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The Financial Side of a Professional Services Firm: An Interview with Profitability Coach Bill McDermott

June 7, 2022 by John Ray

Profitability Coach Bill McDermott
North Fulton Studio
The Financial Side of a Professional Services Firm: An Interview with Profitability Coach Bill McDermott
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The Profitability Coach

The Financial Side of a Professional Services Firm: An Interview with Profitability Coach Bill McDermott

Profitability Coach Bill McDermott, who works with law firms, engineering firms, consulting firms, and other professional services practices, joined host John Ray to discuss the financial side of a professional services firm. Bill discussed why he started his practice and how it has developed, when to take on debt, the biggest financial mistakes he sees, buying hard assets such as real estate, planning for an exit, and much more.

The Price and Value Journey is presented by John Ray and produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX®.

 Bill McDermott, The Profitability Coach

Bill McDermott, The Profitability Coach

Bill has worked with hundreds of business owners. They are good people with their hearts in the right place. What they don’t have is the perspective to see the blind spots in their business. Knowing which levers to pull and when to pull them can lead to a thriving and profitable business.

He loves to help business owners have the business they want by becoming better financial managers.

Bill McDermott graduated from Wake Forest University and launched a career in banking that spanned 32 years. He first started out as the “repo man” as part of Wachovia Bank’s management training program before locating to Atlanta to work for Peachtree Bank, which later became SunTrust. There, he distinguished himself as a great producer of loans and deposits for the bank, climbing the ranks to ultimately become a Group Vice President in the Commercial Banking division. In 2001, Bill’s group won the SunTrust Cup for being the highest performing commercial banking group in the company.

Over the next 8 years, Bill worked in community banking, becoming a top producer for IronStone Bank and later helping to double Embassy National Bank’s initial capital in loan production within 15 months. However, in early 2009 as the Great Recession was rapidly altering the economy, Bill’s position as Chief Commercial Lender was eliminated.

As Bill searched for what was “next”, he realized that he had a desire to share the treasure trove of knowledge of banking and financial acumen he had built. Bill combined his sales success from his banking/insurance experience with his deep financial/analytical skills and launched McDermott Financial Solutions in April 2009. His purpose quickly became “making business owners better financial managers”. Over the past 11 years, he has served over 200 clients by delivering results-oriented insights, helping to take them from financial confusion to financial clarity.

Bill currently sits on the board of directors for Pinnacle Bank. He also hosts a monthly podcast, ProfitSense, which features stories of successful business owners and the professionals that advise them. When Bill is not working, you can find him on the golf course, gardening, spending time with his family, and leading a small group at his local church.

Website | LinkedIn | Instagram

 

TRANSCRIPT

John Ray: [00:00:00] And hello again. I’m John Ray on the Price and Value Journey. And I want to welcome Bill McDermott to the show. Bill is here to chat about the financial side of a professional services firm.

John Ray: [00:00:13] Just a little background on Bill. Bill is the founder and CEO of McDermott Financial Solutions. He serves as a profitability coach to his clients, which include a lot of professional services firms. When business owners want to increase their profitability and they don’t have the expertise to know where to start or what to do, Bill leverages his talents, his knowledge, and his relationships from 32 years as a banker – somehow he made 32 years. I’m going to have to ask him how he did that – to identify the hurdles that get in the way, and create a plan to deliver profitability that his clients never thought possible.

John Ray: [00:00:57] Bill also serves as a treasurer for the Atlanta Executive Forum. He’s previously held positions as a board member for the Kennesaw State University Entrepreneurship Center and the Gwinnett Habitat for Humanity Chapter. And he has been treasurer for CEO Netweavers. He’s a graduate of Wake Forest University – go, Demon Deacons. And he and his wife, Martha, are just about to celebrate anniversary number 45. Congratulations on that, Bill. And I have to plug his podcast, ProfitSense with Bill McDermott, coming up on three years, right, Bill?

Bill McDermott: [00:01:36] It is. And it’s a pleasure to be here, John. Thanks so much for having me.

John Ray: [00:01:40] Absolutely. So, I want to give a little background on you. You spent three decades as a banker, how –

Bill McDermott: [00:01:54] How did I survive?

John Ray: [00:01:55] Well, you could certainly answer that question. But, I guess, how did you come to the choice of the practice that you started?

Bill McDermott: [00:02:05] Yeah. That’s a great question. I’ll give you the short version of a longer story. So, it was April of 2009, we had just entered The Great Recession, we were in a banking crisis. And the CEO of the bank that I was working for at the time walked in my office – it was actually on my wife’s birthday – and he said, “Bill, you’re doing a great job, but we’ve got to cut cost. You were the last one in, so you’re the first one out. We’re eliminating your position.” And I was done.

Bill McDermott: [00:02:36] And so, we had two daughters in college. I had to figure out a way to earn an income. So, first thing I did was pray. And I said, “Okay. You’ve closed the door. Open a window, and would you mind putting a little neon around it for me so I can see it?” But all kidding aside, in 32 years of banking, I saw that business owners were usually great salespeople or great operations people. Where they struggled was in the area of financial management. They didn’t learn it in school. And when you’re the owner of the business, there’s no on-the-job training because the buck stops with you.

Bill McDermott: [00:03:16] So, part of my why is, because I saw business owners struggle with financial management, I said, “Can I launch a business leveraging my expertise and knowledge in banking and help business owners become better financial managers?” So, the business started with that in mind. And my goal is to really, hopefully, leave a legacy of making business owners better financial managers in their business.

John Ray: [00:03:41] And you just celebrated a business anniversary, speaking of anniversary.

Bill McDermott: [00:03:45] Yeah. So, April was 13 years, and still going strong.

John Ray: [00:03:51] Congratulations.

Bill McDermott: [00:03:53] Yeah. Thank you so much.

John Ray: [00:03:54] That’s awesome. I think a lot of professional services practitioners, they get into business and then they pivot along the way, not pandemic related pivot, but their business morphs naturally. Yours has morphed along the way. Why don’t you explain that and kind of the decision points around that.

Bill McDermott: [00:04:17] Yeah. So, when you’re in the middle of a banking crisis, a lot of businesses are losing money. And so, I actually started negotiating workout plans on behalf of the business owner with their bank. You know, who better to negotiate a problem loan? A banker with another banker.

Bill McDermott: [00:04:37] And so, I successfully did that for several years. I had one client that I actually worked with for three years. We started with $16 million in debt, worked that down to a million. And, actually, the bank drew a line in the sand and said we’re not renewing anymore. Forced us into bankruptcy. And the bank eventually settled for $0.10 on the dollar, so we got $1,000,000 for $100,000 and, basically, negotiated out. So, that’s really how I started.

Bill McDermott: [00:05:10] When you negotiate a problem for a business owner, you become on the team because you two have been through it together. And so, what then happened is I had business owners asking me to come out and sit with them and go through their monthly financials. Well, I’m not the sharpest tool in the shed, but pretty soon I figured out, you know, a monthly meeting going over financial performance with the business owner, I’m coaching them how to be better.

Bill McDermott: [00:05:45] And so, what morphed is, is doing workout loans, actually became a practice where I’m coaching business owners on how to be better financial managers. And then, probably sandwiched between that is I have some of my clients want to leverage my banking expertise, and so I would help them find financing if they were buying a building, if they were getting a large piece of equipment, maybe that business owner who thinks they need a line of credit.

Bill McDermott: [00:06:12] By the way, best time to borrow money from a bank is when you don’t need it. Anyway, that’s maybe even another podcast for another day. We’ll go there.

John Ray: [00:06:20] When you don’t need to hire Bill McDermott, right? I mean, you get the folks that really need that financing, right?

Bill McDermott: [00:06:28] Yeah, exactly. And so, from workouts to financing, and then to the profitability coach. And that’s kind of been my path.

John Ray: [00:06:38] Wow. So, let’s describe for folks that don’t know what does a profitability coach do. You say you look at financials every month, but there’s more to it than that.

Bill McDermott: [00:06:47] Yeah. There really is. So, I’m going to start by saying that a profitability coach, first, speaks the language of business. Warren Buffett was quoted as saying, “Accounting is the language of business. And you, as a business owner, not only need to learn how to speak it, but how to become fluent.” And that language actually comes out in the form of reports, balance sheet, profit and loss statement, cash flow statement.

Bill McDermott: [00:07:17] Where I help a business owner is, most business owners understand their profit and loss statement. They generally don’t look at their balance sheet. And they hardly ever look at their cash flow statement. And so, what a profitability coach does is analyzes the trends in the business, helping that business owner see those trends, asking questions about what might be driving those trends, and then helping them make decisions.

Bill McDermott: [00:07:43] But probably the biggest thing, John, is, if you own your own business, you’re not accountable to anybody. And so, part of what a profitability coach really does, or any business coach for that matter, is holds that business owner accountable for, not only the dreams that they have, because those dreams usually convert to goals and those goals convert to plans, but somewhere along the way – it’s kind of like, you know, all of us want to lose weight January 1. And so, the gyms and the exercise places fill up for about two weeks. But after about the first two weeks they’re done. Well, nobody’s holding them accountable – part of what a profitability coach does is, not only help them become better financial managers, but holds them accountable to what their dreams and their plans and their goals are.

John Ray: [00:08:31] So, really, it sounds like your knowledge of the financials, how to read the financials, and the business owners knowledge of the business, and what’s going on day-to-day meet, essentially, right?

Bill McDermott: [00:08:44] That’s exactly right. Because, you know, part of that three decades in banking, I literally looked at thousands of financial statements because I had to look at financial statements to determine whether that business owner could borrow money or not. And so, the ability to interpret those financials helped me become trained in helping that business owner.

Bill McDermott: [00:09:05] So, you’re absolutely right. Generally, if a business wants to improve, there are really about five things that they need to look at. There’s either a people aspect of their business, there’s a strategy aspect, there’s an execution issue, there’s a process issue, or there’s a money issue. And so, people, process, strategy, execution, and cash are usually things that business owners need to pay attention to in order to be successful.

