Currently, as a senior VA of an intern in the AssistU Internship Program and a mentee in the AssistU Virtual Mentoring Program, I get to see the beginnings of their businesses. The starting out. The foundation work.
During a call with another VA last week I discussed my process for filling my practice. At first, I played around with marketing. I was half-hoping that it would fill on it’s own. We had a lot going on, I would bargain with myself, we moved right after my AssistU graduation, then we moved again one year later. I was in charge of the moves. Then I unpacked. Then I had my days back and I was scared. I hate marketing myself.
From September to November, I tried… I would send a letter here and there, research potential prospects, plan. Life seemed to still be creeping in. Okay, I was allowing it.
December came, and I began contemplating finding a desk job in an office. I sent out a few resumes. I considered what a corporate job would cost me after all I had done to be a VA. I carefully thought through the benefits of keeping my practice full-time.
I already knew how many hours I wanted to work each week for clients. Was I in my office those hours? No. Was I currently working those hours? No. I didn’t have clients, so I didn’t see a need. However, really admitting that to myself allowed me to make a shift.
As I shared in a previous post, I calendar everything. I decided to use this to handle my need to add clients. Here is the process I used:
- I clearly determined the hours I would work for clients during each of my work days.
- I blocked those hours off for marketing on my calendar.
- I calculated my hours per week, then per month.
- I took my retainer rate and applied to to those hours, like I was my own client.
- I used that multiple (retainer rate x available hours) and considered that my marketing budget.
- Then, I kept my butt in my seat working on marketing during those hours.
It wasn’t magic. It didn’t happen over night… but slowly, one client at a time, I gathered clients. I was actively (not passively) growing my business. I never stopped using those hours as marketing time. I still don’t. I keep hours each week to work on my blog, research new client opportunities, and keep myself alive “out there” and in touch with people who matter to me.
I never forget that regardless of how well I help my clients… if I don’t run my business… no one will. I can’t bring my best to my clients if I don’t run my own business as well as I help them run theirs. I need time each week to do that. I have to calendar it and I have to keep my butt in my seat.
How do you keep “working on your business” while you are working your business? Leave me a comment below and share your process!
It isn’t easy is it? I added myself to my time tracking software and told myself that I’m my number one client and that marketing my business on a consistent basis is job #1. This is something that people in the corporate world take for granted that not only does an entrepreneur need to work for clients, she has to market her own business consistently too. Having the structure of a group to whom we are accountable really helps. Thanks for sharing this… I think a lot of people will relate! ~Kristy
As always, you inspire me, Amy.
While there are some chunks of time here and there throughout the week that I’m active in marketing, etc., I devote Fridays solely to my own business… no client contact, no client tasks if at all possible. I work on my marketing, financial management, processes and systems – the grease that makes the rest of it run smoothly. As much as love the work I do for clients (and I really do!), I look forward to Fridays so much. 🙂
Jude,
Thanks for your kind words. I love that you do Fridays like this. I would imagine that it is a day to look forward to. I am an excited spectator at the amazing work you are doing in your practice and your life. Thank you!
I love that you track your time. It made the biggest impact for me. Working on our businesses versus in our businesses is so vital to our successes as entrepreneurs. I appreciate what you have added to the conversation. Thank you.
Amy – These are brilliant insights and directions. It sound very much like directions on a flight. Take the oxygen mask first so that you can effectively help others! Making my own business healthy will empower me to make my clients’ businesses more healthy. Thank you for the inspiration! Now it’s time to keep my butt in my seat. 🙂
Thanks, Janet! I promise, keeping my butt in my seat worked for me! I bet it will work for you, too! Have fun while you’re there… that’s what it’s all about!