Going Solo: The Three Skills Of Soloing
Stephanie Booth and I skyped this morning about the upcoming Going Solo (remember the early bird discount ends on Monday with the close of the month). Stephanie caught me making a face:
Looks like I will be talking about The Three Skills Of Soloing which is based on a post I made awhile ago:
[from Going Solo: A Few Words Of Advice]The most difficult challenge for soloists is to find a balance between the various activities that must take place to survive. I like to oversimplify these down to three:
- Doing The Work — The heart of consulting — of whatever description — is delivering the work. A soloist has to deliver value to the client in order to make money. Most consulting-oriented people start with this capability: it’s the other two that cause problems, in general.
- Marketing and Networking — I have already noted that I principally market myself through blogging, and that I attend conferences: those are the outward signs of a willingness, or even an obsession with networking with likeminded others. When I find out about a web product that sounds interesting (my beat), I sign up for the beta, fool with it, write a review, ask for more info, and very soon I am involved in a direct communication with the company’s management. I read other people’s blogs and comment on their ideas. When attending conferences I try to chat with both old friends and folks I have never met before. I know many consultants whose natural introversion makes such activities difficult if not impossible. But these interactions are just as critical to being a soloist as performing the work, and are likely to take up just as much time!
- Prospecting, Contracts and Cash Flow — I am always happy to talk about money, and as a soloist it is imperative to get what you are worth, and then to collect the fees. This is a blind spot for many, and a make-it-or-break-it issue. I know a lot of folks that find it hard — even with people they know well — to ask for a project, an engagement, whatever, and to demand payment later on. It may seem obvious but many consultants only get involved with this as a necessary evil, but it’s not. It’s just as central as delivering the goods and networking.
My sense is that you need to be doing each of these three things an equal amount of time. One third of your time should be devoted to networking and marketing, that is finding new clients, or letting them find you; one third to talking up new projects, getting them into contracts, and managing the business side, up to and including getting paid; and one third performing billable work. I can hear the groaning already: only one third of the time billable?
Yes, and you will have to jigger your billing rate to make that work. I plan to only work 10 days per month, so that has to make all the ends meet. I know that 10 days will go to marketing and networking, and 10 days to prospecting, negotiating, contracts, and getting the money. I no longer fool myself that these things will happen by themselves.
So balance is the most likely place for a prospective soloist to run aground. They do not allocate enough time to marketing, or they underestimate the level of effort involved in prospecting, or they hope that they will have 22 billable days a month and set their rates too low so that they starve to death while working five days a week.
The subtext is that the abiding skill is the balancing act, rather than the three skills being balanced.
I will also touch on countering your psychological tendency to skitter away from the areas you don't like to do as much, and other unsavory aspects of the job, like firing clients.
Stephanie also informs me that I will be involved in a second session having to do with money issues, like billing and negotiation. I am always happy to talk about money.


How did I miss this? I should have submitted the Consulting Counterculture Manifesto
http://socialwrite.com/2006/12/16/manifesto-for-an-emerging-consultant-counter-culture-why-change/
Posted by: Jevon | March 29, 2008 at 08:17 AM