In most of our businesses, our primary focus is on the mainstream
products and services our companies offer. These provide the bulk of any
organization’s revenue growth. They are the mother nest business. We train our
sales forces to doggedly pursue growth in these revenue centres. Our sales staff
is rewarded on their success achieving their targets. But what would happen if we stood occasionally
and objectively looked at our operations and analyzed the operations of our
clients with the objective of identifying what else we could be doing with the
assets we already have to provide additional products and services to the
client. Let the thought process move in every direction in search for new
opportunities. You might be amazed at the revenue opportunities that exist
which require very little additional investment and could represent significant
high margin business.
I use several key parameters when prioritizing ancillary opportunities:
- Is there additional revenue to be made that we ordinarily would not have earned?
- Are we already knocking on the doors?
- I recommend looking beyond just sales staff activity, examine all aspects of your operation. I recently was involved in discussions regarding a company that had service staff entering the offices of over 30,000 small, medium and large businesses on a monthly basis to fulfill their service requirements. This company was not in the delivery business but we did identify a number of opportunities where these service reps could be used to provide deliver services for other non-competitive companies.
- Is the additional investment minimal both in terms of money and human resources?
- Does the opportunity have the potential for synergies beyond just revenue?
- There may be circumstances where your organization can provide a service that may not directly generate revenue but strengthens your brand, competitive position, customer relationships or provides opportunities for you to generate new challenges for underutilized staff or management that you may be at risk of losing.
Here are some examples based on my experience that you may find helpful:
1. When I was in charge of Trader Classified Media in
Quebec, we published close to 75 classified advertising magazines, directories
and associated websites that provided Quebec businesses and consumers with
critical data on the used car, truck, recreational vehicle, motorcycle, boat
and real estate markets. These publications and their websites were highly
regarded sourcing tools or buying guides for anyone wanting to purchase
previously owned items. The Trader products and services were the market
leaders.
The revenue generated from this online data management arrangement was significant and the margin was impressive for the following reasons:
- The data was already being collected due to the nature of Trader’s ongoing mainstream operations.
- There was very little additional administrative expense required to operate this ancillary business.
- The service was provided online so there were none of the usual publications costs involved.
Here was a case where the data was originally sold to Trader by the consumer or used car dealer through the purchase of an ad. The data was then resold to the government and again to the dealer as well as the consumer. When you think of it, from the perspective of those consumers and dealers who paid to advertise their vehicles in Trader’s publications, they were in effect rebuying the same data they had paid Trader to advertise.
2. The real estate market provided another
lucrative opportunity. We published approximately 24 real estate titles in
Quebec. The primary advertisers were real estate agents selling residential
properties. The site we operated was called Visinet. This site was the third
most visited site in Quebec after MLS and, I believe, ReMax. The main reason
for the site’s popularity was the nature of its content. The site advertised
real estate from any agent or agency that wanted to advertise. Unlike most
other sites, such as Remax, our site was not restricted to carrying product
being sold by one company. Consumers liked the site because they could search a
large portion of the real estate market by visiting only one site.
- We managed to get additional revenue from the real estate professionals that we were already dealing with.
- We kept these agents “in the family” as we helped them develop their own web identities. This allowed us to continue to nurture existing relationships and identify value add opportunities.
- Even with their own websites, they tended to stay committed to us because we could constantly offer upgrades to their web capabilities that they could not afford to do independently.
- Their exposure on Visitnet drove traffic to their own site but they liked the synergy of having their business exposed on both sites.
- This made good business sense to us because we already had made the investment in web development and hosting assets. To do this work for the agents was not a huge strain or require significant additional cost. The real estate professionals selected their web design from templates we had pre-designed and hosting requires very little administration or cost. It provided us with opportunities to better utilize existing staff or add new staff that we could not have rationalized based on just our internal requirements.
- The value adds we were providing solidified our customer relationships.
- We created additional revenue opportunities for sales staff.
3. I was the head of business development for a
market leading conference management organization. They organized over 100
conferences per year. The attendees at their conferences were professionals
mainly lawyers, investment bankers. While their events were well attended, they
realized that in any given firm only 1 or 2 professionals would attend an
event. Efforts to attract more attendees were unsuccessful.
The answer was to assemble the
proceedings from each event into a publication. Wait a few weeks after the
event was over and then make the publication available to others in firms that
had sent a delegate to the event. The rationale was that those who attended the
event would return to their offices and discuss the event. Ideally this would
stimulate a demand for the information from the event. Delegates would be able
to reap the benefits of the knowledge or information they acquired from the
event for a week or two before the opportunity to acquire the proceedings was
given to their colleagues. The proceedings were sold to the colleagues at about
half the price of the event. The only people eligible to buy the proceedings
were members of firms that had sent a delegate to the actual event.
- It re-purposed the proceedings providing the opportunity to generate revenue beyond the event itself.
- The margin of the sale of the proceedings was high because the costs associated with preparing the publication were quite a bit less that organizing an event.
- The publication would be passed around within the respective firm and thus continue to promote not only the event but also the event organization. Basically the client was paying for the privilege to promote the event company.
4. I was COO with a new-media company that provided products and services to the “enterprise software development” community. Their website was an intriguing example of ancillary revenue generation. Those who contributed content to the site were paid based on a fee schedule that had fixed and variable elements. The company broke their content into categories (articles, news posts, interviews etc.) established a core value on each category (the company established a fixed fee for each type of content based on degree of effort....e.g. an article was worth more than an interview etc.). They paid that set amount plus a variable amount based on views of the specific piece. They would generate approximately 150 new pieces of original content/topics monthly. Their content just kept getting better and more relevant because they could continually monitor its popularity and the contributors were motivated to keep abreast of what were popular topics because it was in their best interests to give the readers more of what they wanted. The company also aggressively tagged all content (probably 4-5 tags per topic). The tagging allowed for cross referencing to items for sale such as online books (most of these books were custom written just for their audience), lead generation assets etc. They could target advertisers or product/service providers based on readership patterns. Client products or ads would be posted on pages where articles or other content appeared that contained words or phrases tagged to their product or service offering.
The company also published e-books. E-book titles were selected based on an analysis of the traffic. Since the site had a B2B focus, the content of the books tended to be need-to-know information. The writers that created the online editorial content were the authors of the books. Management tracked a given writer’s popularity with readers and because of their tagging and tracking they could identify which of the writer’s subject categories were most popular. The writer would then be contracted to write a book on a specific topic. The books were then sold as e-books or they could be purchased in print through Amazon. Companies that sold products or services that were relevant or related to a book’s content were invited to sponsor the book if they wished. The sponsorship deal could take 2 forms. One form was for the sponsoring company to pay a sponsoring fee. The other arrangement would be for the company sponsoring the e-book to have it made available as a free download but the e-book customer was required to register for the download and the company sponsoring the e-book got the registration. The client company paid the site operator for the leads that were generated.
By: Richard Peters
http://ca.linkedin.com/in/richardpeters2/
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