Modern Business Magazine September 2016 | Page 41

MODERN BUSINESS However, your ability to do this is highly dependent on the kind of work that customers contract your business to do. And this, in turn, is dependent on the effectiveness of your business development effort. Let’s start by defining what business development actually is. Business development is not “sales” – or even marketing. Somewhere along the line, though, the terms have become interchangeable. • The purpose of business development is to build value that customers can buy. • The purpose of sales (and marketing) is to go out and sell value, once it has been created. The most successful businesses are those where everyone in the business understands the role that they play in creating value for a customer. This includes the front-line staff who deliver the work and who interact with customers every day; the managers who support those people in their role; and the senior leaders who free up staff to pursue value creation projects and to pilot new programs. The best new business ideas often come from the coal-face of service delivery. Recently, I ran a Contract Leadership Program with a human services organisation. Their front-line managers include tertiary-qualified social workers, counselors and psychologists. Working together, we had already doubled the organisation’s revenue by bringing in new government contracts from Justice and Health, both markets where the organisation had aspirations to grow. The program was designed to help the front-line managers to identify opportunities for improvement and growth within the existing funded programs they manage. Sixteen managers participated, and it’s fair to say that in the beginning, many struggled with embracing business development as part of their role. By the end of the program, though, things had changed. Everyone had come up with new ideas to grow the business by bringing continual improvement, best practice and innovation to their customers. One manager was so enthused by this prospect that she approached her main contact in a Victorian government department immediately with an idea for a new program. She walked out of that meeting with a commitment to $900,000 in additional funding. Problems can arise when we treat business development as a function, and not an intention. • When we rely on salespeople to find new business, we ignore the people who interact with customers every day and who have access to insights and opportunities. • When we rely on proposal teams to write proposals, we ignore the knowledge of the people who deliver the service every day and who know it best. We are also letting those people abdicate from the need to sell what they do, as well as just “do” what they do. • And when we rely on our good track record as the incumbent supplier to see us through a contract renewal, we leave ourselves vulnerable to being picked off by competitors. Only 50% of incumbent suppliers end up keeping the customers they have worked very hard to win and to serve. This isn’t because they are doing a bad job – most do quite a good job. It’s because they are still doing the same job, and this just doesn’t cut it with customers any more. As an HR Director or practitioner, here are five ways that you can contribute to the long-term business September 2016 ModernBusiness 41