John Ray: [00:09:37] So, for those that don’t know, what’s the difference between a profitability coach and a fractional CFO? And when do you bring these different roles in? Or are they different?

Bill McDermott: [00:09:51] They’re absolutely different. So, right now, I have a very successful client who has basically managed the financial aspect of their business for 30 years. He still wants to keep me as a coach, but he doesn’t want to do financial management anymore, so he has hired a part time CFO to come in and run the business.

Bill McDermott: [00:10:15] Because having someone fulltime, first, it’s not that big a job and he doesn’t want to pay $200,000 a year, whatever a CFO gets these days. So, you want to hire a part time CFO if you just don’t want to have to be involved in the financial management of the business. You want a part-time CFO. Or if you want to do that yourself, you can. But, again, you better be able to speak the language.

Bill McDermott: [00:10:45] Now, actually, I will tell you, I coach a lot of business owners that have a part-time CFO and, primarily, a lot of that CFO role is about accounting. They make sure that they have all the debits and credits entered into QuickBooks or whatever accounting software is used. They’re able to generate the reports. But, generally, everything that that part-time CFO does is really about the past, because accounting is accounting for the past. It doesn’t really have much to do with the present or the future.

Bill McDermott: [00:11:18] So, kind of where they leave off is where I pick up. And we start talking about what are your goals for this year or this quarter, and where are you in relation to getting those goals accomplished. And, basically, working together with them, holding them accountable to what they want to do for the future, not necessarily focusing on the past.

Bill McDermott: [00:11:42] So, you can have both, but there is a difference. Most of the time, the part-time CFO is directly responsible, involved with financial management. But that CFO doesn’t really hold the business owner accountable to what their goals and dreams are. And so, that’s really what I’ve been doing as a profitability coach, helping them achieve their goals and dreams and become more profitable.

John Ray: [00:12:04] Do you find you can be in those cases a little more, maybe direct is the word, with the business owner, more of their mother-in-law -maybe that’s a bad metaphor – but you can be a little tougher when needed?

Bill McDermott: [00:12:20] I think part of it. And you said direct. I’ve had a few clients call me blunt, which I can be more than direct at times, and I’m working on that. But, no. I think, yeah, if someone is paying you to give advice then, by golly, they should take it.

Bill McDermott: [00:12:45] And I did give a lot of free advice when I was in banking because as I was looking at the financial statement, especially if I had to decline someone, I said, “Look, you, as the business owner, made $100,000 in profit, but you took out 75,000 in distributions. So, you only have a fourth of what you made available to handle the growth of the firm and pay back a loan if you choose to borrow.” And so, just little things like that are the things that I’ve done. But, yeah, sometimes you do have to be direct. And, again, if I’m holding someone accountable by being nice, I’m not really helping them.

John Ray: [00:13:28] Yeah, for sure. So, this show is designed for solo, small firm, to some degree, medium sized firm professional services providers, let’s talk about the needs here. I mean, at what point do you think a solo firm, a solopreneur, needs to hire a profitability coach?

Bill McDermott: [00:13:56] That’s a great question. And I want to be respectful, there are a lot of people out there that believe in doing it themselves. That is a totally valid way. But it’s interesting, there’s a guy by the name of Doug Tatum, Tatum CFO, who wrote a book titled No Man’s Land. And that book was really about his experience as being a CFO where growing companies fail. And he talks about the five M’s.

Bill McDermott: [00:14:27] John, so to your question, when do you feel like you should hire a profitability coach, one of the M’s that he mentioned is momentum. If your business has lost momentum, if your rate of sales is either decreasing, flat, or not increasing in proportion to what you’re expecting, you might want to hire a coach.

Bill McDermott: [00:14:47] Another thing is marketing. Marketing is the number one weakness in a growing firm. And so, if you’re not properly identifying your brand, to your point, about value, if you’re not sure of your value in the marketplace, you might need some help there. So, momentum marketing, management. Growing firms, growth, it makes businesses more complex. And so, you may have management issues that you need to address.

Bill McDermott: [00:15:21] Fourth, M is money. You know, when you’re growing, as you know, growth always requires cash. And if you have this big crazy number in accounts receivable and you’re complaining about a low bank account, well, by golly, then get on the phone and collect some of those past dues.

Bill McDermott: [00:15:38] So, marketing, momentum, management, money – I’m trying to remember what the fifth one was and it escapes me right now. But, in essence, I would think that you would hire a coach if you find yourself not hitting on all cylinders in some of those things.

John Ray: [00:15:54] Right. Right. So, I’m curious, it sounds like – you just answered the question I was about to ask – the biggest mistake solopreneurs make is not hiring outside help fast enough.

Bill McDermott: [00:16:12] Yeah. And so, part of my questions, because I want to be sure that the particular person that I’m talking to is really interested, and so I might ask them, “Look, if you’re in your car and you’re lost, do you keep driving or do you stop and ask for directions?” And the people that are probably going to keep driving kind of identify themselves as “I’m kind of a do it yourself-er. By golly, I don’t really need to stop and ask for help.” But those that ask for help, I want to help them.

Bill McDermott: [00:16:51] So, I worked with a professional services practice for about three years. When I started with that practice, a lot of their receivables were reimbursements from insurance companies. And what I saw was a huge amount of accounts receivable, and a lot of them were 60 or 90 days outstanding. Insurance companies are horrible at paying claims. You know, they’re paid to hold on to their money, not pay it back to the service providers. And so, we were able to devise a plan where she had a person in her practice that was accountable for making sure those receivables were collected.

Bill McDermott: [00:17:34] Well, then this practice also had a scheduler, and this firm had three locations, had 27 professional providers, but they weren’t maximizing their schedule. And so, there was a lot of holes, a lot of time that was billable time that was lost. And so, together we kind of crafted a scheme that, not only helped collections, but also helped increase appointments.

Bill McDermott: [00:18:03] And by the way, also talking about can we increase rates for reimbursements to the insurance companies, and the answer is yes, because a one percent increase in your price is about an eight to a ten percent increase in your bottom line. So, talking about Price Value Journey, a lot of that is just learning that raising prices is an immediate direct hit to your bottom line.

Bill McDermott: [00:18:29] But long story short, we were able to increase the revenue over a two year period of time in this professional practice 64 percent, so it’s about 32 percent a year. And we took about $100,000 out of the accounts receivable, put that into cash. So, not only did they have more profit, but they also had more cash to boot. So, this firm had been limping along for a year. I was introduced to them by their CPA. We were able to come in and help them. And they’re continuing to thrive to this day.

John Ray: [00:19:05] So, you brought up pricing, so forgive me but I can’t help going down that road. Let’s do that. I mean, my contention is, is that the biggest problem financial or professional services providers have is their pricing. Do you agree with that?

Bill McDermott: [00:19:27] A hundred percent. And I’ll tell a personal story. When I started my business 13 years ago, I’m figuring what do I charge. And, of course, when you first start, you’re not even sure you know what your value proposition is. And so, I said, “Okay. I’m going to start at this rate.” And by the way, it was an hourly rate. And so, by setting an hourly rate, I unintentionally got to the point where I was perceived as a commodity because I’m paid by the hour. There’s no value there.

Bill McDermott: [00:20:04] And by the way, my experience is, I, actually, in the first three years, tripled my hourly rate because the first rate that I thought it was worth was woefully low. And so, I had to work to the point where I had to find somebody to tell me that my rates were too high before I knew that I was right where I should be to begin with.

Bill McDermott: [00:20:31] But the other thing is, I read a really good book that, basically, introduced me to the concept of value-based pricing. So, to kind of use that example of the professional services practice I talked about, I mean, the amount of money that that firm paid me was probably about, I’m going to say, half of the profit that I delivered. So, essentially, if you think about it, they covered their cost and I gave them 100 percent return on their investment.

Bill McDermott: [00:21:15] So, the whole concept of value-based pricing was a total shift for me, John. And believe me, I have not arrived on this journey. I’m still learning. But switching from an hourly rate to a fixed fee, and doing that pricing in relation to the value that you’re delivering to your client makes sense. I can think of another story.

John Ray: [00:21:44] Yeah. Please.

Bill McDermott: [00:21:45] So, early on, I was involved in a loan negotiation with the bank, and it was a big loan. And so, I want to say the loan was about $2 million. And so, I said, “Okay. If I can deliver a discount of 20 percent, $400,000, what amount would you be willing to pay?” “Five percent.” So, $20,000. So, we got into the negotiation with the bank, it took me an-hour-and-a-half. And I successfully negotiated $20,000 of fees for 90 minutes worth of work. So, I don’t know what that comes out to for an hourly rate. But I delivered the value and got paid a percentage.

Bill McDermott: [00:22:41] And so, the concept in my practice that I’ve implemented, but I’m still figuring out is, price based on the value that you’re creating for your client. Don’t price on an hourly rate, if you can. Now, there are some practices that are comfortable with hourly pricing, and I’m not saying they shouldn’t do that, but they might be leaving money on the table that could be theirs instead of someone else’s.

John Ray: [00:23:11] You said when you were talking about that first example that when you were pricing hourly, you were regarded as a commodity. Explain more on that. Say more on that.

Bill McDermott: [00:23:26] Yeah. So, I think I’m going to use an analogy and, hopefully, explain in the meantime. Everybody shops at Walmart. Walmart struggles with customer service because they’re so big. But you know that you can go into Walmart and you can get the lowest price. And if there’s no supply chain disruption, they’ll have it in stock. But, still, Walmart doesn’t really add value because there’s no one there to help you. And if you wait in the checkout line, you’re probably going to wait a long time.

Bill McDermott: [00:24:09] Versus Ace Hardware. I go into Ace Hardware. Ace Hardware has everything. And when you walk in the front door, there’s someone there at the door that’s going to greet you and says, “Sir, what can I help you with?” And I say, “I need a 20 pound bag of birdseed.” Takes me right to the aisle right where the birdseed is and say, “Look. You got three choices. These are the prices. Clients ask for this one the most.” And I get service. There’s value. Because I don’t want to wander the aisles of Ace Hardware trying to find it. I want to be created by someone who knows where it is, knows what they’re talking about. And I can get through the checkout line quickly. So, there’s value in going to Ace Hardware that I don’t think you get at Walmart, in my personal opinion.

