Built to Sell – John Warrillow

Built to Sell – John Warrillow

If you focus on doing one thing well and hire specialists in that area, the quality of your work will improve and you will stand out among your competitors.

JOHN WARRILLOW

Don’t be afraid to say no to projects. Prove that you’re serious about specialization by turning down work that falls outside your area of expertise. The more people you say no to, the more referrals you’ll get to people who need your product or service

Don’t rely too much on just one client

Relying too heavily on one client is risky and will turn off potential buyers.

Make sure that no one client makes up more than 15 percent of your revenue.

 

Owning a process makes it easier to pitch and puts you in control. Be clear about what you’re selling, and potential customers will be more likely to buy your product.

Don’t become synonymous with your company. If buyers aren’t confident that your business can run without you, they won’t make their best offer.

Using the right language

If you want to be a sellable, product-oriented business, you need to speak its language.

Change words like “clients” to “customers” and “firm” to “business.” Rid your website and customer-facing communications of any references that reveal you used to be a generic service business.

JOHN WARRILLOW

To sell your business, you need to demonstrate to a buyer that you have a sales engine that will produce predictable, recurring revenue.

Scalable things meet three criteria

Sales and sales reps

About finding an advisor

Find an adviser for whom you will be neither their largest nor their smallest client. Make sure they know your industry.

Avoid an adviser who offers to broker a discussion with a single client. You want to ensure there is competition for your business and avoid being used as a pawn for your adviser to curry favour with his or her best client.

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