Resilient Profit Partners

Ideas for Adapting Your Business [Podcast]

What's Wrong with Your Business episode 003

If you are facing a crossroads, this could be a great opportunity to create a better version of your business. This episode provides 9 ways you can adapt to market changes, including how to evaluate both emotions and useful data for making risk intelligent decisions.

What’s Wrong with Your Business? Podcast

04/30/2020 – 21 minutes 6 seconds

Highlights and Take-Aways

Ways to Adapt Your Business

1. Adjust Your Expectations

When this is no longer the case, due to recent events, what is the new reality? And how will your expectations need to change?

Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs, Maslow's hierarchy, fears, Expectations, Physiological, Safety, Esteem, Belonging, Self-Actualization
Part 1 of Grace LaConte’s Hierarchy of Needs, Fears, and Expectations

Changing one’s expectations means being realistic about what is possible. It means measuring results and choosing to make risk intelligent decisions. And it means comparing those results to what you were hoping to achieve.

2. Set SMART and CLEAR Goals

Willpower alone doesn’t result in Big, Hairy, Audacious Goals. We also need to make sure they’re SMART and CLEAR.

Grace LaConte’s take on SMART and CLEAR goals

SMART Goals

CLEAR Goals

3. See a Long-Range View

It’s important for every business owner to look ahead at what could happen in the future.

Unfortunately, the fallout from COVID-19 may not be the only disaster your business will face. There will be other situations that will cause you to struggle. Company owners will face significant challenges and problems that you will need to see ahead of time, in order to adjust when they happen.

4. Identify New Trends

All of these could provide opportunities for you to “see around the bend” and make adjustments before your competitors.

5. Find a Niche Specialization

Although picking a niche specialization for your marketing is important, it’s not the only part of the strategic picture.

Finding a specific area of expertise that is different from everyone else in your field can take years to develop. It could appear like a lightning bolt (“Hey! That’s the one thing that makes me different!”); but it could take a lot of trial and error.

Find out what makes you different from other service providers and business owners in your field:

The 5 Elements of a Niche

29 Medical Conditions that Make an Excellent Niche Focus

Why would this help you as you’re looking to adapt?

Instead of trying to offer every option to lots of types of buyers (which is not very effective), why not offer services or products to a certain type of buyer… or focus on solving one particular problem?

6. See the Good

Analyzing what’s going wrong in businesses is important (it is, after all, the title of this podcast!) But there are also benefits to noticing the positive things that are happening.

This is especially helpful when you’re having a really bad week. You can leverage what you’re doing well and “turn up the volume” on what is working, and spend less effort on actions that aren’t leading to good results.

7. Be Honest

“Should I quit?”

This is a crucial question to ask. Is it time to stop trying?

No, you should keep pushing! Go beyond what you’re capable of!

This could be the case; maybe you’re not pushing yourself, and you should keep going. But are there signs that your business has reached an end?

For folks who decided to end their company, they feel relief once they stop running on the hamster wheel. Once they let go of others’ expectations and the pressure to keep forcing circumstances that are not producing what they wanted, they realize “I don’t have to keep trying!”

Quitting is not a sign of moral failure. It is possible to stop while you’re still ahead, as long as you can measure why you’re doing it.

Don’t stop just because it’s uncomfortable. But if you see signs of problems that you won’t be able to overcome, then quitting is more risk intelligent than continuing.

The Future Test

Imagine this: If nothing changes in your business, and things continue the way they are going right now, what will it look like in 5 years?

This picture might make you feel uncomfortable:

Two options:

Adapt and make adjustments. Dig deep to keep going, and make different decisions than you’ve done in the past.

Quit. Cut your losses, and realize this is not worth doing anymore.

There’s nothing wrong with either decision.

8. Measure Profit

Are your business decisions resulting in higher profit margins?

Many of our decisions are made emotionally. We put a lot of ourselves into our business: perceptions, personality traits, beliefs about the world. All of this comes out, especially in the company culture. The way you train your staff or independent contractors, and the processes you use to deliver services or products to customers, reflect where you place value. What you care about.

Something that does not change is profit. By measuring how each of your business actions results in profit margins (extra that’s left over after spending overhead) is a good indicator of whether the decision is good or not.

In deciding how to adapt your business, consider where you’ll get the highest profit margins. Not just what you hope will make money, but what you can actually measure.

9. Measure Success

This is related to #1, Adjusting Expectations and #2, Setting Goals.

What do you imagine of your own success?

Whether you are a business owner, professional, an independent contractor, or if you want to launch a business… what do you want that to look like?

How do you see yourself in the future? Do you want to leave a legacy? Have more financial security? To be generous and give your money to a worthy cause? To be well known? To have your ideas be and efforts be appreciated?

There are many ways to look at the emotion behind goal-setting. How do you measure that? We can look at the amount of change (quantitative), as well as the emotion and experience they bring (qualitative).

As you review how to adapt, ask what you would like to see in the success of your business – not just focusing on the daily activities, generating more sales, and offering new things for people to buy, but also how YOU want to be perceived as successful, and what you believe is important.


I hope this gives you some ideas for how to make adjustments in your business. Asking the deeper questions will help you to see around corners and peer into what could happen in the future.

Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/laconteconsulting/message

Interested in discussing your company’s challenges? Find out more here.

Grace LaConte is a Decision & Continuity Advisor who helps independent owners in manufacturing, B2B, and professional services to uncover hidden profit leaks and build stronger companies without burnout or added complexity. She uses proven frameworks and data-driven insights to improve cash flow, boost margins, and create lasting value. When not consulting, she develops practical tools that help owners protect their bottom line and grow businesses that last.

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