9 Reasons Why You Need A Business System

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If you want to build your business, it is essential that you have systems and processes in place as they serve as the building blocks for your business and without them you cannot grow your business. Here are the 9 reasons why you need business, systems:

1. Consistency – With a business system you can repetitively produce the same products and services with no variation. Systems can be implemented for sales, marketing, operations, training, etc. This allows you to monitor your business so that you can make changes to improve it.

2. Change – Because change in any business is inevitable by having systems in place and knowing how your process works you can modify it quickly to suit the required changes. Also, with systems in place you will be able to review it and apply continuous improvement which will improve your business overall.

3. Training – A system will allow proper training to take place which in turn will increase productivity and effectiveness. Procedures will be in place which allows employees to have consistent, high-quality performance on relevant tasks.

4. Focus – When deadlines or new projects are required, business systems will allow the activities to be performed on autopilot as everyone will know the processes and procedures that are required.

5. Customer Expectations – Systems will allow you to measure and analyse customer satisfaction, this will give you information on how to improve your products or services that will give you the competitive advantage in your market.

6. Reduce Costs – The business system is the only way of providing quality assurance as you don’t have to repeat activities several times due to defects. Systems will also allow you to remove waste from your business.

7. Profitability – Because systems are in place your business will be efficient and effective and you will have reduced costs by removing waste from your business. Customer satisfaction will have increased and you will have improved your on-time delivery therefore you will increase your profitability.

8. Value of your business – By having systems in place your business instantly becomes more valuable to an investor, this is because the investor knows that your business will run smoothly, and quality is assured. This will also help you to sell your business and command a higher price.

9. Strategy – By having business systems in place you will be able to step back and work on your business instead of in your business, therefore you will have the time to become more strategic and be ahead of the competition.

 

Deming’s 14 Points and Property Investing

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Dr W Edwards Deming is known as being one of the quality gurus and is highly regarded in Japan as Deming made a significant contribution to Japan’s reputation for innovative, high-quality products, and for its economic power that has helped Japan become the second largest economy in the world. As some of you know I am a quality professional as well as a property investor and therefore I have studied Deming’s work over a number of years and particularly his 14 points which still apply to today as it did in 1982 when it was first published.

I was revisiting the 14 points to see how I could apply them to property investing and this is what I came up with:

1. “Create constancy of purpose toward improvement of products and services, allocating resources, with the aim to become competitive, to stay in business, and to provide jobs.”

This point calls for looking ahead and making changes to your business so that you have better approaches to changing markets and environments. The one that comes to mind is the changes in the tax laws that we will all have to face, so think of the ways that you can mitigate it. But bear in mind who your customers are as the customer’s needs remain the top priority in your business because without them you have no business.

2. “Adopt the new philosophy. We are in a new economic age. Western management must awaken to the challenge, learn their responsibilities, and take on leadership for change.”

This point is all about innovation and change management. Therefore, look at your processes and systems and make them robust. If you don’t have any yet, then now is the time to start applying these to your business otherwise you will be working in your business instead of on your business.

3. “Cease dependence on inspection to achieve quality. Eliminate the need for inspection on a mass basis by building quality into the product in the first place.”

This point is about monitoring your processes at every stage and not trying to detect defects at the end. Not only will you prevent defects from happening, but you may also be presented with an opportunity to innovate the process. So, for instance instead of doing snagging at the end of a refurbishment do your snagging during the refurbishment.

4. “End the practice of awarding business on the basis of price tag. Instead, minimize total cost. Move toward a single supplier for any one item, on a long-term relationship of loyalty and trust.”

What this point is telling us is to stop cutting corners by buying cheap materials when in fact you need good quality materials as this will work out cheaper in the long run. You also need to work with single suppliers and build up relationships so that you can work together in this way you will get your materials at a decent price and delivered on time as your supplier will know exactly what you need. Also, by building the relationship you will know what your competitors are doing as the supplier will have their ear to the ground and let you know.

5. “Improve constantly and forever the system of production and service, to improve quality and productivity, and thus constantly decrease costs.”

This is about building a culture of making improvements within your business. By ensuring everyone is looking at all of your systems and processes on a constant basis and finding ways to make improvements you will increase the quality, your productivity will go up and your costs will come down.

6. “Institute training on the job.”

People are part of the process; therefore, you need to train them properly, therefore you must have continual support for learning about process monitoring and improvement. This can also be applied to people outside of your business e.g. estate agents can be trained to understand what your requirements are and not to give you information on unsuitable property that does not meet your needs.

7. “Institute leadership. The aim of supervision should be to help people and machines and gadgets to do a better job. Supervision of management is in need of overhaul, as well as supervision of production workers.”

Leaders should help people think about their job and find ways to make improvements, this will also help people understand their processes. This will help your business grow and become part of the culture.

8. “Drive out fear, so that everyone may work effectively for the company.”

Research has shown that if people are afraid to speak freely it will have a negative impact on innovation and reasoning. Therefore, you need to ensure that the people in your business can speak candidly.

