Business Systems and Processes.

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Business Improvement: Systemize Everything!

In the Zone, you are flooded with inspiration and ideas to improve your business. You have a vision of what the business is going to look like when it is “finished.” You have written down specific goals. You are now ready to take steps to grow the perfect business. This is where the real fun begins.

As you look at your business through a microscope, you see it is made up of systems and subsystems. You realize that smooth-running systems create a smooth-running business. You conclude that your business will operate best when there is harmonious and orderly interaction between its vital systems. Business systems are the building blocks for creating the perfect business, one that runs itself efficiently and profitably. Let’s explore this further.

Smooth-running business systems

Systems are the solution to problems

All businesses have challenges that can create frustration for business owners and customers. A frustrating condition exists when there is a specific, recurring problem over which the business owner feels little or no control. Have you ever thought:

  • “My cash flow is stressing me out.”
  • “I can’t seem to hire good people.”
  • “Our quality needs improvement.”
  • “Employees are wasting time.”
  • “I don’t get enough sales leads.”
  • “Profits are down.”

These undesirable patterns can be eliminated by simply installing effective business systems. Systems are the logical and practical solutions to your business problems and they are just waiting to be discovered.

What exactly is a system? An effective system is a procedure, process, method, or course of action that produces a consistent and measurable result.

Every business has informal systems but that informality is the reason for much of the inefficiency and frustration. Pricing systems, hiring systems, lead generation systems, quality control systems, and every other loosey-goosey, informal system can change with the whims of people and will not consistently produce the desired outcome. When systems are set up properly and well documented, they remove all of the guesswork and deliver a specific, measurable result every time.

Effective systems also enable the business to run itself profitably without the hands-on involvement of the business owner.

Systems are the “Magic formula” for success

Businesses often struggle with profit margins when there is a continuous change in the delivery of products or services. Routine systems and procedures enhance profitability. Once the system is defined, money is made when ordinary people learn to do it fast and do it well. Generalized solutions, seat-of-the-pants operations, “human nature,” and everything left to chance is replaced with detailed procedures, performance standards, and accountability. Technology, as painful as it often is, can be a great ally.

The organization chart, which visually describes the structure, leadership, and relationships within the organization, is the most fundamental business system. All other systems fall somewhere within the specified job functions on this organizational chart. For example, a lead generation system would fall under the job function of “marketing.”

Good business systems increase efficiency, accomplish objectives, and give customers what they want every single time. They are the solution to frustrations, wasted resources, poor performance, and other business problems. While the right people are critical to an organization, a mature business has fully-developed systems and is systems-dependent rather than people-dependent. The time and cost to create a system are repaid many times over. Systems must be simple, in writing, and easily understood by operators to be effective.

Start creating systems today

Many systems are no more than a form or a checklist. Some are more complex. Systems are often modified and improved, but always provide the best-known way of getting the job done. Remember, all new systems require owners and employees to have the “will” to implement change and stick with the new method of doing things.

There are three stages to developing an effective system.

Stage 1 – Design the System. Identify from business information, personal frustration, or customer dissatisfaction the areas of the business that need improvement. Defining the problem and its causes will often point to the system solution. Describe what the new system will look like and what effect it will have on the organization. Estimate the costs and benefits of the new system and decide if you have the “will” (time, financial resources, and determination) to see the development process through to completion.

Stage 2 – Develop the System. Innovate new procedures, processes, or methods to solve problems and accomplish objectives. Innovations are the “best-known way of doing things” and should be simple, repeatable, and customer-driven. The completed system should contain all definitions, policies, detailed procedures, forms, management reports, and every component necessary for an employee to operate the system with exactness. For a business system to be effective, it must be documented!

Stage 3 – Deploy the System. Implement the documented system. Eliminate employee discretion, “the enemy of order, standardization and quality” (Theodore Levitt, Marketing For Business Growth). Perform the task or procedure the same way every time, or until innovation improves it. Measure the impact of each system innovation on your business and its effectiveness over time. Assign clear responsibility and accountability for the performance of the system.

This sounds like a lot of work. It is! But it is an essential process for growing the perfect business. Some systems will take hours, some days, and some weeks to implement. You’ll have a dozen or so critical systems and many small subsystems. Accounting and marketing are the two granddaddy systems that drive the business. If you spend regular time in the Zone, you will get the task accomplished sooner than you might imagine.

When you think about it, this is why you got into business in the first place — to build a business that you could sell, franchise, or hire someone to run for you. A business built on systems is the only way to do it. Each system in place is one more step toward a business that works profitably and leads you to financial and personal freedom.

Become a Systems Thinker. Step back and look at your business as a world of integrated systems. Identify weaknesses. Get in the Zone and start designing new or improved systems today! Once you begin Systems Thinking, ideas will flow into your mind 24/7. Have a notebook to write them down.

Take a look at your accounting system first. It plays a critical role in your business. Its importance cannot be overstated. Your next step is to get in control of the “numbers.”

Step 3: Manage by the Numbers
Download PDF ebook: 10 Easy Steps to Grow the Perfect Business

*****Special Alert: My Retirement is Your Gain*****

To give back to the entrepreneurial community, I HAVE DECIDED TO GIVE AWAY MY VALUABLE SYSTEMS-BUILDING SOFTWARE, ecOURSE, AND OTHER INFORMATION ABSOLUTELY FREE. By filling out the form on this page, you will go directly to a download page. This is not hype. There is no catch. You will receive a software product and a “college equivalent” eCourse on how to develop effective business systems and processes. Customers have been paying for this software and eCourse for fourteen years (see What Cutomers Are Saying).

I will show you how to eliminate business frustrations and make more money by creating remarkable systems and processes that boost customer loyalty, profitability and growth. The application of these strategies has proven to be of great worth for owners of many small and mid-size businesses. Put me to the test!

You will learn the following, and much more:

  • How to become a Systems Thinker and raise your business I.Q. by 80 points—OVERNIGHT.
  • What six elements are found in every great business system.
  • How you can remove waste and inefficiency, and build a results-driven organization.
  • Why good systems and processes are the essential ingredient to start, grow, fix or franchise (replicate) your business.

You have nothing to lose and everything to gain. I will not be trying to sell you because you are getting everything for FREE, much more than I have described here. I won’t be contacting you; however, you can contact me for help with the software or your business at any time. Please browse around my website. If you have any questions, email me, Ron Carroll, at boxtheorygold@gmail.com.

I hope you enjoy and benefit from this FREE offer. It was a labor of love for me to develop. Becoming a Systems Thinker and using the Box Theory™ methodology will be one of the best decisions you have ever made.

I’ll be cheering you on from my quiet fishing hole in the mountains of Utah.

I want to learn how to create remarkable business systems …

Just Retired
Gone Fishing
Your Lucky Day

It's time for me to focus on other things. Many hours and dollars have gone into my software and written materials over the last fourteen years. Now it's time to give back. This is not a gimmick. There is nothing to buy. I give it all to you for free. If you use the software and apply the principles, you can create a remarkable company. See Below. Have fun!

Turn Your Business Into Money-Making Systems!

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Welcome to the #1 website for helping owners of small to midsize businesses create customer-pleasing, waste-removing, profit-boosting business systems and processes.

Michael Gerber, "E-Myth"

Michael Gerber

"Organize around business functions, not people. Build systems within each business function. Let systems run the business and people run the systems. People come and go but the systems remain constant."

W. Edwards Deming, Total Quality Management

W. Edwards Deming

"If you can't describe what you are doing as a process, you don't know what you're doing. . . . 94% of all failure is a result of the system, not people."
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