13 Experts Share Small Business Growth Strategies

Want to improve the odds that your small business goes big? Don’t feel you have to go it alone. Small Business Development Center (SBDC) consultants and advisors provide free consulting to help small business owners start or expand their businesses.This month, America’s SBDC—which is comprised of some 1,000 centers nationwide— celebrates forty years of helping small businesses grow, and the results are impressive.As a result of their work with thousands of small business owners, they have unique insights into what it takes to succeed. Here, 13 SBDC pros share strategies for helping your small business think—and grow—big.1. Don’t try to give birth to an adultYou don’t expect a baby to perform or respond as a college graduate. Just like rearing a child, businesses are born, reared, evolve, and mature. You don’t start the business and expect mega success overnight. That path usually leads to disaster or collapse. What we think the experience and effort is going to be when we start—and what it actually is—are worlds apart.We start the business and end up making it up as we go along, learning and adjusting, and just when we think we have it down (or mastered the age group) the game changes and we have to adapt and learn and lead again. We lead but we learn, too. The business, the customers, the market, all teach us what we need to know. Business owners who stay very present, patient, observant, and nurturing, taking the slow path and keeping careful pace with the business (their baby) as it matures through stages, like us, ultimately reduce the level of their risks and grow the business more securely to big over time.—Lorraine Allen, consultant and former Regional Director, Small Business Development Center at The College of New Jersey2. Get connectedNetwork with anyone and everyone in your region and industry. Establish solid connections and maintain those relationships. Choose 20 to 30 individuals or companies that are large enough to offer you something relative to your work and maintain contact with these folks. At least monthly, shoot them an email checking in, wishing them happy holidays, or asking them to grab coffee with you. When the time comes that you need to ask for something, you’ll be comfortable doing so, and they’ll be more likely to say yes.Leave a good impression (and a business card) with just about anyone you come into contact with. You never know whose hand you’re going to shake that could open a major door for you in the future.—Alison Lane, Business Advisor, Maine Small Business Development Center3. Think like a franchisorSuccessful franchises have very specific systems in place so that the model is easily duplicated when new branches open. If a small business starts thinking about these systems from the early business planning stage, it becomes a part of their business model and gives them a competitive advantage. Create systems or procedures for everything inside the business (inventory ordering/management, bookkeeping, human resources management, culture, etc.) and everything outside the business (customer relations, marketing, branding, atmosphere, culture, etc.). Even if a company does not want to franchise, these systems will put a small company in a position to grow.—Sue Pitts, Regional Director, Iowa Western Community College SBDC4. Aim for these three essentialsI have been a consultant for 19 years and have seen businesses fail and succeed for many reasons. Long-time successful businesses seem to embody personal characteristics I call the “DOC” theory. They have these three personal skills: discipline, organization, and communication. They are disciplined in getting work done on time and carrying out goals; they are organized enough to know where everything is and manage their time well; and they have the ability to communicate well with others. These are the backbone of interpersonal skills that lay the groundwork for a product or service that is needed.—Curt Walczak, Business Consultant Northeast Minnesota SBDC5. Take a phased approachClients who take a phased approach to growing their business are typically more successful. In a phased approach, the client will start small and then grow the business in phases and not all at once. Using this method, clients test the market and make adjustments to their product or service while they are still small. By the time the business has scaled up, it has honed its product or service to meet the market needs. The phased approach also allows them to begin realizing revenue that can then be used to support the next phase of growth.—Shannon Byers, Center Director/Business Advisor, Maine SBDC at Coastal Enterprises, Inc. 6. Create your growth teamSuccessful business owners are proactive and intentional when it comes to their growth. They plan in advance and use their team of resources—their SBDC, their CPA, and their banker—strategically. They make sure that “the team” is on-board with the anticipated growth. With checkpoints in place, the growth is monitored and controlled. “Runaway” growth can be just as dangerous as no growth at all.—CJ Johnson, Capital Development Advisor, Arizona SBDC7. Ask for what you really needIf you are fundraising for debt or venture capital, whatever financing you think you want to ask for is nine times out of 10 two or three times more than what you really need. Do a 24-month financial cash flow projection about the estimated expenses you will incur during your runway for growth period. Seed capital should cover the first one to two years of operating and R&D expenses to help with commercialization. Focus on the essentials first and then go for the bigger ask when you have justifiable market demand that requires funding to scale.