9. “Break down barriers between departments. People in research, design, sales, and production must work as a team, to foresee problems of production and in use that may be encountered with the product or service.”

You need to have a cross fertilisation team that can work together, e.g. planner, architect and builder working together to come up with a design that suits your needs.

10. “Eliminate slogans, exhortations, and targets for the work force asking for zero defects and new levels of productivity.”

You need to remove targets and quotas for people to hit, instead you need encourage your team to work collaboratively as this will move your business forward.

11. “Remove barriers that rob the hourly worker of his right to pride of workmanship.”

This is point is about putting quality before quantity and encouraging people to make improvements in their work. By allowing people to make improvements you are also encouraging your business to improve.

12. . “Remove barriers that rob people in management and in engineering of their right to pride of workmanship.”

This is about allowing people to manage without undermining their responsibility. Managers also need to encourage continuous improvements and allow people to take responsibility for their work.

13. “Institute a vigorous program of education and self-improvement.”

Training should engage people in on-going learning opportunities and not just limited to specific tasks. Also, you should allow time for your own on-going mentoring, training and education so that it can help you grow your business.

14. “Put everybody in the company to work to accomplish the transformation. The transformation is everybody’s job.”

This is all about teamwork within your business and collaboration with your suppliers and power teams so that everyone is on board to help you grow the business.

As you can see Deming’s 14 points can be adopted and applied to any business, therefore it can work in your property business. I have just skimmed over them as you need to see how you can apply them to your own business. If you would like to know more about the 14 points and how to apply quality to your business, I suggest that you read Deming’s book ‘Out of Crisis’.

What’s your strategy?

Introduction

How often do we hear people at network meetings ‘What’s your strategy?’ and the answer is usually goes something like ‘Baby buy to lets, then move up to HMO and eventually commercial properties’, and everyone is satisfied and they then move onto the next person and ask the same question. This always begs the question why are using this strategy, what are you hoping to achieve? You then get the blank looks or a mumbled answer which indicates that this has not been thought through.

According to the Business Dictionary strategy has the following meanings:

  1. A method or plan chosen to bring about a desired future, such as achievement of a goal or solution to a problem.
  2. The art and science of planning and marshaling resources for their most efficient and effective use. The term is derived from the Greek word for generalship or leading an army.

Integrated Method

As can be seen by the above definitions strategy is linked to a plan to bring about a desired future and we need to bring our resources together to be efficient and effective. What do we mean by this and how can we achieve it? Because we need everything and everyone to work together rather than in isolation we need to consider an integrated systems approach. This method is about people and systems coming together and working as a team. Why as a team? If we think of the system as a football team and now the manager calls each team member one by one and tells them what the tactic is that he wants them to play. The team then go out on the field and they play badly because each member of the team only knows what his specific task is, they have not had the benefit of listening to what was said to everyone else and knowing what their roles were. Now that you get the idea why we need an integrated approach let’s model it so that you can see how it fits in together.

 

As can be seen by the model you need to understand where you want to be in your future, as this is the starting point. This could be your why, or it could be your financially free figure. Once you have decided what your future should look like then you can work on your strategy to see what you need to achieve your future. Then you need to understand what methods and tools are required to make it a reality. Do you need training in the tools and methods? If so this needs to be added to your integrated approach. Finally you need to consider what systems need to be put in place to support the integrated approach and KPIs (Key Point Indicators) to measure your success. By having flow down and feedback throughout the integrated approach everyone understands what is required to reach the future state.

If we take each of the headings and place it into a table we can then work on each section to come up with our integrated approach e.g.

 

Where do I/we want to be? What is my/ our strategy? How can I/we do this? What capabilities must be in place? What systems are required?
Financially Free Figure of £10k per month Buy to Let = £200 per month.

£10k/£200 = 50 Buy to Lets

Money in Money out.

 

Training Courses KPI’s
HMO = £1500 per month.

£10/£1500 = 7 HMOs

Joint Ventures Mentors Standard Work Procedures
Serviced Accommodation = £2700 per month.

£10k/£2700 = 4 Serviced Accommodations

Investment area(s) Benchmark against successful investors Lessons Learnt

Work with suppliers (Estate Agents, Letting Agents, Sourcing Agents etc.) so that they can deliver to our requirements

Power Team Visual Management

 

You can see by using this method you start to build up a picture and you begin to see how everything is linked to your future state. This is your birds’ eye view of where you want to be. This can then be broken down further e.g. you may decide that you only want HMOs as your strategy, in which case everything below the strategy needs to be geared for HMOs e.g. Finance, Estate Agents and Letting Agents that deal in HMOs, Training, Regulations, Commercial lending, vetting, house rules, etc.

 Conclusion

When you work on things in isolation it is quite easy to lose your way, by having an integrated approach to your business you will become more focused and achieve quicker results. Planning for your future state is important so take your time to think and make your plans. As Abraham Lincoln said ‘Give me six hours to chop down a tree and I will spend the first four sharpening the axe’