamic plan. A dynamic plan can accomplish continuous improvement in business performance over time resulting in increased profitability. How does a static plan become dynamic? The answer is in the format of the plan. To be forceful a plan must be understood and implemented at all levels of the business – operational as well as management. The...

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The Concept of Time – How Its Progression Affects Important Tasks show art The Concept of Time – How Its Progression Affects Important Tasks

Business Concern

The Concept of Time – How Its Progression Affects Important Tasks Time is the progression of events from the past to the present into the future. Time marches forward relentlessly. From birth to death, we age, and every moment that passes is unique and unrepeatable. The more important tasks we accomplish within our lifespan, the more fulfilling and impactful our lives can be. But what defines "important"? Is it happiness? Recognition? Pursuing a passion? How we define, or not define, “important” has a great deal to do with how we spend the time of our life span. I believe in defining...

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Pay Attention to What is Important show art Pay Attention to What is Important

Business Concern

In the new year make sure you pay attention to what is important but not urgent. This is the time to make resolutions – that process involving review of the past year and resolving to do something different in the new year. It is a given that urgent but not important matters often replace important but not urgent matters in the time allocation of business owners. This diverts the owners from accomplishing important long-term tasks such as obtaining maximum value for their business interests. To pay attention to what is important you must prioritize paying attention to what is important by...

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Important Accomplishments show art Important Accomplishments

Business Concern

As a business owner imagine how it would feel at the end of the year to look back and realize you have reached one or more important accomplishments. You used your values to create a strategy. You set a goal at the beginning of the year. You created a plan to act to accomplish the goal. You executed the plan by acting to reach the goal. The feeling would be one of satisfaction and a sense of accomplishment. For most owners this feeling of satisfaction will not be possible. Most will not have articulated their values and created the strategy to set the goal. Some will not have published the...

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Establish a Profitable Business – Do Not Stop There! show art Establish a Profitable Business – Do Not Stop There!

Business Concern

No one said it would be easy. If you are the owner of an interest in a business which has become profitable, you and your team have done something right and it probably was not easy. Moreover, it will not be easy to keep your business profitable. What follows is a chart for the failure rate year by year from a LendingTree analysis of U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data ().   Time Frame Percentage of Failure Within 1 year 23.2% After 2 years 32.8% After 3 years 36.2% After 4 years 43.2% After 5 years 48.0% After 6 years 52.9% After 7...

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Shoulda, Coulda, Woulda show art Shoulda, Coulda, Woulda

Business Concern

The idiomatic phrase – shoulda, coulda, woulda – conveys the feeling you as the owner of a business might have in three years. Ok, “Could've, Would've, Should've” is a Taylor Swift (and Aaron Dessner) song. But it derives from the phrase often written as “shoulda, coulda, woulda.” The combination of the meaning of each – should conveying correctness, could conveying possibility, and would conveying a thwarted intention – yields a meaning of the uselessness of looking back or looking for excuses. Pat Riley, President and former coach of the Miami Heat and the Los Angeles Lakers...

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“No One Wants to Buy a Job” show art “No One Wants to Buy a Job”

Business Concern

The quote is from Mordecai Evans who is the Lead Advisor for Business Acquisition Advisors, LLC located in Augusta, Georgia. Mordecai went to work for a pharmaceutical company after graduating from Clemson. His passion for entrepreneurship and sales led him to becoming a broker with a business brokerage firm. Recently, Mordecai formed his own merger and acquisition firm, Business Acquisition Advisors. Rick asked Mordecai to do a Zoom interview about his experiences with the small to medium size business market. What follows is a summary of that conversation. Rick began by asking about what the...

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Thinking About Who Will Buy My Business show art Thinking About Who Will Buy My Business

Business Concern

If you are thinking about who is going to buy your business, you have already dealt with the significant core perception necessary for business strategic planning: that inevitably, voluntarily or involuntarily, with good results or bad, you will transfer your business interest. The reality check for the owner-manager of a business is the perception of and planning for the inevitable transfer of the business interest. Coming to this realization is the basis for the Prior Diligence strategy. The owner and the business will separate, the principal unknown factor is when and what happens to...

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Most of us do not wear our values on our sleeves. There are many reasons for this – most of them social. Regardless of social norms, in the arena of business ownership, each of the owners of a business should be able to articulate to the other owners their personal values with respect to the business principles by which the business is planned.

 

The planning process is well recognized. A business principle is determined by an owner from that owner’s personal values. Your personal values will control your business principles. These values with respect to the business, your business principles, are brought to your perceptions of the marketplace. From that examination, strategy planning goals are set. To implement the strategy, the planning goals are used to determine actions to accomplish those goals, initiate those actions, monitor the effect of those actions, and evaluate the results. As the need to revise the strategy and goals becomes apparent through monitoring, the process repeats.

 

What work needs to be done to define your values and determine business principles?

 

The strategic planning process begins with personal values. A value is a personal principle that informs and shapes thoughts, desires, feelings, choices, and behavior. A value is not a preference, but an enduring and essential attribute of character. Most owners are only vaguely aware of the standards and concerns that compose their personal value systems. Most unthinkingly embrace an array of normative standards to which they assume most caring and intelligent people adhere. Few have consciously attempted to resolve the tension that inevitably arises when those standards conflict with situations involving business principles and planning.

It is axiomatic that if you exercise personal choice in the development, management, consumption, and disposition of personal and community resources in harmony with your core values, you will likely experience a sense of self-fulfillment and personal well-being.

For each owner to agree with and support a strategic plan, the business principles identified from the owners’ personal values should appear to that owner to enhance the owner’s sense of well-being, including a sense of self fulfillment. Even if values that identify business principles are not articulated, owners will still have a sense of what they are. Plans which conflict with these values will not seem right and not be satisfying to the owner. To avoid this conflict and unease, it is essential for each owner to think about their values with respect to the business when identifying business principles and make these values known to the other owners. The initial and primary task of the owners must be to think about values and define their personal values.

For the corroborative effort of the owners to determine principles and plan based on values, they must engage in serious conversations and in so doing be able to articulate their values such that the principles upon which the strategic plan is based are considering each owner’s articulation of values. Doing this will provide a sense of personal well-being and self-fulfillment for all owners. For this to happen, there are two requisites. The first is that the owners have done the thinking to define their values. The second is that the owners can articulate their values to one another.

If an owner’s value system is to serve effectively as the framework for the formulation of the succession plan, the owner must do the thinking to define the owner’s values – to clarify and prioritize the components of the personal value system. To bring clarity and order to the owner’s personal value system, the owner should reflect on the circumstances and experiences that have informed and shaped the owner’s hopes, fears, and perspectives. The product of this reflection should be memorialized in writing. The writing should be reviewed and altered from time to time to reflect changing circumstances and perspectives.

Once there is a writing describing the personal value system of an owner, that system should be applied to the business and what it represents to that value system to identify the business principles. These business principles are the owner’s values with respect to the business and its specific activities. One owner may want to own the business for their entire working life. Another owner might want a family enterprise. An owner may want to build value and sell within a time frame. There are as many possibilities as there are owners.

Each owner should define that owner’s personal value system and be able to bring an articulation of that value system into conversations regarding the conduct and ownership of the business. Each owner should be aware of the principles of conducting a critical and difficult conversation so that those conversations result in increased understanding about the values and feelings of the other owners. With this competency in place, the initiation of the planning process becomes a source of cohesion among the owners and the basis for corroborative group decision making resulting in sustaining and effective business decisions.