—Brett Dickstein, Business Advisor for Access to Capital, South Bay SBDC hosted at El Camino College and the Los Angeles Regional SBDC Lead Center8. Just startNo one begins at the finish line, so just start. Go get that first client, make that first sale, start making money, then ramp it up. Strong, healthy businesses start at the beginning, then build and grow into the businesses they imagined. It’s easy to get caught up in the vision one might have for the business, but pivoting happens almost immediately. The faster you start taking the first steps, the faster you can begin navigating the changes that come from learning about your business and your customers. The result is strong, steady growth. The finish line is always sweeter if you start at the start.—Yolanda A. Facio, Business Analyst, Maricopa SBDC9. Work with what you haveToo many of our clients feel like they have to start with the “-est” of everything. They need the “bigg-est” location, the “b-est” equipment, the “new-est” technology. But there really is something to be said for shoestrings. Many successful entrepreneurs and small business owners have built remarkable success stories from basic beginnings. Eric Ries calls it “minimum viable product,” but the concept of getting a business open by starting with essentials and adding from there has been a hallmark of long-term growth from well before the day that Sam changed Walton’s to Walmart.This doesn’t mean that you don’t go all in; it’s just a reminder that you don’t have to start at the finish line. From the beginning, define the phases that you envision your business growing through to the point where it looks like you want it to look. Then, get started and work through those phases as your cash flow—and customer base—allows.—Kevin Lust, Director, Illinois Small Business Development Center at Lincoln Land Community College10. Never stop working on your business planThere are parts of your business plan that will never be “complete,” such as industry trends, projections, competitors, pricing, and core clients. Many small businesses feel like they are past the business plan stage after a few years as they look to “go big,” but keeping the business plan updated (especially these particular sections) is just as important on day one as it is on day 1000.And don’t lose sight of your core clients. As you get more revenue, you can do more marketing or broaden your core client base, but it always comes down to the core clients, who they are, and how much they are willing to pay.—Peter G. Harriman, Center Director, Portland Maine SBDC11. Be uniqueEntrepreneurs can grow faster by identifying one or two niche markets where they stand out from the competition, and create marketing campaigns that address the specific needs and characteristics of that niche. Prospects in that niche or market segment are more likely to connect with and respond to the message, resulting in faster growth.Once a critical mass of customers are built in that market segment, momentum takes over and will often organically expand, both in that niche, as well as into other market segments. In addition, resources can be diverted to developing another niche.Many entrepreneurs resist moving from general branding and marketing of their products or services to specific targeted marketing because they feel they are excluding the broader market segment. But the challenge of stopping at broad message marketing is that it takes too long and costs too much to build a solid customer base. Be unique—you’ll stand out!—Harriet Parker, Manager, Illinois SBDC at Waubonsee Community College12. Delegate, systematize, and measure#1. Delegate. In order to grow, you must be able to satisfy more client projects, hence you must have the production and service capacity, as well as the internal capacity to manage all business operations. This means you need more “hands on deck,” and you, as the business owner, must be able to let others develop some of these activities.#2. Systematize. Some sort of automation has to take place so more things can get done easier and faster. Having a system in place allows a process to be fulfilled in an orderly manner, with an expected result from a specific input. It allows you to manage time more efficiently and lets you anticipate how long it will take you to deliver a service or product to your customer.#3. Measure. You can’t improve what you don’t measure. Once you define your business goals, you need to identify the key performance indicators that help you reach them, and these must be tracked so you can see how far or close you are from your goals. Then you can define larger objectives and more ambitious business projects.—Eileen Devereux Dailey, Business Consultant, Arkansas SBTDC at UA Little Rock13. Don’t give upIf your product or service is something that is not provided in your area, have a plan but be flexible. Learn to love to sell, sell what people want—not what you love, floor it, and don’t stop for anything. Never give up on your dreams.—Todd Rausch, Regional Director, Western Iowa Tech Community College SBDCRELATED: SBA, SCORE, and SBDCs Explained—3 Essential Local Resources for Small Business Owners