Allocating time for developing systems is a difficult task for busy business owners. If you’re familiar with our blog, or any of the E-Myth books, you understand the value of developing systems. But adding more work to your already extremely busy schedule can leave you feeling overwhelmed and frustrated. Even with a regular chunk of time allocated to systems development and improvement, it can be difficult for even the most savvy business owners to create and develop systems.
There’s a variety of ways you can approach systematization, and different businesses require different systems. Some systems are common to all businesses, although even these have variations on a common theme. For example, an income statement is an information system common to all businesses, but there are countless ways to prepare and present even this most common of information systems.
Our first recommendation is to get an E-Myth Business Coach. Our coaches are uniquely qualified to help you implement the systems essential to business success. You may also want to attend the Creating Your Business System virtual seminar which will help you begin the process of creating a systems-dependent, business. But here are a few tips to get you started right now.
Believe it or not, your systems development starts with a system. You need a system for developing systems in your business. While that may sound a bit trite, this is where so many people get tripped up. The reason you want systems in the first place is to produce order, structure and predictability. You want to approach your systems development in the same way… with a Systems Strategy.
A Systems Strategy will save you valuable time and reduce the frustration and stress of system development. In our coaching programs, we use E-Myth’s proprietary Seven Centers of Management Attention™ model as the basis for developing your Systems Strategy. This model demonstrates the integrative nature of any business. It contains the three essential business disciplines, Money, Management, and Marketing, and the three essential business processes, Client Fulfillment, Lead Generation, Lead Conversion, and finally Leadership at the center of the model.
If you use the Seven Centers of Management Attention model to guide your systems identification and development efforts, you’ll have a holistic or “360-degree” view of your business. It gives you the ability to consider the business as a whole, and then you can break it down to look at the major divisions of business activity. The Marketing Center is your marketing system; the Money Center is your financial system; and so on. Each of the Seven Centers may break into smaller component systems, which may break into still smaller systems, just like the root system of the tree.
The benefit of using the Seven Centers model is that it allows you to approach systems development with structure. You can look at this model and visually identify where you need to focus your attention to begin developing your systems and best practices. You might take a look at this and recognize that the area of Lead Conversion is where your business needs the most attention right now. Then you can create a plan that will guide your systems development efforts in that area. Viola! You have your first system and it’s in an area that really matters.
Start with the “big picture” of your business as a whole, and work your way through systems, subsystems, and sub-subsystems until you decide that further systemization is an exercise in the trivial.
If nothing’s jumping out at you, try examining each Center, and then ask: “What systems do I need for Money?” or “What systems do I need for Lead Conversion?” In this way, you will uncover the systems that will support each Center and ultimately, the systems that will lead to increased efficiencies and greater results.
One question we hear a lot is: how much is too much? Just think about it practically: you will certainly need a system for recruiting and hiring employees, for example, but you almost certainly will not need a system for sorting paper clips by size and color.
And remember, creating systems in your business is a team effort. As the business owner, it is your responsibility to lead systems development in your business. This means you set the stage for development, define the strategy for systems development and then involve your staff. Many times they are the ones working the systems on a day-to-day basis. Do not get caught up in all of the systems work. Involve your most important key players.
How have you implemented systems in your business? Have you used the Seven Centers of Management Attention model to become a systems-dependent business? What does your business look like now that it is systematized? Post a comment and tell us about it, we love to hear your stories.
I'm a small business productivity coach (www.bureau4betterbusiness.co.uk). Is there any proprietary software out there that can lead you through the process of documenting your business's bluprint and provide a repository for the strategies, standards, processes etc.?
AJ
Submitted Jan 13, 2010 8:05 AM
Alan, like you, I have looked for such software to document processes, but there's nothing that sticks out. Instead, I've relied on WIKI's (which is a great approach), spreadsheets (great for checklists), and Mindjet's MindManager is a tremendous tool. If your clients are large and have Sharepoint in place, consider using that system for documentation. Otherwise, I still think the WIKI approach would be the best approach.
Submitted Jan 13, 2010 10:04 AM
We are currently working on such a piece of software. If you would like to be made aware of when it is released, you can add your e-mail to our newsletter or follow us on twitter. Thank you E-Myth for giving us the idea!
http://www.productivecomputing.com/
or
Submitted Jan 13, 2010 10:15 AM
I have used Touchstone which uses a different business organizational model.
Submitted Jan 14, 2010 12:45 PM
I have had an Emyth business coach who helped me to see that if ever I was frustrated with something in the business to realise that it wasn't my fault or any of the staff that were to blame. It was just the simple fact that there wasn't a system in place. she called this the key frustration process.
When you get the mentoring they provide you with a really easy system template that allows you to document all your systems. Its been alot easier than I thought although I must admit I felt like I was shototing in the wind before I had a coach to explain it all.
Submitted Jan 15, 2010 3:04 AM
I don't understand the WIKI approach. What is it?
Submitted Jan 16, 2010 9:23 AM
I took the leadership intensive course in the fall (which I highly recommend) and we reviewed the seven centers. I made these the framework for my operations manual and even the model of how I set up our shared drive to store templates and internal documents. This alignment has really provided clarity as to what needs to be done, what needs to be documented and how to find the related documents when needed
Ken Rogers, MBA, CPA
CEO | My Fiscal Office, LLC
Phone: 1-888-756-3606 x701
Email: krogers@myfiscaloffice.com
Check out the free resources on our website, www.myfiscaloffice.com and sign-up for our free monthly newsletter.
Submitted Jan 20, 2010 2:10 PM
We just finished our OrgPlanner software that allows business owners to record their company's annual goals, setup their organization chart and define all of the standards and procedures assigned to each position within the company.
For more information you can review it at:
http://www.productivecomputing.com/solutions/orgplanner-id-116/
Submitted Jan 29, 2010 10:48 AM
Dave T asked: "I don't understand the WIKI approach. What is it?"
Mark G's suggestion to compile the Operations Manual over time in a WIKI format is nothing short of Genius! Well done Mark! This is one of the best ideas I have heard since I signed up with E-Myth Mastery.
Until now I have been writing the Operations Manual for my business in .doc format (converted to .pdf for hard copy printing) on my desktop.
From now on, I will convert everything to WIKI!
For those looking to do the same, a free WIKI engine is available at http://wiki.zoho.com/
To answer your question, Dave, a WIKI is a web page (which like all web pages can be accessed anywhere in the world from an internet-connected computer) which can quickly and simply be updated by anyone with authorisation through the browser.
This allows for multiple authors to make edits and updates to the same document from multiple locations at any time of day.
A WIKI document includes a history of 'Previous Versions' so that if an edit is made to the document which is later considered to be undesirable, the document can be 'rolled-back' to any of its previous versions.
What better format to write an Operations Manual in than WIKI?
1) Systems processes may be quickly and easily updated. (By anyone!)
2) There is no danger of someone accidentally following the 'old way' of doing things (because... there's only one document, universally accessed by everyone through the browser).
3) Any ambiguous instructions may be highlighted and asked about by those reading a Systems Process authored by another company member. Those instructions may then be clarified and updated by the original author.
I love it Mark, what a superb idea!
Submitted Feb 12, 2010 3:04 AM
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