Decision Making In A Home Based Online Business (3)
Information You Need To Make Decisions
There is no disputing the fact that to make decisions, you need
information. Without information, you are guessing in a vacuum.
If you guess instead of decide, you are reducing your chances
of success with your business.
Company Decision Making
A large company will probably have, or at least should have,
quite sophisticated management information systems. The systems
will be computerized, bringing information from all the key
areas of the business. The management team will have a process
for reviewing and monitoring that information, through the
circulation of summary reports, meetings (regular and ad hoc),
and other means of communication.
Those same sources of management information will be used as a
basis for important decision making. Past sales reports; cost
reports for different products, manufacturing processes, and
cost centres; market intelligence; material cost reports;
supplier reliability reports. Depending on what type of
decision is being made, some or all of these, plus more, may be
taken into account.
There is no doubt that such information should be crucial to
making key decisions in that business. However, some companies
fall into the trap of allowing the information system to become
an internal industry in itself, with no checks and balances. If
a company becomes complacent, if the whole process becomes
routine and habitual, then the value of those systems
dissipates. It turns the information systems themselves into a
bottomless pit for management time, bringing no valuable
return.
Let me illustrate. In the early 1990’s, there was an
internationally known British company, which, like most
companies, had a budget setting process each year. That was an
important time for decisions; absolutely critical in one of the
most competitive markets in the world. That particular company
was near the top of the tree, if not at the top. It had won a
reputation for modernization, innovation, and efficiency, in an
industry bogged down by state intervention across the world.
The whole budget setting process went on for many months before
the start of the financial year. Every manager of every
department was geared up for it, and it had become a highlight
of management activity. So how did they go about deciding the
next year’s budget for each department?
Across the board, in each department, their starting point was
the current year’s budget. Each manager would add a bit here
and there for anything new they needed to spend money on. We’re
talking many millions of pounds here. Then the Finance Director
and Chief Executive, as they went through their budget setting
meetings, would get individual managers to knock off a bit to
make the cost base look better. So, they would end up with a
budget very much like the last, regardless of whether the last
budget was nonsense.
One year the Chief Executive decided the whole system was
flawed. He threw out the system of “top down” budgeting, and
forced every department to start from zero. They now had to
justify every penny they spent to get their budget for the
year. Out went the complacency and blind acceptance of what had
been happening in the past. From then on, the management were
forced to justify what they were going to spend. Each item of
expenditure became a decision, rather than a habit. Habits
continue unless you “decide” to stop them. Fewer habits and
better decisions ultimately means higher profitability.
I can say with confidence that such examples of poor use of
management information systems is common. Often, too, users of
those systems come to accept them as gospel truth, when in
reality there may be errors in the figures or they may include
a lot of estimates. They may, on the face of it, appear to be
sophisticated, but under the surface they are often not.
Applying Company Lessons to Your Own Business
So, why have I spent so long writing about large companies when
you are probably just a one man band?
First and foremost, you will have an advantage over many others
if you are fully conscious of the fact that you are making
business decisions. I have given the illustration because you
are more likely to remember that than a whole load of theory.
It is a hook for your memory, which I hope may aid you in
remembering as you go through your business life:
“I need to make decisions based on good, accurate information,
and not let my decision making becoming a habit that skirts the
truth.”
It is amazing how differently you may view a situation given
hard facts, rather than just your memory and perception, mixed
in with emotion and mood. A few years ago my partner at the
time wanted to drop one of our magazine clients, because they
brought in only about $300 a month. It took only a few minutes
to change her mind. I worked out the income per hour from that
magazine, and out of the 7 magazines we handled, that had by
far the highest income per hour. That was a simple decision,
and one we were able to make because of a simple part of a very
basic information system – a record of time spent on each
client.
It is not possible, in a short article, to give a comprehensive
list of all the records you should keep, and how you should use
them, to aid your decision making. Whatever you do, do not
become over enamoured with any systems you set up to get the
information you need. You need accuracy and relevancy; you need
only the information necessary for the decisions you are likely
to need to make.
In your business, you know your cost base, markets, clients,
customers, suppliers and the way they interact within your
business. Think for a while what type of decisions you are
going to need to make, and then ensure you will always have up
to date and accurate information in order to make those
decisions. Here are a few closing tips:
• Much of the information you will need will be of a financial
nature. When you set up your accounts for statutory purposes,
use a software package, like Quickbooks, that allows you to
break down figures into cost categories, products, markets etc.
For example, if you have a bill from an advertising medium you
have used for more than one product, ensure you can input not
just the total (for statutory purposes) but can then allocate
the costs to each product A, B and C etc. That will give you a
lot of information that can be summarized quickly for decision
making. Similarly with sales income or commissions. A cheque
from Clickbank may include several products; ensure you break
it down.
• Try to master the use of spreadsheets. They can be used for
simulations or “what if?” scenarios in decision making, and
once set up can be very powerful assistants.
• If you do use spreadsheets, ensure they are 100% right before
using them for decision making. Complex spreadsheets in
particular can harbour mistakes in formulae that have not been
immediately evident. If information is not accurate, it is
dangerous or worthless, usually both.
• If you are spreading your time between separate sources of
income, try to keep a rough record of time spent on each. As a
sole proprietor with no staff, time can be particularly
critical; you only have a limited time each day to work, you
want to make the most of it.
• Try to set aside some quiet time when there is a need to make
a significant decision of any sort. Think first about the
information you need to make a good decision, and only when all
that is in place should you “decide”. That will help neutralize
moods and emotions that may distort your decisions.
• If you have a decision to make, and find you do not have the
necessary information from your records, ask yourself if you
need to alter your own record keeping for future decisions.
What I have aimed to do with this series of articles is to
increase your awareness of the need to separate business from
personal decision making. In your own business they do overlap,
but you will make better decisions if you not only separate
them, but treat them differently also.
I have also tried to encourage you to be aware of the need to
gather relevant information that you may require in the future
for making decisions. Often, being prepared right at the
beginning will make things a lot better for you later on.
As your business grows, you may need to think about some of the
more sophisticated and statistical decision making tools and
techniques. I will not go into those here, just ask you to
remember the lesson from the British company I mentioned
earlier. Bigger is not always better. Accuracy and relevancy
are always better.
About The Author: Roy Thomsitt is the owner, webmaster and
author of www.change-direction.com , a website in about
working online in a home based business. He has a background in
the UK of offline advertising, with practical experience of
working from home in marketing since 1995, plus 2 years of
experience with online marketing.
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