Bill McDermott: [00:25:00] So, what I had to figure out is if I couldn’t describe my value to someone – and believe me, describing my value, that’s on me – if I can’t accurately describe the value that I’m delivering to my clients, I default to a commodity. Because if I’m not Ace Hardware, they’re going to see me as Walmart. And they’re going to say, “Well, this is his price. Is it worth it to me to pay that?” It’s the difference between looking at it as a cost versus an investment, too, John.

John Ray: [00:25:35] Yeah. No, that makes sense. And just to be clear – and I probably should have let folks know this at the top of the show – so the professional services can be a big category, but you work with engineering firms, architectural firms, psychiatric related firms.

Bill McDermott: [00:25:59] Marketing agencies.

John Ray: [00:26:03] Attorneys, legal practices, what are some of the others? Have I mentioned most of them there?

Bill McDermott: [00:26:08] Most of them. I’ve got, certainly, a different aspects. I have, actually, three engineering firms. One is mechanical engineering, one of them is civil engineering, and then I also have one that’s environmental engineering. Several different attorney firms, some that work in the employee benefits arena, some of that are litigators. I’ve worked with a few CPA practices. I’ve worked with a couple of marketing agencies. I’ve done work with one of the top interior designers in the southeast. And so, yeah, professional services, generally, those professional services providers are great technicians at their craft, but they really struggle with the business aspect.

Bill McDermott: [00:27:03] But my practice is I’ve worked with solopreneur. I’ve worked with firms that are anywhere from ten people to, I’d say, 50 people. Probably, the largest firm I’ve worked with is a large contracting firm in Northwest Atlanta that has about 400 people. But, yeah, I really love professional services firms because, generally, they’re great technicians, they’re great at their craft. But when they were going to school, nobody taught them business. You know, business is not an undergraduate requirement to get your degree. And, certainly, if you don’t learn it in school, then you either got to learn it somewhere along the way or have a coach to come in and help you learn it.

John Ray: [00:27:55] Now, you’ve talked quite extensively here about the importance of pricing. And we both know that professional services firms, they don’t have inventory, they don’t have a lot of the same kind of capital expenditures, maybe any, that a lot of other firms have. When you talk to your clients, are you focused mostly around pricing or are there other aspects of the income statement that you hone in on?

Bill McDermott: [00:28:29] So, we’re focusing almost entirely on revenue because revenue is the largest number. And so, any percentage increase in revenue creates the biggest change. And so, one of the things that I would say, if you’re a solopreneur out there or look at what I call a revenue multiplier, some people call it a labor multiplier – so an architectural practice that I’m working with right now, they have a bill rate but then they also have a pay rate for engineering work that needs to be done.

Bill McDermott: [00:29:07] And so, that bill rate, of course, incorporates that engineering cost associated with it. But the gross profit is basically what’s left. And so, the higher that you can charge your bill rate against that pay rate that you’re paying out the engineering costs, the higher your gross profit is going to be.

Bill McDermott: [00:29:28] So, what we focus on, if you have an engineering cost for an architect that’s maybe $100, and you can bill that client $150, then your revenue or your labor multiplier is 1.5, if I’m doing the math right, because 150 divided by 100 is 1.5. And so, can you drive that multiplier up? Can you get it to 1.6 or can you get it to 2?

Bill McDermott: [00:29:55] And so, for this particular architectural firm, we’ve actually gone from about a 2.3 revenue multiplier in two years. Right now, we’re north of 3. And so, what that means in terms of gross profit is their gross profit was running probably in the mid-60s. It’s now up into the mid-80s, John. So, the incremental gross profit is falling right down to their bottom line. They’re well on their way through April of making probably two-thirds of the profit that they made last year.

John Ray: [00:30:32] Wow. Now, there’s some value right there that you deliver. Wow. What a great story. So, we talked about solopreneurs, now let’s talk about small, medium-sized professional services firms. They get to a certain size, what are some of the financial mistakes that you see that firms like this make that are common?

Bill McDermott: [00:30:58] Gosh. Let me think about that a minute. I think, first, customer concentrations can be a little bit risky. I do have a particular firm that I work with that is heavily concentrated in one particular client, makes up about 30 percent of their business. My rule of thumb, going back to my banking days, is probably to the extent that you can, limit your concentrations to maybe 15 percent of your total revenue to any one client. So, certainly, revenue concentrations.

Bill McDermott: [00:31:37] Other mistakes would be probably some mindset issues. A lot of business owners are willing to accept mediocre performance. When in reality, they have some self-limiting beliefs that are holding them back. And so, I can certainly expand on that.

Bill McDermott: [00:32:04] But, you know, a quick story is I had a client that I worked with who was in the engineering practice business. He didn’t really feel that he could deliver the value that he really did. And we got through that to the point where he was willing to, first, educate himself on the benefits of value-based pricing, implement it, and then reap the results. So, probably some of it is self-inflicted.

Bill McDermott: [00:32:39] You know, when I started my business, I didn’t know how much to charge. I had some self-limiting beliefs about what I was worth. And so, I would say that would be an item.

Bill McDermott: [00:32:49] And then, I would say, growing a business is really all about people and processes. And so, where I think some solopreneurs or small to medium-sized firms make some mistakes is they either have the wrong people. And when I say wrong, I’m talking about people that don’t really share the company’s core values or core focus, or that person is in the wrong seat. They’re not playing to that person’s strength.

Bill McDermott: [00:33:21] Probably the other thing, in addition to that wrong people, is documented processes. If you want to be an effective and an efficient organization, you’ve got to have documented processes. Because if you have 15 people in your billing department and each of those 15 people has a different way that they do billing, you got problems. And so, documented processes. And if they are documented, you need to inspect what you expect, which means making sure that the processes are being followed. So, those would be the three things that really stick out.

John Ray: [00:34:01] Let’s talk about debt. I mean, when should a firm as they grow start to take on debt? You say it’s when they don’t need it. Say more on that and what you counsel business owners.

Bill McDermott: [00:34:17] So, get a line of credit. There are people who basically believe that I don’t want to have any personal debt in my consumer, in my personal household, the way they run their household. But running a business and running a household are two different things. So, for a line of credit, I would say one month’s revenue is a good rule of thumb. So, if you’ve got a $3 million company that’s a $250,000 line of credit. Don’t base it based on last year’s revenue. Base it on this year’s revenue. So, that would be one thing.

Bill McDermott: [00:35:00] And, generally, year-end financials are in by January or February. Most banks are going to want to see a full fiscal year and then the most recent interim in order to approve a line.

Bill McDermott: [00:35:16] But I would say that I have another business that I work with that does steel fabrication for construction. They have done a great job of purchasing equipment that has technology associated with it that reduces their overall labor costs. They still have people working in their plant, but they have invested in equipment and technology to improve their operating performance. And so, borrowing for a piece of equipment where you find that you can increase your profit margin because of efficiency doing that.

Bill McDermott: [00:35:58] Right now, I’ve got three clients that are either building a building or buying a building. Rent is pretty expensive. A lot of times, depending on the requirements that you have on your building, you might need special electrical requirements. You might have special ceiling requirements, zoning requirements, things like that. But, you know, borrowing money to buy your own building versus paying rent every month is valid.

Bill McDermott: [00:36:31] Probably the most interesting thing right now is us, baby boomers, we’re getting ready to retire. And I’ve got three clients that I’m working with right now that are in various stages of exiting. And, of course, on my last podcast, we had a gentleman who is in the process of ownership transition. We had a banker who came on and spoke about financing those transactions. So, finding a financing source for your business to sell it or buy it is something that is very much top of mind for business owners right now, especially if you’re a baby boomer.

John Ray: [00:37:13] Yeah, for sure. So, if you’re a professional services firm, does having hard assets, like real estate, owning your own building, the building you’re operating in, or any other building for that matter, that’s maybe an investment, I mean, is that a good way to use excess cash flow?

Bill McDermott: [00:37:34] So, that’s a great question. I’ll try to answer it in a concise way. So, I have a client who, just on the operating performance of his business alone, earns a 22 percent net income. I’m going to say that real estate on an annual basis does not increase 22 percent. So, does it make sense for him to invest in an asset that is maybe going to appreciate even though he’s building equity in it versus investing in his business?

Bill McDermott: [00:38:09] So, investing in real estate might be a good diversification play because that way he or she doesn’t have all of their eggs in their company basket. So, it’s a little bit personal choice in my view, John. And I’m a big believer in diversifying your assets. And, generally, the stock of the closely held business that that solopreneur or small to medium-sized business owner has is the 800 pound gorilla on their personal financial statement. So, diversifying away from that and buying a building certainly makes sense.

Bill McDermott: [00:38:49] But if you’re looking at it strictly from numbers, rates of return, providing cash flow, you know, we went through a real estate crisis in 2009, real estate values dropped 30 percent. But on the flip side, real estate has been a great asset to own for a long, long period of time.

John Ray: [00:39:09] So, as we wind down here – Bill, this has been great – I want to get to exit planning, because you’ve started to do some exit planning work for clients. And we could do a whole show on exit planning for professional services firms. But give us the CliffsNotes version, if you will. I mean, folks that are thinking about exiting their firm, what are some of the things that they need to do to prepare their professional services practice for a change, for an exit?

Bill McDermott: [00:39:44] Yeah. So, for the solopreneur, it is a challenge primarily because, generally, a business owner buyer is not willing to pay for what is between that solopreneur’s ears. And so, it is commonly said that in exit planning, the value of a business is the value minus the business owner’s contribution to that value. So, if I were a solopreneur and, basically, all of the intellectual property was in my head, it’s going to be very, very hard to transfer that value to a potential purchaser. It can be done but there are some challenges.

