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More on Business Development

By Leah Speser posted 01-27-2014 14:03

  

In another, lesser known that, the Wise General once said, “If winners get to write history, first win, then write.” So when business calls, I must respond. Unfortunately, the demands of work have made it hard to post daily. The weekend has brought time to catch-up and plow ahead with the completion of Sun Tzu’s chapter on Battle and our commentator’s exegesis on business development.

 

Comments on Sun Tzu’s The Art of War, edited by Dick Cooledge, Comptche Press, 1927.

 

Sun Tzu: “Prolonged warfare benefits the defense, as armies tire, their families want them home and the country is impoverished. If you have not experienced the evils of war then it is difficult to understand how to win.”

Raven: “When you know what they fear and what they hope for, sometimes you can be the answer. If I want to be the answer, I start by listening to their questions.” 

Poor Richard: “If you want to do business with someone, do the first deal. If the first deal is a good deal, others can follow. So you have to figure if there is a good deal or you will waste a lot of time. First you get clear on how they figure fair market. Since fair market value is what it is worth, all that remains to figure out is the payment schedule. In a good deal, there is an alignment of payouts with milestones and money to pay them. When your deals have payoffs that are win/win and payment schedules that are cash flow acceptable, people want to do deals with you.  That's what they call goodwill, by the way. People want to buy things from merchants with a reputation for goodwill and avoid merchants with a reputation that is contrary and bad will.”

 

© Phyl Speser, January 23, 2013

 

 

Comments on Sun Tzu’s The Art of War, edited by Dick Cooledge, Comptche Press, 1927.

 

Sun Tzu: “Bring food for your men and your animals. But do it only once. Once established in the field, an army must feed itself off the land. When I see a line of wagons heading each way to and from the front, I worry. For the state is being impoverished and my men are no longer warriors but wagon masters.”

Raven: “Do you see that field with scarecrow?  The farmer builds defenses so he can eat better than me. If I know that is what they are, I can ignore them or use them to my advantage. Either way, there is food to eat.” 

Poor Richard: “Repeat customers are the best customers. When the prosperous merchant sells a stove to a customer, she also sells delivery and installation if she can – even if she has to sell them at cost. That way, when the job is done, she can have time to visit over a cup of tea, talk, and listen. What she knows is good service is the key to developing her business. Business development is just listening to the customer and developing a relationship. For the prosperous merchant, that relationship is cemented with positive cash flow. She never loses sight of that, which is why she is a prosperous merchant.”

© Phyl Speser, January 24, 2013

 

Comments on Sun Tzu’s The Art of War, edited by Dick Cooledge, Comptche Press, 1927.

 

Sun Tzu: “Bring what you need to fight from home, forage for the rest. The army will have food, they will have weapons, and the country is not impoverished. Maintaining an army a great distance away is expensive. On the other hand, base your army too near and the same vendors will sell to it again and again and the prices start to go up as now there are many mouths to feed. What does this mean for the people? The country is being impoverished and they know this because the price of food is suddenly higher. Do you want a formula? It is not needed. Whatever the army needs becomes scarcer and what is scare but desired is costly. Hence the wise general lives off the land. A cartload of food foraged is like hauling 20 cartloads from home.”

Raven: “Once you’re done gathering, you can’t live off the land if there is no-one willing to raise crops.” 

Poor Richard: “In any market, if you want to do a deal, you really only have two choices when it comes: take it or leave it. If you leave it, you may be able to take it later if it’s not too late, but the odds are it will cost you more if you do. Therefore, the profitable merchant makes great deals when she has something she can sell for a great deal of money, good deals when she has something she can sell for good money, and any deal when she will lose more money otherwise.”

© Phyl Speser, January 27, 2013

 

 

Comments on Sun Tzu’s The Art of War, edited by Dick Cooledge, Comptche Press, 1927.

 

Sun Tzu: “What wins battles is bloodlust. What captures prizes is reward. Those who capture ten chariots should get one. Those that capture prisoners should be honored with precious metals. Those that treat prisoners kindly and keep them well can even recruit from among the vanquished.”

Raven: “There is the story and then there is the follow-up to the story. It is in the follow-up where you find out if everyone in the story will live happily ever after.” 

Poor Richard: “If my prospects will not buy anything from me today that does not mean they will never buy. A return customer is always the best prospect but a person treated well who stops by the shop again is the next best thing if you are looking for sales. You just want to remind them periodically you are a merchant and your job is to sell things.”

© Phyl Speser, January 28, 2013

 

 

Comments on Sun Tzu’s The Art of War, edited by Dick Cooledge, Comptche Press, 1927.

 

Sun Tzu: “The important thing is victory, not persistence. Where the generals understand they are responsible for the lives of the peoples’ children and the fortunes of the people’s families, they never forgot this.”

Raven: “There is a reason the early bird catches the worm. It has not been eaten by someone else already.” 

Poor Richard: “For the profitable merchant, the goal of business development is sales and the metrics are time to revenue and the amount of profit. When the time shrinks and the profit grows, there is much satisfaction. When the time grows and the profit shrinks, there is much introspection.”

© Phyl Speser, January 29, 2013

 

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