Students who pursue management studies always aim to work in one the large corporates and investment banks. While small businesses like plumbing and carpet cleaning may not sound as appealing as a Wall Street banker job, the learnings that you take home from all these different jobs are essentially the same. Small businesses, thanks to their limited resources are much more challenging in terms of management and this is exactly why they offer students a greater exposure towards leadership and management than a business school would.
Here are three local business strategies that could be great learning lessons for a management graduate.
Focus on profit
Revenue, turnover and valuation are all figures that make your business seem bigger than it really is. What matters in the end is how much profit you bring to yourself. Think about it - if you sell gym equipment that costs several thousand dollars a machine, you can quite easily reach $100K in monthly revenue by selling just a handful of machines. But would that mean you have made it? Not quite - the profit per sale is the determining factor and unless you have sufficient profit to show (after accounting for your own salary), such a business cannot sustain itself forever. So the first lesson to know - profit is everything; revenues and valuations mean nothing.
Less advertising & more referrals
How do large corporates get the word out on their new launches? Through advertising campaigns of course. But small businesses often run on tight budgets that ad campaigns are extremely few and far between. These business owners rely much more on word of mouth referrals compared to large businesses. What this essentially means is that the mantra customer is king resonates much more with local businesses than large corporates.
In her column on the Forbes magazine, Marian Berege, the owner of Rianns Wedding and Events Hire, a Perth based events management company, says that although small business owners operate on shoestring budgets which restricts their operational freedom, many consider it a blessing in disguise since customers have come to realize that they get better value out of dealing with small businesses than with large ones. Ultimately, there are more repeat orders and referrals for such businesses.
Do things that don't scale
The advice for startup entrepreneurs to do things that don't scale was popularized by Paul Graham, the popular owner of the startup incubator firm, Y Combinator. Paul argues that in your initial days in a startup, you must not shy away from pursuing customer acquisition strategies that may not be realistic models in a large setting. Today, it is not uncommon for even large corporates to have incubation divisions where such marketing strategies are practiced. In truth however, small businesses have always been known to pursue such marketing techniques. Be it distributing fliers near a university campus or walking door to door asking tenants if they need landscaping, small business owners have done it all. It's only now that it is catching up at large corporates.
It is not true that you learn more in large businesses compared to small ones. The truth however is that the bitter truths of running a business are more often experienced in small businesses compared to large companies where there is often enough buffer to take in any setbacks.
Here are three local business strategies that could be great learning lessons for a management graduate.
Focus on profit
Revenue, turnover and valuation are all figures that make your business seem bigger than it really is. What matters in the end is how much profit you bring to yourself. Think about it - if you sell gym equipment that costs several thousand dollars a machine, you can quite easily reach $100K in monthly revenue by selling just a handful of machines. But would that mean you have made it? Not quite - the profit per sale is the determining factor and unless you have sufficient profit to show (after accounting for your own salary), such a business cannot sustain itself forever. So the first lesson to know - profit is everything; revenues and valuations mean nothing.
Less advertising & more referrals
How do large corporates get the word out on their new launches? Through advertising campaigns of course. But small businesses often run on tight budgets that ad campaigns are extremely few and far between. These business owners rely much more on word of mouth referrals compared to large businesses. What this essentially means is that the mantra customer is king resonates much more with local businesses than large corporates.
In her column on the Forbes magazine, Marian Berege, the owner of Rianns Wedding and Events Hire, a Perth based events management company, says that although small business owners operate on shoestring budgets which restricts their operational freedom, many consider it a blessing in disguise since customers have come to realize that they get better value out of dealing with small businesses than with large ones. Ultimately, there are more repeat orders and referrals for such businesses.
Do things that don't scale
The advice for startup entrepreneurs to do things that don't scale was popularized by Paul Graham, the popular owner of the startup incubator firm, Y Combinator. Paul argues that in your initial days in a startup, you must not shy away from pursuing customer acquisition strategies that may not be realistic models in a large setting. Today, it is not uncommon for even large corporates to have incubation divisions where such marketing strategies are practiced. In truth however, small businesses have always been known to pursue such marketing techniques. Be it distributing fliers near a university campus or walking door to door asking tenants if they need landscaping, small business owners have done it all. It's only now that it is catching up at large corporates.
It is not true that you learn more in large businesses compared to small ones. The truth however is that the bitter truths of running a business are more often experienced in small businesses compared to large companies where there is often enough buffer to take in any setbacks.