Bill McDermott: [00:40:31] But building transferable value is important. That transferable value is basically having a solid management team that can take the business after the business owner exits. Having reliable financial statements because they’re paying a multiple of what the value of the business is based on those financial statements. So, having reliable financial statements is important.

Bill McDermott: [00:40:58] Back to an earlier comment, making sure that your revenue is not concentrated in any one or two places. So, frankly, it’s all about building transferable value. It’s also about having a growth plan that a business owner purchaser could buy into. So, those would be the aspects, primarily.

John Ray: [00:41:19] Got it. Well, Bill, this has been great. And I can’t imagine there aren’t some folks listening to this conversation wouldn’t want to get in touch, so let’s tell them how they can do that.

Bill McDermott: [00:41:32] Yeah. Well, first, it’s been a delight to be with you. This has been a great opportunity for me as well. And so, thanks for having me. They can reach me at bill@theprofitabilitycoach.net. Or they can call me on my mobile number, which is 770-597-3136. And our website is theprofitabilitycoach.net.

John Ray: [00:41:55] That’s easy to remember, folks. Terrific. Bill McDermott, thanks so much again for coming on the show.

Bill McDermott: [00:42:01] Thanks for having me, John.

John Ray: [00:42:02] Absolutely. Hey, folks, just a quick reminder, if you want to see past episodes of this series or check them out, you can go to pricevaluejourney.com. We would be honored – I’d be honored – if you would subscribe to the show on your favorite podcast app and you won’t miss an episode that way. If you’d like to get in touch with me directly, ask questions, or give some suggestions on topics that we ought to cover here, feel free. My email is john@johnray.co. Thank you for joining us.

 

 

About The Price and Value Journey

The title of this show describes the journey all professional services providers are on:  building a services practice by seeking to convince the world of the value we offer, helping clients achieve the outcomes they desire, and trying to do all that at pricing which reflects the value we deliver.

If you feel like you’re working too hard for too little money in your solo or small firm practice, this show is for you. Even if you’re reasonably happy with your practice, you’ll hear ways to improve both your bottom line as well as the mindset you bring to your business.

The show is produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® and can be found on all the major podcast apps. The complete show archive is here.

John Ray, Host of The Price and Value Journey

John Ray The Price and Value Journey
John Ray, Host of “The Price and Value Journey”

John Ray is the host of The Price and Value Journey.

John owns Ray Business Advisors, a business advisory practice. John’s services include advising solopreneur and small professional services firms on their pricing. John is passionate about the power of pricing for business owners, as changing pricing is the fastest way to change the profitability of a business. His clients are professionals who are selling their “grey matter,” such as attorneys, CPAs, accountants and bookkeepers, consultants, marketing professionals, and other professional services practitioners.

In his other business, John a Studio Owner, Producer, and Show Host with Business RadioX®, and works with business owners who want to do their own podcast. As a veteran B2B services provider, John’s special sauce is coaching B2B professionals to use a podcast to build relationships in a non-salesy way which translate into revenue.

John is the host of North Fulton Business Radio, Minneapolis-St. Paul Business Radio, Nashville Business Radio, Alpharetta Tech Talk, and Business Leaders Radio. house shows that feature a wide range of business leaders and companies. John has hosted and/or produced over 1,100 podcast episodes.

Connect with John Ray:

Website | LinkedIn | Twitter

Business RadioX®:  LinkedIn | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram

Tagged With: banking, Bill McDermott, business coaching, John Ray, Price and Value Journey, pricing, professional services, professional services firm, professional services providers, solopreneurs, The Price and Value Journey, The Profitability Coach, value, value pricing

LIVE from RISKWORLD 2022: Camille Graham, Floodproofing.com

June 7, 2022 by John Ray

Floodproofing.com
Minneapolis St. Paul Studio
LIVE from RISKWORLD 2022: Camille Graham, Floodproofing.com
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Floodproofing.com

LIVE from RISKWORLD 2022: Camille Graham, Floodproofing.com

Attending the first RISKWORLD for herself and her company, Camille Graham, National Project Manager for Floodproofing.com shared with host Jamie Gassmann how rewarding the conference was for building new relationships. She talked about the comprehensive services provided by Floodproofing.com, the increase in flooding across the country, the need to consider flood mitigation services regardless of one’s location, and much more.

Workplace MVP is underwritten and presented by R3 Continuum and produced by the Minneapolis-St.Paul Studio of Business RadioX®.

This show was originally broadcast from the RIMS 2022 RISKWORLD Conference held at the Moscone Center in San Francisco, California.

Camille Graham, National Project Manager, Floodproofing.com

Camille Graham, National Project Manager, Floodproofing.com

Since 2001, Floodproofing.com has been providing global floodproofing product options and education to design professionals, municipalities, and property owners. Their goal is to provide the best mitigation solutions through complementary project design analysis.

Floodproofing.com is built upon the legacy and expertise gained from the development of Smart Vent Products Inc., which has propelled the company into an industry leader. A team of Certified Floodplain Managers and Flood Mitigation Specialists provides the industry with a portfolio of innovative dry and wet floodproofing systems.

Camille Graham joined Floodproofing.com in 2019.

Company website | Camille Graham LinkedIn

About Workplace MVP

Every day, around the world, organizations of all sizes face disruptive events and situations. Within those workplaces are everyday heroes in human resources, risk management, security, business continuity, and the C-suite. They don’t call themselves heroes though. On the contrary, they simply show up every day, laboring for the well-being of employees in their care, readying the workplace for and planning responses to disruption. This show, Workplace MVP, confers on these heroes the designation they deserve, Workplace MVP (Most Valuable Professionals), and gives them the forum to tell their story. As you hear their experiences, you will learn first-hand, real-life approaches to readying the workplace, responses to crisis situations, and overcoming challenges of disruption. Visit our show archive here.

Workplace MVP Host Jamie Gassmann

Jamie Gassmann, Host, “Workplace MVP”

In addition to serving as the host to the Workplace MVP podcast, Jamie Gassmann is the Director of Marketing at R3 Continuum (R3c). Collectively, she has more than fourteen years of marketing experience. Across her tenure, she has experience working in and with various industries including banking, real estate, retail, crisis management, insurance, business continuity, and more. She holds a Bachelor of Science Degree in Mass Communications with special interest in Advertising and Public Relations and a Master of Business Administration from Paseka School of Business, Minnesota State University.

R3 Continuum

R3 Continuum is a global leader in workplace behavioral health and security solutions. R3c helps ensure the psychological and physical safety of organizations and their people in today’s ever-changing and often unpredictable world. Through their continuum of tailored solutions, including evaluations, crisis response, executive optimization, protective services, and more, they help organizations maintain and cultivate a workplace of wellbeing so that their people can thrive. Learn more about R3c at www.r3c.com.

Company website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Twitter

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:02] Broadcasting live from Riskworld 2022 at the Moscone Center in San Francisco, it’s time for Workplace MVP. Brought to you by R3 Continuum, a global leader in helping workplaces thrive during disruptive times. Now, here’s your host.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:00:22] Hi, everyone. Jamie Gassmann here with Workplace MVP and we are broadcasting from Riskworld 2022 Expo Hall in R3 Continuum’s booth. And joining me is Camille Graham.

Camille Graham: [00:00:22] Hello.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:00:37] Hello. From Floodproofing. Talk to me about your company and tell me a little bit about your background.

Camille Graham: [00:00:42] Yes. Thanks for having me, Jamie. We are Floodproofing.com. We are all the way from New Jersey. It’s our first time out here in San Francisco, for me personally ever. And it’s our first time that our company is doing this conference. We do all things flood mitigation. So, we provide flood panels, flood events, and even flood glass, deployable systems and passive systems to prevent flood water from entering into a building. We also have flood vents that let water through to alleviate the pressure on a building. And we have an insurance agency risk reduction plus group that helps to pass on the insurance savings that you should see from having proper flood mitigation through to your insurance premium. We are a one-stop shop for all things flood mitigation.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:01:28] Very interesting. And so, you mentioned this is your first time expo-ing at RIMS.

Camille Graham: [00:01:33] Yes, it is.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:01:33] So, talk to me about, you know, what were some of the things that made you decide that this was where you needed to be for sharing your business and what you guys do.

Camille Graham: [00:01:42] So, we actually – one of our partners that we work really closely with, Tiger Dam, is also here and they told us that this is the most beneficial conference that they come to every year because they meet people that have an immediate need for what we do. They have an immediate problem that they need to solve with flooding and they’re looking for solutions. And so, it’s cool. We usually go to conferences where we work with a lot of architects and engineers, which is incredible because we get specced early on in the design phase. But there’s also a huge need for property managers, risk managers, people that have buildings now that need solutions, and we’re here to provide them.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:02:23] And so, I mean, we’re at the end of day one. And so, talk to me. How have your conversations been going so far with, you know, the traffic that’s been coming through?

Camille Graham: [00:02:32] It’s been awesome. We have had some of the most incredible conversations with people that have experienced flooding or they know that they’re in a flood zone. And with the changing climate and with the increased risk that’s posed by flooding all over the country, people know that this is an issue that they need to solve. They’re looking for solutions and it’s top of mind more today than ever before. So people are coming eager to find a solution to that problem. And it’s just been the most progressive conversations that we’ve had at a conference.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:03:06] That’s fantastic. And so, looking at flooding, just out of pure curiosity, are there areas within like the North, obviously, America, I think you’re kind of more in the U.S. for your services? Are there some areas that are more prone to flooding that doesn’t have this protection in place than others? Talk to us a little bit about that.

Camille Graham: [00:03:27] Yeah. So, I will say that a lot of people, when they think about flooding, they assume coastal. They think oceans, they think beach towns, they think Florida. But actually, all over the country, you know, this risk is present. A lot of flooding that happens is flash flooding from rainstorms. So, yes. Do we do a ton of work in coastal communities like Florida, like New Jersey, like New York City, and Hoboken? We do. But we also do a ton of work in places that probably would not be top of mind when you think about flooding because this issue is all over the country these days.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:04:04] Yeah, absolutely. And so what – so, you mentioned flash flooding, but what are some other natural or even none, like maybe manmade situations that are causing flooding within the country that businesses should be aware of?

