Small
Business IT Consensus-Building Tips for Project Managers
Do
you provide small business IT services?
One of the best way to be successful in small business
IT is to survey your prospects, customers and clients to find out about
their true needs. This way, you can propose IT projects that will solve
their biggest problems.
But how do you convince your customers and clients that
they need the major projects you’re proposing? And how do you get them
to agree to enter into long-term relationships with your firm?
The following 3 tips can help you understand why getting
buy-in from customers -- and building consensus -- is so important to
the success of major small business IT projects.
-
Know the Dangers of Not Getting 100% Buy-In.
If a small business owner is totally gung ho about a planned
project, but every other staff member is bitterly resistant, your
life will be a complete nightmare. If not everyone is on board from
the beginning, you also run the risk of having the owner pull the
plug mid-project. Then you’ll have to either eat some non-billable
hours or risk alienating a client with aggressive collection
efforts. Either way, you're much better off investing the time to
ask the right questions, so you can uncover their true needs and
build consensus right from the outset.
-
Take Precautions Up-Front with New Customers and
Clients. You can avoid major aggravation if you work hard at
talking to all important people at a client site before starting any
major small business IT projects. You want to make sure you talk to
the owners/partners, internal gurus, mid-level managers/supervisors,
power users and novice/beginner users. These talks will be your last
chance to probe newly-discovered topics that need to be addressed
and to ask for additional clarification. Make sure you completely
understand their expectations and that they understand yours before
proceeding. Remember, building consensus if crucial to your success
as the project manager.
-
Keep the Small Business Owner Involved in the
Project. Make sure every client stays actively involved with any
project you do. If the problem you are tackling is not urgent or
important enough to demand the small business owner’s attention,
or if the small business owner becomes disengaged, these are red
flags that you may be headed for trouble. With small business IT
projects, your clients can’t completely outsource decision-making,
oversight and responsibility. You need periodic feedback and
guidance at certain key decision intervals. Projects typically fail
when the owner wants the project done immediately, but has no time
to explain what is needed. You need to make sure your client is
delegating responsibility to someone within the company that is
authorized to make decisions.
In this brief article, we discussed 3 tips that help you
improve the success rates and client satisfaction rates of your small
business IT projects. To learn more
about how you can attract great, steady, high-paying small business clients, go sign-up now for the free
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