Great!  You want to make a living out of coaching and training? Many people have been  there, and haven‘t really succeeded. They have made the attempt, and are back in  the casual or part-time workforce, in order to support their coaching dream, or  have completely abandoned it.
Depending  on a few crucial points, turning a coaching hobby into a business can be  daunting or enjoyable; in reality it‘s frequently a combination of the two. A  number of these points can be applied to owning and running any kind of  business, but a couple are specific to the training or coaching  business:Confidence in your teaching skills.
Can  you justify your fees to clients if you haven‘t really developed your teaching  skills? Have you overcome the disempowering inner hints telling you that you are  not worth it? Do you feel you have good integrity charging the fees you have  decided upon? Do you charge these fees because that is what other coaches and  trainers charge? There are plenty of Joe Blows who think they can instruct other  people. They think it is just giving advice and supervising and calling the  shots to get it done, or simply offering some platitudes as opposed to real  coaching. You will find that after a few months into your coaching and skills  training that you become aware of the complex and challenging set of skills  needed for this career. You become keenly aware of its difficulties. Self-doubt  and discouragement begin an erosion of your confidence. Overcoming and regaining  confidence in your coaching/training skills requires practice, and as much  education as your time and purse will permit. You need to practice, and hire  coaches/trainers whose skills far exceeds your own. Practice and read up on  different coaching processes. This way you will enlarge your skills and listen  to your coaching calls. Self critique and improve upon you  talents.
Be  willing to market your services and close the sales. This is a big stepping  stone. All you want to do is coach. As a business owner with little income, you  aren‘t in the position to hire marketing and sales professionals to take on this  role. It is important you view coaching/training as an intimate service  offering; people want to feel they can rely upon and trust you. They will need  to experience your service offering before committing to buy. This experience  will create a needed confidence in your ability to successfully help clients.  Remember to blow your own horn and speak with certainty describing the benefits  clients will experience by working with you. Many people aren‘t born with sales  abilities. Personal development courses are around to help you become  comfortable and proficient in selling your services and  products.
Finances  and time are essential to successfully building a business. It might take 2-5  years to enjoy profitability in a coaching/training business. Ideally you need  to plan to have sufficient time and money until reaching sustainable  profitability without feeling desperate. Clients and prospects smell desperation  a mile away. Trust me; this is not a good look. The frustrations and wrestles  with finances can be consuming and will impede your coaching/training abilities.  You might find yourself needing to justify your worth to avoid the client  sacking you. This is not fertile space needed for good coaching/training.  Keeping your day job is a good sign that you are willing to act to maintain  progress. Couples are a boon, where one works
Believe  in yourself. Believe you are capable of achieving the business success you  desire. Self belief is bolstered by a series of small successes. Reading,  attending business and training seminars, watching videos and having access to a  great coach all help to build an environment conducive to building and  maintaining self belief. Build wisdom and competencies. You will see yourself  accomplishing the needed steps to success. Coaching/training will find you  examining your own beliefs and skills. You‘re ahead of the game compared to lots  of new business owners.
Are  you motivated by real desire to succeed in coaching/training?  Desire deals with  what you want and the intensity of that want. Pursuing the coaching/training  role requires flexibility. Ask yourself is this what you want, and are you  willing to make sacrifices or apply yourself to achieve it. You can marry  coaching/training with consultancy work. Guts are needed to be responsible for  your business with its ups and downs. You must have a good feel for what it  takes to meet the needs of business ownership. You will find yourself doing more  jobs in the business than simply coaching, training and consulting. You will be  doing many jobs for at least a couple of years or more until your business  becomes sustainably profitable. Don‘t succumb to disappointment – treat it as a  challenge worth pursuing!
Persistence  pays off!  Persistence is needed when pursuing any dream. Persistence might be  compared with the size of a tank, and desire – the fuel. A Mack truck desire  isn‘t going to hold up if you only have a lawn mower fuel tank. There is a lot  to learn about starting and building a business. Natural horsemanship used in  the horse racing industry is a new service in thoroughbred training. It will  take time for it to be fully embraced by the race horse industry. Inroads are  already being made using well known natural horsemanship identities such as  Monty Roberts, Frank Bell and John Lyons. Persistence will see you hanging in  there, being flexible, and exhibiting a lot of gumption. You need a master coach  to keep you growing in your coaching/training skills sets, and a great business  coach to keep you business growing at a sustainable rate.
Other  considerations may contribute to your business success as a coach/trainer.  Lacking them does not mean failure.  A  business plan clarifies  what you want your business to look like. It includes the kind of services you  offer, to how many, and to what type of clients. The plan includes your  expenses, and predicted income. What clientele do you serve? How? How will you  contact them? It will feature the benefits of working with you. Marketing tasks  will appear in your marketing  plan.  The plan is a roadmap, and designed to be flexible. You can fly by the seat of  your pants. Having a map / plan will keep you on course, contain contingencies  if flexibility is needed, and you can expect an easier journey. It is a true  saying ‘the business that doesn‘t plan plans to fail.‘
Construct  a substantial contact  database.  Fill it with people who know and trust you, and who would be willing to pay you  in this new business. It pays to check to see if they have the financial means  to afford your services. You can also start from scratch and steadily build this  list of good contacts.
Substantial  marketing and sales experience is a plus. It helps you to grow your business  promoting and selling your services, and keeping an eye on the competition, and  regulatory environment in which your business exists.
Career  experience with horses, or the niche market your business is specializing or  serving, is a real business plus. Lots of brilliant thriving businesses have  started as hobbies. Your commitment to the transformation of a hobby into a new  business venture will drive its success.
I love reading a blog about business startup. Thanks for sharing this because I will reserve it when I have my own business so that I will managed it properly.
ReplyDeleteStartup
Thanks, Louis, you are welcome to visit the New Business Group on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/?ref=home#!/groups/199437956784765/
ReplyDelete