Camille Graham: [00:04:17] Yeah. So, we have – sometimes in your drainage system so you might have an area where that sees a lot of rainfall and then the system is completely overwhelmed and it can’t handle the amount of rain that you saw so it can kind of backflow and cause flooding all through the streets, which causes a horrible issue that might not have been expected.

Camille Graham: [00:04:37] During Hurricane Ida in the northeast, you know, this storm was hitting Louisiana and we knew that it was going to cause a huge issue down there. And then, the next thing we knew, up north in Philadelphia and in New York City, there was, I mean, life loss because of flash flooding and flooding that happened that we did not expect. We didn’t expect it to come. It was actually considered to be like a 500-year flood event. Vine Street through Philadelphia was completely flooded to a point that nobody had ever seen before, nobody would ever expect. And one thing that I want to say is that when a storm like that happens, it might be considered a 100 or 500-year flood event but that doesn’t mean that if it happened yesterday, it can’t happen again tomorrow. These things can happen more than once within that 500-year frame, and they probably will as time goes on when we start to see these things happening more frequently.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:05:38] Yeah. And so if there’s a business out there that, let’s just say, they’re not in a prominent flood area, maybe they’re not in a floodplain, it’s not anything that’s really on their radar from a location perspective, what is some advice that you would give to them in terms of how they should be looking at this as part of their overall risk mitigation?

Camille Graham: [00:05:57] Yeah. I always say don’t just think about today and don’t just look at necessarily the history of flooding in an area but think about the future and really just consider the resiliency of your business or your building where you’re at. Whether it be flood insurance or a flood mitigation system in place, if there is an event, having something in place is just going to allow you to open your doors, you know, sooner than if, obviously, you had a flood event. So it’s something that we say, always consider, never think that you’re not vulnerable to something like this, and protect yourself, not just for today, but for the future.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:06:37] Yeah. Great advice. And thank you so much for joining us. If somebody wanted to reach out to you to get more information or to learn a little bit more, how would they go about doing that?

Camille Graham: [00:06:46] Yes. They can go to floodproofing.com. Our website is an awesome resource. You can find everything that we have to offer and you can reach out to us on that website.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:06:57] Yeah. Very interesting information. Thank you again. It’s been great to chat with you.

Outro: [00:07:06] Thank you for joining us on Workplace MVP. R3 Continuum is a proud sponsor of this show and is delighted to celebrate most valuable professionals who work diligently to secure safe workplaces where employees can thrive.

 

Tagged With: Camille Graham, flood insurance, flood mitigation, floodplain, floodproofing systems, Floodproofing.com, Jamie Gassmann, R3 Continuum, RIMS, RISKWORLD 2022, Workplace MVP

Should a Business Owner Pursue Profitability Over Profit? – with Bill McDermott, Host of ProfitSense

June 6, 2022 by John Ray

Profitability
North Fulton Studio
Should a Business Owner Pursue Profitability Over Profit? - with Bill McDermott, Host of ProfitSense
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Profitability

Should a Business Owner Pursue Profitability Over Profit? – with Bill McDermott, Host of ProfitSense

In this commentary from a recent episode of ProfitSense, Bill demonstrates the crucial differences between profitability and profit and why it should matter to a business owner.

ProfitSense with Bill McDermott is produced and broadcast by the North Fulton Studio of Business RadioX® in Alpharetta.

Bill’s commentary was taken from this episode of ProfitSense.

About ProfitSense and Your Host, Bill McDermott

Bill McDermott
Bill McDermott

ProfitSense with Bill McDermott dives into the stories behind some of Atlanta’s successful businesses and owners and the professionals that advise them. This show helps local business leaders get the word out about the important work they’re doing to serve their market, their community, and their profession. The show is presented by McDermott Financial Solutions. McDermott Financial helps business owners improve cash flow and profitability, find financing, break through barriers to expansion and financially prepare to exit their business. The show archive can be found at profitsenseradio.com.

Bill McDermott is the Founder and CEO of McDermott Financial Solutions. When business owners want to increase their profitability, they don’t have the expertise to know where to start or what to do. Bill leverages his knowledge and relationships from 32 years as a banker to identify the hurdles getting in the way and create a plan to deliver profitability they never thought possible.

Bill currently serves as Treasurer for the Atlanta Executive Forum and has held previous positions as a board member for the Kennesaw State University Entrepreneurship Center and Gwinnett Habitat for Humanity and Treasurer for CEO NetWeavers. Bill is a graduate of Wake Forest University and he and his wife, Martha have called Atlanta home for over 40 years. Outside of work, Bill enjoys golf, traveling, and gardening.

Connect with Bill on LinkedIn and Twitter and follow McDermott Financial Solutions on LinkedIn.

Tagged With: Bill McDermott, Business Owners, profits, profits vs. profitability, ProfitSense, The Profitability Coach

HBS Legal Trends: Christopher Grosso, Conner Strong & Buckelew, and Jeffrey Daitz, Hall, Booth, Smith, PC

June 6, 2022 by John Ray

Christopher Grosso and Jeffrey Daitz
Hall Booth Smith Podcast Network
HBS Legal Trends: Christopher Grosso, Conner Strong & Buckelew, and Jeffrey Daitz, Hall, Booth, Smith, PC
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Conner Strong

HBS Legal Trends: Christopher Grosso, Conner Strong & Buckelew, and Jeffrey Daitz, Hall, Booth, Smith, PC

On this edition of HBS Legal Trends, Chris Grosso, Connor Strong, and Jeff Daitz, Hall Booth Smith, discussed how they use their respective expertise in insurance brokerage and employment law to help organizations limit potential claims exposure. Chris and Jeff discussed how they work together, the nature and severity of claims arising from the pandemic and a remote work environment, the value of employment practices audits, the application process for employment practices liability, and much more.

HBS Legal Trends is sponsored by Hall, Booth, Smith, PC and is produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX®.

Conner Strong & Buckelew

Conner Strong & Buckelew is among America’s largest and most admired insurance brokerage, employee benefits, and risk management consulting firms. Its roots trace back to 1959. They have offices all along the East Coast and they serve clients worldwide.

They are also an industry leader in providing high-risk businesses with comprehensive solutions to prevent losses, manage claims and drive growth. Whether providing risk and insurance services to industries ranging from construction to life science or offering employee benefits services ranging from health and wellness programs to strategic advisory consulting, they are intensely focused on getting results for your business.

Conner Strong is proud to be a founding member of BrokerTech Ventures, the first program specifically for investors and innovators building the next generation of tech solutions for insurance agencies and brokerages. For more information, visit brokertechventures.com

Most of all, they are recognized as a passionate community contributor, volunteering thousands of hours and donating to hundreds of organizations every year. With the Norcross Foundation, they have worked to improve youth education, fund disease research, support the arts and culture and lend a hand to the disadvantaged.

Company Website |LinkedIn | Facebook | Twitter

Christopher Grosso, Partner, National Claim Advocacy & Consulting Leader, Conner Strong & Buckelew

Christopher Grosso, Partner, National Claim Advocacy & Consulting Leader, Conner Strong & Buckelew

Christopher assists clients with all aspects of the claim process. He is responsible for receiving, analyzing, and submitting claims to the insurance carrier, and acting as a liaison for our Select market of business across all lines of insurance.

Although his specialty is property, he has experience handling all lines of business. He provides coverage analysis, advice, and direction, and assists in negotiations with the insurance carrier and monitoring of open claims. He works closely with the client to ensure the carrier’s claim representative delivers prompt, fair claims handling and also assists clients with their internal claim management efforts, including conducting comprehensive claim reviews and training. He also acts as the client’s advocate in dispute resolution.

Grosso has held a producer’s license for 17 years and is licensed throughout the country. Prior to his position at Conner Strong & Buckelew in 2004, he was with Hartford Steam Boiler Insurance, an AIG company, for four years. He served as an Underwriting Assistant, before moving into a role as a Senior Technical Claims adjuster, handling commercial property claims.

Christopher has a Bachelor’s from Pennsylvania State University.

LinkedIn

Hall Booth Smith, P.C.

Established in 1989, Hall Booth Smith, P.C. (HBS) is a full-service law firm with six regional offices strategically located throughout Georgia, as well as offices in Birmingham, AL; Little Rock and Rogers, AR; Denver, CO; Jacksonville, Miami, St. Petersburg, Tallahassee, Tampa, and West Palm Beach, FL; Missoula, MT; Asheville and Charlotte, NC; Saddle Brook, NJ; New York, NY; Oklahoma City, OK; Charleston, SC; and Memphis and Nashville, TN.

Experienced across a wide range of legal disciplines, HBS prides itself on providing knowledgeable, proactive, client-specific counsel to individuals, domestic and international corporations, state and federal agencies, and nonprofit organizations.

At HBS they possess the legal knowledge, skill, and experience to meet our clients’ needs wherever they do business. HBS maintains the highest commitment to serve clients ethically and professionally by providing the highest quality legal representation.

Company Website | LinkedIn | Facebook

Jeffrey Daitz, Partner, Hall Booth Smith, P.C.

Jeffrey Daitz, Partner, Hall Booth Smith, P.C.

Jeffrey Daitz is a Partner in the Saddle Brook, New Jersey office, Co-Chair of the Labor and Employment Law Group, as well as Co-Director of the Employment Practices Liability Insurance Defense Department.

He has more than two decades of experience in employment law, labor-management relations, and alternative dispute resolution. Jeffrey’s nationwide practice is focused on defending employers in Employment Practices Liability Insurance (EPLI) matters and Directors & Officers (D&O) claims, and he also monitors claims on behalf of carriers. He is often brought in to coordinate local and co-counsel in multiparty and multi-jurisdiction litigation.

