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Archive for July, 2009

The Most Important Thing Today… and Tomorrow and Tomorrow

July 2nd, 2009

Ever feel like you’re in business overload with a task list that just keeps growing?

I’ve been in that situation recently – lots of good things happening, but the list gets longer every day rather than shorter…  Pretty well everyone I talk with who runs a small-medium business is familiar with the feeling – as soon as you get the sales structures nailed, the project management systems need work.  Then you get those nailed, and the customer support processes need strengthening.  It feels a bit like the gopher bashing game - as a kid I used to go to a local fair where they had a game with multiple holes and gopher heads would keep popping up and people playing would try to bash the gophers (not live ones!) with a mallet.  Every time you got one, another would pop up. 

This is not a new problem, of course.  Solutions are popular; from Verne Harnish’s one page strategic plan (which I depend on heavily) to a variety of other management tools.  But it has been very present for me recently.  I’ve found a couple of things that help me keep a handle on what needs to happen when:

  • Lists.  I love lists; writing stuff down gets it out of my head AND gives me a nice visual indicator of progress as I can check items off.
  • Delegation.  Once I’ve spent the time to write something up, then maybe I can hand it off.  Otherwise it stays as mine to do!  I did a list this morning and had about 10 different task areas that I can hand off, some ongoing and some one-time tasks.  It’s great to see that written down so I can decide what skills are needed and who can do what (instead of me).
  • The Most Important Thing.  I’m a big fan of the square with urgent and important where the goal is to work most of the time on stuff that is important but not urgent, so that nothing makes its way through to the important AND urgent slot.
  • Blocking Time.  I recently blocked off two full days for strategic planning.  It was very hard to free up that time, but the results have been spectacular so far (and make determining the Most Important Things much easier on a day to day basis).

None of these are rocket science, but I find that when I get busy or frazzled, going back to the basics makes a big difference.  It lets me focus and make sure the business is moving forward on a trajectory and that I’m not spinning in circles or just reacting to what comes up.  And for today, that’s my most important thing!

Best Practices, Business Growth, Focus

Controlling Brand & Trademark within Social Media: What to do if franchisees got there first

July 1st, 2009

This is a Guest post from Paul Segreto – Franchisessentials, originally posted at http://franchisessentials.wordpress.com/2009/06/22/controlling-brand-trademark-within-social-media-what-to-do-if-franchisees-got-there-first/

I was recently asked to share my point of view on how a franchise brand can — or even should — wrest control of their brand on social media destinations when franchise holders have been early entrants.

Here are my initial thoughts:

As is typical in most franchise agreements, there’s most likely a clause regarding use of the brand name and trademark. It may need some interpretation to Web 2.0 usage, but there should be no problem applying the language in this regard. Also, online branding falls into marketing, and ultimately, advertising. I’m certain franchise agreements provide typical clauses that prohibit franchisees from utilizing non-authorized ads, etc.

All that being said, it’s always best to convince rather than demand. If the organization is large, it may be more effective to work through advertising cooperatives and franchisee advisory councils in pushing anything regarding social media. One strategy could see the franchisor contributing financially to a social media strategy. (Much cheaper than legal expense to enforce clauses in franchise agreement; not to mention “expense” of diminished morale) As incentive to initiate the same, franchisees would need to voluntarily relinquish their online identities so the parent company may establish one facebook page, one twitter id and one website.

I would recommend developing a template for franchisees to use that would piggyback off the national identity. For example, if corporate identity is Zippy Lube, the franchisee could use Zippy Lube NY or Zippy Lube NY 101 or Zippy Lube Jamaica NY and so on. Each franchisee could have their own web page linked to company website. It’s important to maintain uniformity and a sense of organization when attached to company brand or when linked together.

Please share your thoughts below. Thank you.

Best Practices, Communication, Franchise