More Clients Memorandum
The 20% rule
Posted on July 21st, 2013.For years I've been teaching that if you want to run a thriving business you need to be spending 20% of your time on marketing.
One day a week. Two half days. 90 minutes a day.
However you cut it, you need to devote that 20% of your time to make an impact.
Sure, you can let it slide for a while. Live off past investments.
But in the end it'll catch up. You'll go from feast to famine.
One of the best decisions I ever made early on when I was setting up my business was to invest more than 20% of my time on marketing. More like 40% really.
And yet a lot of people I speak to struggle to hit 20%.
It seems like a vicious circle. You need to be billing all the time, so you can't spare any time for marketing. And because you're not marketing much, you have to accept whatever clients come along. Usually not the highest paying ones. So you have to bill all the time to make ends meet.
And so the circle continues.
If you're going to break the circle you need to make a sacrifice. (Sorry, the alternative of just getting lucky isn't something I'd recommend waiting around for).
That might be taking home a lower income for a while (or burning up some savings) while you build your pipeline and your marketing assets.
Personally I sacrificed time. When I wrote my first lead magnet, Client Breakthrough, I did it over a couple of weekends. And I'd regularly stay up beyond midnight after a long day working with clients to do a blog post or to study a training course on a marketing technique I wanted to master.
I still work pretty hard today. But the investment's given me a lot more freedom and a business that's not reliant on my personal time to make money for me.
Are you investing 20% of your time on marketing?
If not, and you see yourself in that vicious circle, how are you going to break out?
Don't just think about it or worry about it. Make a plan for how you're going to deal with it. Then do something about it.
Joining Momentum Club so you get a shortcut to the most effective marketing strategies for professionals might be a good start.
Dedicating extra time every evening to blogging, or creating a lead magnet, or working on your social media presence could help.
Getting out and meeting potential clients at events they attend will help.
But you gotta do something.