Jeffrey specializes in mediating and litigating all types of employment discrimination claims including sexual harassment, hostile work environment, whistle-blowing, retaliation, wrongful discharge, defamation, misappropriation, and a variety of other employment-related cases in federal and state courts, through appeals and in alternative dispute resolution (ADR) forums. He also defends clients in administrative proceedings before the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) and other federal, state, and local employment practice agencies, as well as wage/hour audits and other regulatory compliance investigations before the federal and state Departments of Labor (DOL), Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs (OFCCP), Department of Health (DOH), and Office of Inspector General (OIG). Jeffrey also represents employers in labor-management disputes, including collective bargaining negotiations.

Clients routinely engage Jeffrey for day-to-day management counseling on issues such as employment policies, contracts, discipline, terminations, leaves of absence, accommodations, complaints, internal investigations, benefits, proprietary information, restrictive covenants, reorganizations, and executive compensation. Jeffrey is a frequent lecturer and guest speaker throughout the country on ever-changing employment laws and best practices.  He also provides advice on risk management and loss control, such as comprehensive employment practices audits and sexual harassment and other internal investigations, in addition to providing training and prevention counsel on topics such as best workplace practices and EEO compliance training for human resources, management personnel and in-house counsel.

Jeffrey’s clients include employers in for-profit and not-for-profit industries including healthcare, construction, financial services, property management, insurance, technology, transportation, building services, hotel and hospitality, retail, manufacturing, power and energy and pharmaceutical.

Jeffrey earned a Juris Doctorate from Seton Hall University School of Law. He holds a Bachelor of Arts degree from Temple University where he majored in Accounting, Finance, and Economics.

Jeffrey has been selected for inclusion in the list of New Jersey’s Super Lawyers for the past 6 years, 2013-2018, honoring the top 2% of lawyers in New Jersey.

LinkedIn

Tagged With: Christopher Grosso, claims, claims exposure, Conner Strong & Buckelew, employee claims, employment law, Hall Booth and Smith, insurance broker, Jeffrey Daitz

Tyler King, Tastify Food

June 6, 2022 by John Ray

Tastify
North Fulton Studio
Tyler King, Tastify Food
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Tastify

Tyler King, Tastify Food (Time Well Spent with Julie Hullett, Episode 1)

Tyler King, owner of Tastify Food, joined host Julie Hullett on this first episode of Time Well Spent with Julie Hullett. Tyler talked about baseball in St. Louis, his hometown, Ted Drewes frozen custard, and his move from music to the restaurant industry. When he got fed up with how the industry treated its people, he jumped ship and decided to start his own business. Ted also discussed how he spends his days, the growth of his business, what may help him create time to do what he loves, and much more.

Time Well Spent with Julie Hullett is presented by Julie Hullett Concierge, LLC and produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX®.

Tastify Food

Tastify is a personal chef company that believes in punctual and clear communication with clients, putting its employees first, and offering better service and better quality food than any restaurant around!

They believe in that mission to its core and have been doing it successfully for almost 4 years.

In 2018, Tyler was working in an old kitchen with no windows. He was exhausted because he closed down the kitchen just 8 hours ago and he was already back, turning on lights and chugging coffee. This was his 7th year working in restaurants and he knew that his degree in Entrepreneurship was falling to the wayside while he worked his life away. That day, he approached his boss, put in his notice, and applied for an LLC titled “Tastify Food”. His vision was to bring better local food, paired with excellent service to people’s homes.

Today, Tyler still owns and operates the Private Chef Business and has shifted the company into the concierge space as well. His team is well trained and ready for any event. His Customers are Nashville Locals and Visitors. They are friends, neighbors, fellow entrepreneurs, and food lovers alike. He is still aiming to change the way his customers think about food through every flawlessly executed event.

Company website |Facebook | Instagram

Tyler King, Owner, Tastify Food

Tyler King, Owner, Tastify Food

Tyler King created Tastify in 2018 when his frustrations with the food industry seemed unheard. Before the staffing shortages and the pandemic threatening hospitality industries, restaurants got away with treating their employees horribly. After a 7 year run in catering, restaurants, and corporate food organizations, Tyler decided to change how things were done.

LinkedIn

 

About Time Well Spent

Time Well Spent with Julie Hullett features stories from busy professionals who have created more time to do what they love. Every other week, your host and personal concierge Julie Hullett speaks with entrepreneurs, community leaders, and influencers to answer the question: What would you do if you had more time?

The show is produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® and can be found on all the major podcast apps. The complete show archive is here.

Julie Hullett, Host of Time Well Spent with Julie Hullett

Julie Hullet, Host of Time Well Spent with Julie Hullett

Julie Hullett is the host of Time Well Spent with Julie Hullett.

Julie Hullett is a personal concierge and entrepreneur in Nashville, TN. She founded Julie Hullett Concierge, LLC in 2011 to give people their time back so they can do more of what they love. No stranger to big ideas and pursuing passions, Julie left corporate America to create her business. She capitalized on her skills—multi-tasking, attention to detail, and time management, to name a few—to build a successful business that gives back. Her clients enjoy ample free time. They’ve traveled more, spent more time with those they love, and have even created their own businesses.

Connect with Julie:

Website|  LinkedIn | Instagram . Sign up to receive her newsletter.

 

Tagged With: Julie Hullett, Julie Hullett Concierge LLC, personal chef, St Louis, Tastify Food, Ted Drewes, time management solutions, Time Well Spent with Julie Hullett, Tyler King

LIVE from RISKWORLD 2022: Paul Jenkins, Lockton Companies

June 6, 2022 by John Ray

Lockton Companies
Minneapolis St. Paul Studio
LIVE from RISKWORLD 2022: Paul Jenkins, Lockton Companies
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Lockton Companies

LIVE from RISKWORLD 2022: Paul Jenkins, Lockton Companies

Paul Jenkins, property broker with Lockton Companies, talked with host Jamie Gassmann live at RISKWORLD 2022. He described the impact of the lockdown on the 350-year-old Lloyd’s Market and how Lockton adjusted to not working face to face. He also shared how they have shifted and succeeded while serving clients in more countries beyond North America, growing in South America, the Caribbean, Australia, and New Zealand, his experience at RISKWORLD, and more.

Workplace MVP is underwritten and presented by R3 Continuum and produced by the Minneapolis-St.Paul Studio of Business RadioX®.

This show was originally broadcast from the RIMS 2022 RISKWORLD Conference held at the Moscone Center in San Francisco, California.

Paul Jenkins, Property Broker, Lockton Companies

Paul Jenkins, Property Broker, Lockton Companies

As a family organization, Lockton Companies is not driven by the quarterly pressure from the financial markets. This kind of independence frees them to always act in the best interest of their clients and creates a completely different dynamic, one that is focused on your success.

They have a strong entrepreneurial culture that’s complemented by the scale and expertise of over 100 worldwide offices. This brings about something quite extraordinary in the insurance business—local partners with the focus and freedom to do what’s right for your business that can also draw on deep global resources to deliver the very best results.
Paul Jenkins is an ACII qualified, Property / Terrorism Underwriter and Team Leader. He has over 17 years of insurance experience.

Company website | Paul Jenkins LinkedIn

About Workplace MVP

Every day, around the world, organizations of all sizes face disruptive events and situations. Within those workplaces are everyday heroes in human resources, risk management, security, business continuity, and the C-suite. They don’t call themselves heroes though. On the contrary, they simply show up every day, laboring for the well-being of employees in their care, readying the workplace for and planning responses to disruption. This show, Workplace MVP, confers on these heroes the designation they deserve, Workplace MVP (Most Valuable Professionals), and gives them the forum to tell their story. As you hear their experiences, you will learn first-hand, real-life approaches to readying the workplace, responses to crisis situations, and overcoming challenges of disruption. Visit our show archive here.

Workplace MVP Host Jamie Gassmann

Jamie Gassmann, Host, “Workplace MVP”

In addition to serving as the host to the Workplace MVP podcast, Jamie Gassmann is the Director of Marketing at R3 Continuum (R3c). Collectively, she has more than fourteen years of marketing experience. Across her tenure, she has experience working in and with various industries including banking, real estate, retail, crisis management, insurance, business continuity, and more. She holds a Bachelor of Science Degree in Mass Communications with special interest in Advertising and Public Relations and a Master of Business Administration from Paseka School of Business, Minnesota State University.

R3 Continuum

R3 Continuum is a global leader in workplace behavioral health and security solutions. R3c helps ensure the psychological and physical safety of organizations and their people in today’s ever-changing and often unpredictable world. Through their continuum of tailored solutions, including evaluations, crisis response, executive optimization, protective services, and more, they help organizations maintain and cultivate a workplace of wellbeing so that their people can thrive. Learn more about R3c at www.r3c.com.

Company website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Twitter

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:02] Broadcasting live from Riskworld 2022 at the Moscone Center in San Francisco, it’s time for Workplace MVP. Brought to you by R3 Continuum, a global leader in helping workplaces thrive during disruptive times. Now, here’s your host.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:00:22] Hi, everyone. You’re host, Jamie Gassmann, here with the Workplace MVP podcast and we are broadcasting from the Riskworld 2022 Expo Hall in R3 Continuum’s booth. And with me is Paul Jenkins from Lockton Companies. Welcome to the show.

Paul Jenkins: [00:00:37] Hello, y’all.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:00:40] Playing off of our producers, y’all. I love it. If you learned anything at RIMS, it was y’all.

Paul Jenkins: [00:00:46] Absolutely.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:00:47] Well, welcome to the show. We’re happy to have you.

Paul Jenkins: [00:00:49] Yeah. Thanks for having me.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:00:50] Yeah. So, tell us a little bit about what Lockton does and your background.

Paul Jenkins: [00:00:53] Yeah. So, Lockton Companies is an insurance broker and they are a broker for all lines of business, looking to provide solutions from an insurance perspective for their clients.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:01:04] And, you’ve been in the industry quite a while.

Paul Jenkins: [00:01:06] Yeah.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:01:07] I think you shared with me you started as an underwriter. So, tell me a little bit about your background.

