Book description
The Unbeatable, Updated, Comprehensive Guidebook For First-Time Consultants
Getting Started In Consulting
More people than ever are making the jump from corporate offices to home offices, taking control of their futures, being their own bosses, and starting their own consultancies. Consulting is a bigger business than ever and growing every day.
For almost a decade, Alan Weiss's Getting Started in Consulting has been an indispensable resource for anyone who wants to strike out on his own and start a new consulting business. It provides a rich source of expert advice and practical guidance, and it shows you how you can combine low overhead and a high degree of organization to add up to a six- or even seven-figure income. You'll learn everything you need to know about financing your business, marketing your services, writing winning proposals, meeting legal requirements, setting fees, keeping the books, and much more.
This new Third Edition of Getting Started in Consulting is more comprehensive, up to date, and practical than ever. In addition to the nuts-and-bolts basics, you'll also get a wealth of new information and resources:
How to leverage new technologies to lower your business costs and increase your profits
A budget sampler that shows you how best to maximize an initial start-up investment of $5,000, $10,000, or $20,000
Free downloadable tools and forms to help you design and start your business quickly and easily
New interviews with consultants who achieved rapid success, including their personal stories and most effective techniques
Brand-new references, examples, and appendices
If your dream in life is to get out of the office and out on your own, consulting is a great way to make it happen. Make sure you do it right—and do it profitably—with Getting Started in Consulting, Third Edition.
Table of contents
- Copyright
- Introduction to the Third Edition
- About the Author
- Acknowledgments
- 1. Establishing Goals and Expectations (Including Your Own): You Will Be What You Decide to Be, Nothing Less, Nothing More
- 2. Physical Space and Environmental Needs: Act Like You Have a Business and You'll Have One
- 3. Sorting Out the Legal, Financial, and Administrative: First, Let's Kill All the Lawyers
- 4. Marketing 101: Creating a Market Gravity for Your Business
- 5. Advanced Marketing: Creating a Brand
- Leveraging Technology: How to get Started at the Speed of Light
- 6. Initiating the Sales Process and Acquiring Business: Building Relationships
-
7. Closing the Sale: How to Write Proposals and Cash Checks
- 7.1. The Nature of Excellent Proposals
- 7.2. The Nine Steps of Great Proposals
- 7.3. When to Follow Up
- 7.4. Eight Rules for a Command Appearance
- 7.5. Ten Steps to Follow if the Buyer is Unresponsive
- 7.6. Horrors, What if the Buyer Says "No!": Six Steps to Redemption
- 7.7. Notes
- 7.8. Questions and Answers
- 8. Establishing Fees: If You Bill By The Hour, You Cheat Your Client and Yourself
-
9. Moving to the Next Level: You May Be Ready for Dramatic Growth Before You Know It
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9.1. Finding Resources: The Pros and Cons of Staffs
- 9.1.1. Rule 1: Implementers Are a Dime a Dozen
- 9.1.2. Rule 2: One and One Must Equal at Least 64
- 9.1.3. Rule 3: Hire the Help that Provides for Abilities or Interests You Do Not Possess
- 9.1.4. Rule 4: Demand that Any Service You Pay For, Full- or Part-Time, Be Constructed Totally in Your Self-Interest
- 9.1.5. Rule 5: Don't Confuse Ego with Business Needs
- 9.2. Business Planning
- 9.3. Creating Passive Income
- 9.4. Working Internationally
- 9.5. Investing In Longer-Term Potential
- 9.6. Notes
- 9.7. Questions and Answers
-
9.1. Finding Resources: The Pros and Cons of Staffs
- 10. Giving Yourself Permission to Succeed: How to Continue to Grow by Paying Back
-
11. The Quick Start: How to Hit the Consulting Ground Running at Full Speed
- 11.1. First Dimension: Creating Infrastructure
- 11.2. Second Dimension: Reaching Out for Business
- 11.3. Marketing Technique 1: Call Everyone You Know
- 11.4. Marketing Technique 2: Target Twelve
- 11.5. Marketing Technique 3: Focused Prospecting
- 11.6. Quick Start, Full-Speed Mileposts, and Dangers
- 11.7. Summary
- 11.8. Notes
- 11.9. Questions and Answers
- A. Business Plan to Attract Investment
- B. Sample To-Do Lists
- C. Office Equipment Recommendations
- D. Trade Associations, Professional Groups, Publicity Sources
- E. Sample Biographical Sketch for a New Consultant
- F. Sample Position Paper: Accepting Equity for Your Services: Or Why the Craps Tables Suddenly Look Good
- G. Sample Magazine Inquiry Letter
-
H. 101 Questions for Any Sales Situation You'll Ever Face
- H.1. An Overview
- H.2. Qualifying the Prospect
- H.3. Finding the Economic Buyer
- H.4. Rebutting Objections
- H.5. Establishing Objectives
- H.6. Establishing Metrics
- H.7. Assessing Value
- H.8. Determining the Budget Range
- H.9. Preventing Unforeseen Obstacles
- H.10. Increasing the Size of the Sale
- H.11. Going for the Close
- H.12. The Most Vital Question
- Glossary
Product information
- Title: Getting Started in Consulting, Third Edition
- Author(s):
- Release date: March 2009
- Publisher(s): Wiley
- ISBN: 9780470419809
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