
Are your gatekeepers costing your company money? Most businesses have them, especially if the company has more than 10 employees. A gatekeeper is defined as the person who is responsible for a certain task or job (or the person you need to go through to get to the decision maker).
Gatekeepers are pretty much needed. They are there to ensure that employees and owners of the company follow the established company protocol of procedures and systems. They usually get credit for running a tight ship. It is great when your gatekeeper is doing his or her job and then some.
What I would like to discuss is when your gatekeepers are actually costing you more money than you realize in lost sales and business opportunities.
Consider these scenarios:
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I was speaking to an old friend who recently has closed his business down. This really got me thinking about why some ecommerce businesses succeed and why others don’t. I compiled the top 7 reasons why I believe businesses — whether they are ecommerce or bricks-and-mortar — fail.
- No plan or poor planning - Due to lack of planning, business owners fail to include all the necessary components of running a business. More time is needed to do a thorough due-diligence process (customer research, competitor research, product demand). It needs to be as comprehensive as possible and include as many expenses and revenues that may or may not apply, but if you put it down on paper, you’ve at least thought of it and hopefully did a full-on research. Not having a clear target market or customer base is a the result of poor planning. If a business is planned carefully, then the entrepreneur can be laser focus on what needs to be done and followed, thus not get easily distracted by the many opportunities of shiny pennies of there.
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I recently spoke to a friend of mine who had to close his business down. I’m feeling his pain but mustered up the courage to ask him to share his story. I’d promised to keep his identity confidential because the point here is not who he is but what he’s learned as an entrepreneur.
These are the questions I asked:
Shirley: What inspired you to get into Ecommerce
Friend: I think like everyone, you must like what you do. If you do not have a passion, a desire to be in the field you are in, it will be short lived. When you wake up in the morning and you are thinking of what needs to get done when you get into the office, you should be able to smile.
Shirley: What is your proudest moment when you knew that you’re on track or it felt right for you?
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