Paul Jenkins: [00:01:10] Yeah. Okay. So, I left school. I wanted to be an architect. And, in London – in the London market, you don’t have to study to get into insurance. You tend to get into insurance by accident. So that’s what happened to me. I started my career as a cat modeller. So, I was doing RMS scheduling and running some analysis from that. And from there really, it just sort of happened by osmosis. I got into underwriting, as a result working in the Lloyd’s market, always doing property insurance. And I’m now a broker at Lockton.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:01:43] Wonderful. And, what has the last few years looked like in the broker kind of world going through the pandemic and some of the changes that have happened in the business world?

Paul Jenkins: [00:01:54] Yeah. A real challenge for us in London on the basis that, you know, in the Lloyd’s mMarket, it’s the oldest insurance market in the world, you know, and that it’s a marketplace. It’s been going for about 350 years. And most businesses still transacted face-to-face, so person-to-person in one place in a market, and lockdown prevented us from doing that because we didn’t have a marketplace. So, we adapted ever so quickly with Zoom, WebEx, iMessage, however you’re doing this stuff.

Paul Jenkins: [00:02:27] But, yeah, it’s been difficult because you’ve essentially been working in isolation and you would normally have your team around you. And we do work as a team. We’re a close-knit team and the youngsters learn from being in-situ and, you know, listening and taking on board what’s going on around them. So, it’s been a challenge for a number of reasons. You know, from a trade perspective, it’s been difficult. From a coaching perspective and a learning perspective, it’s been a challenge. But we’ve managed to do it and we’ve managed to grow our book. So, you know, we’ve got more clients now than we had prior to the lockdown and we’ve got high revenues than we had prior to the lockdown. So, I suppose on reflection, it’s really quite incredible that we’ve been able to do what we did.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:03:10] Yeah, I bet. And so, your clients that you have that you’re speaking of, are they mostly in just London or is it kind of a global kind of clientele or?

Paul Jenkins: [00:03:20] My clients will be North American clients.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:03:23] Okay.

Paul Jenkins: [00:03:23] So, they’ll be in America or in Canada.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:03:26] Great. And then, I’m sure Lockton is kind of a global, anywhere that they might be located, and broadly you guys can support them.

Paul Jenkins: [00:03:32] Yeah. We’ve got a big network and a really successful network in the U.S.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:03:37] Yeah.

Paul Jenkins: [00:03:37] And, we’re growing our footprint globally. So, we’ve just opened offices in South America and in the Caribbean and in Australia and New Zealand. So, you know, we’re growing the footprint so that we can look after our clients as they expand and grow because many of our clients, you know, are growing internationally as well.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:03:55] Wonderful. And I know this is not your first room, so it’s not – you’ve been here before, but what is one of your most exciting, you know, or what are you most excited, I guess I should say, about being here at the show this year?

Paul Jenkins: [00:04:08] Yeah. It’s great to be able to travel again. Again, you know, we would often see our clients. Our clients come to London to meet with us and our underwriters, or we come to America to come and meet with our clients. So, it’s really wonderful to be able to meet people again. And many of these people are people I’ve met for the first time. So, they’re new clients. As I said, you know, we’ve been able to grow the portfolio of business that we have. We’ve done that successfully by providing amazing service, you know, to our clients to give them the best possible outcomes. And it’s nice just to, you know, make friends with new people and –

Jamie Gassmann: [00:04:42] Yeah, totally.

Paul Jenkins: [00:04:43] And to be here together.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:04:44] Yeah. And the clientele that you have, just question, is there anything from a risk perspective or an insurance perspective that’s changed or shifted in terms of the types of things that they need support with?

Paul Jenkins: [00:04:56] It’s ever-evolving. So, take for example the current global environment with regards to supply chain. Supply chains are disrupted all over the place, and for some clients, they have coverage for this, and for others that they don’t. But just trying to identify how they are running their business and continuing to operate with all this challenge, you know, with their business, it’s something that you can only really understand once you’re talking to people and once you get, you know, underneath the – you can’t present this stuff in an email or in an Excel spreadsheet. So, you need to listen to the clients as to what their challenges are, understand the business need. And that allows us to provide them the best possible policy and the best possible coverage at the best possible terms so that, you know, they’ve got the cover that they need in the event of a disruption or loss.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:05:51] Yeah. And like kind of keeping like a pulse almost on what might be potentially a risk for them, too, as things continue to evolve. Because as I always say, you know, the complexities and challenges we’ve experienced over the last few years have required businesses to think of things differently.

Paul Jenkins: [00:06:06] Yeah. Absolutely.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:06:07] Because they’re faced with more.

Paul Jenkins: [00:06:08] Yeah. Absolutely.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:06:09] So, interesting.

Paul Jenkins: [00:06:09] And not just that many businesses had to either close or reduce, you know, their capacity or their ability to produce things, which meant that they might have laid staff off. And then, now having to challenge to try and –

Jamie Gassmann: [00:06:23] Hire them.

Paul Jenkins: [00:06:23] Hire people. You know, there’s a real war on talent at the moment with regards to being able to get good people who know what they’re doing. And that in itself, you know, that might not be an insurable thing, but that in itself is a business problem that I think many people are at the moment trying to get their arms around.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:06:39] Yeah. Absolutely. Well, it has been an absolute pleasure to hear from you.

Paul Jenkins: [00:06:42] Yeah. Thank you.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:06:42] Yeah. So if people wanted to get a hold of you or to reach out to you about the services that Lockton Companies offers, how would they be able to do that?

Paul Jenkins: [00:06:50] Well, I suppose you could look on social media. There’s LinkedIn and others if I’m plugging, you know those platforms, or likewise, you can go on the website and we’ve got all the contact details that you need to be able to contact us.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:07:05] Wonderful. Well, thank you so much for being on the show. It’s been a pleasure.

Paul Jenkins: [00:07:08] Yeah. Thanks very much.

Outro: [00:07:14] Thank you for joining us on Workplace MVP. R3 Continuum is a proud sponsor of this show and is delighted to celebrate most valuable professionals who work diligently to secure safe workplaces where employees can thrive.

 

 

Tagged With: insurance broker, Jamie Gassmann, Lockton Companies, Paul Jenkins, property broker, R3 Continuum, RIMS, RISKWORLD 2022, Workplace MVP

Signals For Whether or Not You Need a Financial Advisor, with Anthony Chen, Host of Family Business Radio

June 6, 2022 by John Ray

Financial Advisor
Family Business Radio
Signals For Whether or Not You Need a Financial Advisor, with Anthony Chen, Host of Family Business Radio
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Financial Advisor

Signals For Whether or Not You Need a Financial Advisor, with Anthony Chen, Host of Family Business Radio

Anthony Chen shares that the best time to reach out to a financial advisor is when major changes are occurring in life or business. Family Business Radio is underwritten by Anthony Chen with Lighthouse Financial Network.

Anthony’s commentary was taken from this episode of Family Business Radio.

Anthony Chen, Host of Family Business Radio

family owned craft breweries
Anthony Chen

This show is sponsored and brought to you by Anthony Chen with Lighthouse Financial Network. Securities and advisory services offered through Royal Alliance Associates, Inc. (RAA), member FINRA/SIPC. RAA is separately owned and other entities and/or marketing names, products or services referenced here are independent of RAA. The main office address is 575 Broadhollow Rd. Melville, NY 11747. You can reach Anthony at 631-465-9090 ext. 5075 or by email at anthonychen@lfnllc.com.

Anthony Chen started his career in financial services with MetLife in Buffalo, NY in 2008. Born and raised in Elmhurst, Queens, he considers himself a full-blooded New Yorker while now enjoying his Atlanta, GA home. Specializing in family businesses and their owners, Anthony works to protect what is most important to them. From preserving to creating wealth, Anthony partners with CPAs and attorneys to help address all of the concerns and help clients achieve their goals. By using a combination of financial products ranging from life, disability, and long-term care insurance to many investment options through Royal Alliance. Anthony looks to be the eyes and ears for his client’s financial foundation. In his spare time, Anthony is an avid long-distance runner.

The complete show archive of Family Business Radio can be found at familybusinessradioshow.com.

Tagged With: Anthony Chen, financial advice, financial advisor, Lighthouse Financial Network

LIVE from RISKWORLD 2022: Carlos Castillo, Confia

June 3, 2022 by John Ray

Confia
Minneapolis St. Paul Studio
LIVE from RISKWORLD 2022: Carlos Castillo, Confia
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Confia

LIVE from RISKWORLD 2022: Carlos Castillo, Confia

Carlos Castillo, CEO of Confia Insurance Brokers headquartered in Costa Rica, was the guest on the episode live from RISKWORLD 2022. He and host Jamie Gassmann talked about the services Confia offers, his experience at the conference, and more.

Workplace MVP is underwritten and presented by R3 Continuum and produced by the Minneapolis-St.Paul Studio of Business RadioX®.

This show was originally broadcast from the RIMS 2022 RISKWORLD Conference held at the Moscone Center in San Francisco, California.

Carlos Castillo, CEO, Confia

Carlos Castillo, CEO, Confia

Confia began in 2010 offering insurance brokerage services. Their mission is to give customers the best advice and service in the insurance market, protecting their risks as if they were ours.

They offer their clients the best insurance solutions, with customer service that exceeds your expectations. We will achieve the prompt payment of your claims.

They operate in Costa Rica, Honduras, and the Dominican Republic.

Company website | Carlos Castillo LinkedIn

About Workplace MVP

Every day, around the world, organizations of all sizes face disruptive events and situations. Within those workplaces are everyday heroes in human resources, risk management, security, business continuity, and the C-suite. They don’t call themselves heroes though. On the contrary, they simply show up every day, laboring for the well-being of employees in their care, readying the workplace for and planning responses to disruption. This show, Workplace MVP, confers on these heroes the designation they deserve, Workplace MVP (Most Valuable Professionals), and gives them the forum to tell their story. As you hear their experiences, you will learn first-hand, real-life approaches to readying the workplace, responses to crisis situations, and overcoming challenges of disruption. Visit our show archive here.

Workplace MVP Host Jamie Gassmann

Jamie Gassmann, Host, “Workplace MVP”

In addition to serving as the host to the Workplace MVP podcast, Jamie Gassmann is the Director of Marketing at R3 Continuum (R3c). Collectively, she has more than fourteen years of marketing experience. Across her tenure, she has experience working in and with various industries including banking, real estate, retail, crisis management, insurance, business continuity, and more. She holds a Bachelor of Science Degree in Mass Communications with special interest in Advertising and Public Relations and a Master of Business Administration from Paseka School of Business, Minnesota State University.

R3 Continuum

R3 Continuum is a global leader in workplace behavioral health and security solutions. R3c helps ensure the psychological and physical safety of organizations and their people in today’s ever-changing and often unpredictable world. Through their continuum of tailored solutions, including evaluations, crisis response, executive optimization, protective services, and more, they help organizations maintain and cultivate a workplace of wellbeing so that their people can thrive. Learn more about R3c at www.r3c.com.

Company website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Twitter

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:03] Broadcasting Live from RISKWORLD 2022 at the Moscone Center in San Francisco, it’s time for Workplace MVP. Brought to you by R3 Continuum, a global leader in helping workplaces thrive during disruptive times. Now, here’s your host.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:00:22] Hey, everyone. Jamie Gassmann here, your host of Workplace MVP, coming to you from RISKWORLD 2022. And with me is Carlos Castillo. Hi, Carlos. Welcome to the show.

Carlos Castillo: [00:00:33] Hello. Good morning.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:00:35] So, talk to me about tell me where you’re from, what company you work for and what your company does.

Carlos Castillo: [00:00:40] Yeah, I’m from Costa Rica. The company is called CONFIA, which means trust. We are a brokerage insurance company. We started operations 12 years ago. When the market opens, we were in a state monopoly for 84 years with only one insurance company. Right now, we have 13 insurance companies from different countries. The market has grown. Right now, it’s at $1.4 billion in premiums. It’s a very attractive market. So, we started operations there in 2010 as a broker brokerage company.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:01:23] Wow. And this is your first time attending the RIM’s conference. So, talk to me what are you excited about with your first, you know, experience here? What are you looking forward to?

Carlos Castillo: [00:01:33] Yeah, I always wanted to visit RIMS, but this is the first year. I’m expecting to meet different brokers, different companies looking for opportunities. So, that’s what I’m here for, to make contacts.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:01:50] Yeah. So, the networking aspect of the show, I think there’s a lot of that going on here, which is great.

Carlos Castillo: [00:01:56] Absolutely, yeah. We’re looking for that networking opportunities, not just for Costa Rica, where we have operations. Also, we also operate in Dominican Republic and Honduras.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:02:07] Wow! So, kind of expanding your operation and see if there’s, you know, potential with some of the other brokers that might be working here at RIMS.

Carlos Castillo: [00:02:14] Exactly.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:02:14] Yeah.

Carlos Castillo: [00:02:15] Exactly.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:02:15] Are you planning on attending any of the sessions at all right here?

Carlos Castillo: [00:02:18] Yes, yeah.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:02:18] Yeah.

Carlos Castillo: [00:02:19] I will.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:02:19] Well, which ones attract you the most? Like, which topics are kind of your, like, go-to, can’t-wait-to-sit-in-that-audience for?

Carlos Castillo: [00:02:26] Well, I’m looking for a different topics: cyber insurance, marketing, global market opportunities. Yeah, I registered in some of the conferences.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:02:39] Yeah, fantastic. So, I know you’re networking and this is a great show for that. And are you — so far, I know the show has just kind of started, so far, have you been pleased with what you’ve been finding?

Carlos Castillo: [00:02:52] Oh, absolutely, absolutely. Everybody is very up and happy to see each other after the pandemia, right?

Jamie Gassmann: [00:02:59] Yeah.

Carlos Castillo: [00:02:59] It’s great after being two years in Zoom calls.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:03:03] Yeah.

Carlos Castillo: [00:03:04] So, it’s fantastic to have the opportunity, you know, to talk to people personally and to make contacts. So, everybody is very willing to share information, and everybody wants to do business.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:03:16] Yeah. Well, I really hope that you make a lot of great connections. And it was so great to have you on our episode here, and to meet you, and to hear a little bit about your background and really appreciate you stopping by.

Carlos Castillo: [00:03:27] Well, fantastic, fantastic. Our contact information is in www.confia.co.cr.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:03:39] Great. Wonderful. That way, if they need to get a hold of you or they want to reach out for partnership or any business-

Carlos Castillo: [00:03:45] Absolutely.

Intro: [00:03:45] … they actually have that opportunity to.

Carlos Castillo: [00:03:47] Absolutely.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:03:47] So, thank you so much for joining us. It was so great to talk to you.

Carlos Castillo: [00:03:49] All right. You’re welcome. Have a great day.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:03:51] You, too.

Outro: [00:03:56] Thank you for joining us on Workplace MVP. R3 Continuum is a proud sponsor of this show and is delighted to celebrate most valuable professionals who work diligently to secure safe workplaces where employees can thrive.

 

 

Tagged With: Carlos Castillo, Confia, insurance broker, Jamie Gassmann, R3 Continuum, RIMS, RISKWORLD 2022, Workplace MVP

It’s Not a Sales Call, It’s a “Best Fit” Conversation

June 3, 2022 by John Ray

It's Not a Sales Call It's a "best fit" conversation
North Fulton Studio
It's Not a Sales Call, It's a "Best Fit" Conversation
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It's Not a Sales Call It's a "best fit" conversation

It’s Not a Sales Call, It’s a “Best Fit” Conversation

As professional services providers, we’ll serve more effectively if we view our time with prospects as a “best fit” conversation instead of a sales call.

The Price and Value Journey is presented by John Ray and produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX®

TRANSCRIPT

John Ray: [00:00:00] Hello. I’m John Ray on The Price and Value Journey. Conversations with prospective clients should not be viewed as a sales call. Frankly, it took me a while to come to this realization and the use of this terminology.

John Ray: [00:00:19] These conversations that we have with prospects shouldn’t even start with a sale in mind. A better way to frame these conversations is to start out with something like, “Hey, let’s see if we’re a good fit. And to do that, I need to ask you some questions.” And then, ask those questions. Ask the individual in front of you, Why do you think you need X and Y? What outcomes are you trying to achieve? Why haven’t you tried fill in the blank? And so forth.

John Ray: [00:00:52] We are professional services providers. We serve. Our mission should be to help others find solutions to their problems. If we make that our focus, we will be seen as a person of value. And in turn, we will stand out from the crowd.

John Ray: [00:01:13] Earlier in this series, I was fortunate enough to interview Bob Burg, and he and John David Mann are the co-authors of a book called The Go-Givers Sell More. And here’s the way they put it in that book.

John Ray: [00:01:31] They say, Most of us look at sales backwards. We see it as convincing people to do something they don’t want to do. But it isn’t. It’s about learning what people do want to do and helping them do that. Or, we may think it’s about taking advantage of others. While, in fact, it’s about giving other people more advantage.

John Ray: [00:01:57] But the biggest inversion of all, the great upside down misconception about sales, is that it is an effort to get something from others. The truth is that sales at its best, that is at its most effective, is precisely the opposite. It is about giving. Selling is giving. Giving time, attention, counsel, education, empathy, and value. In fact, the word sell comes from the old English word sellan, which means – you guessed it – to give.

John Ray: [00:02:39] What a great passage. Try it. Instead of thinking of prospect meetings as sales calls, try thinking of them as best fit conversations. Maybe you call them giving conversations. You might have another way to frame it. But whatever we call it, we should do whatever’s necessary to put ourselves in the mindset of genuine service. That’s what makes us professional services providers.

John Ray: [00:03:11] I’m John Ray on The Price and Value Journey. Past episodes of this series can be found at pricevaluejourney.com or on your favorite podcast app. And if you have not subscribed, I’d be honored if you would. And if you’d like to connect with me directly, send me a note, john@johnray.co. I’d love to hear from you. Thank you for joining me.

 

About The Price and Value Journey

The title of this show describes the journey all professional services providers are on:  building a services practice by seeking to convince the world of the value we offer, helping clients achieve the outcomes they desire and trying to do all that at pricing which reflects the value we deliver.

If you feel like you’re working too hard for too little money in your solo or small firm practice, this show is for you. Even if you’re reasonably happy with your practice, you’ll hear ways to improve both your bottom line as well as the mindset you bring to your business.

The show is produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® and can be found on all the major podcast apps. The complete show archive is here.

John Ray, Host of The Price and Value Journey

John Ray The Price and Value Journey
John Ray, Host of “The Price and Value Journey”

John Ray is the host of The Price and Value Journey.

John owns Ray Business Advisors, a business advisory practice. John’s services include advising solopreneur and small professional services firms on their pricing. John is passionate about the power of pricing for business owners, as changing pricing is the fastest way to change the profitability of a business. His clients are professionals who are selling their “grey matter,” such as attorneys, CPAs, accountants and bookkeepers, consultants, marketing professionals, and other professional services practitioners.

In his other business, John is a Studio Owner, Producer, and Show Host with Business RadioX®, and works with business owners who want to do their own podcast. As a veteran B2B services provider, John’s special sauce is coaching B2B professionals to use a podcast to build relationships in a non-salesy way which translate into revenue.

John is the host of North Fulton Business Radio, Minneapolis-St. Paul Business Radio, Alpharetta Tech Talk, and Business Leaders Radio. house shows which feature a wide range of business leaders and companies. John has hosted and/or produced over 1,300 podcast episodes.

Connect with John Ray:

Website | LinkedIn | Twitter

Business RadioX®:  LinkedIn | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram

Tagged With: best fit conversation, ohn Ray, Price and Value Journey, pricing, professional services, professional services providers, Sales, sales call, solopreneurs, value, value pricing

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