Are You Like Target?

Saturday found us browsing new car seats at Target. It’s something we would usually order online after careful research, but after buckling our little dude in that morning, we realized we have a giant toddler on our hands. I decided we should just pick up the best one we could find for our needs at Target.

We found just what we were looking for, but the only one they had on the shelf was blue. We wanted the red display model because it matched our car (I know, such a yuppie thing.)

We called a Target team member to see if they had a red one in the back. She was nice enough and checked for us, but came back with bupkis. Nada. Zilch. Strong absence of red.

Okay, bummer, right? Yeah, we survived. We’ll probably just order it online now. But it got me thinking (as you just knew it would). A couple observations about this trip to Target:

  • The store was really slow. Not a lot of Target shoppers lately, I’ve noticed. In fact, a lot of shelves were eye-sore empty. It looked like a Goodwill going out of business.
  • No overhead music. Deathly quiet in the store.

So, with these observations noted and considering the current state of the economy, I was struck by the fact that the nice Target lady left us with just, “Sorry, none in the back.”

I was struck with the realization that when Target lays off employees, they will probably be shocked. When Target’s sales suck, Corporate will blame “the economy.”

The craziest thing about this is that there are these tiny, yet incredible, opportunities for the nice Target lady to save her store.

She couldn’t help the fact that there were no red car seats in stock at that moment. However, she could have:

  • Offered to call another local store to check
  • Looked at the display to see if the cover could be switched with the one in the package
  • Asked us a few questions about what we were looking for (besides “red”) to see if there might be another option in stock that could work for us.

I know what you’re thinking. You’re thinking that regular, on-the-clock Target employees don’t make enough money to offer that kind of salesmanship or customer involvement.

I’m saying, how can they afford not to offer that kind of customer support?

You see, I don’t care how much money you make per hour. I don’t care that your job is “only part time.” I don’t care that you don’t have health benefits.

As a company, Target is not really saving money by leaving shelves unstocked. They’re telling customers, “We’re anticipating having trouble so we don’t care how we look right now. It’s about us, not you.

Those tiny, seemingly insignificant things like dirty, empty shelves and silence in the store are things that stick in people’s minds long after they leave (obviously, since I’m writing it about a week later).

Are you listening closely? Good. Hear this:

If you don’t go the extra mile in this economy, you will lose your job, your company will go under, and/or you will not get repeat business from your consulting clients.

If you’re working from home, you cannot afford to just do a job as promised. You can’t rely on simply delivering at expectations. In a good economy, a company like Target may be big enough to absorb a lot of lackluster employees. In a poor economy, it could be their downfall.

It’s just not enough.

There are people close to me who are being laid off as their companies reexamine their profit/loss statements. I sympathize with them, I really do. I don’t mean to make it sound as if they could have kept their job if they just worked harder. It’s more complex than that, sure.

As independent business people, even more important to take those extra steps to please your clients. I’m not talking about offering services at a discount or free (that’s a swear word for consultants). On the contrary, independent consultants should be charging premiums for their work on the basis that they are already saving their clients money simply by being lean organizations without large overhead or payroll to meet. Hiring a permanent employee or large company is going to cost a lot more in the long run. It also costs more to hire someone who doesn’t care about them beyond the invoice.

What are you projecting to your clients? Empty shelves and desperation, or a positive, “it’s all about the client” attitude?

If you can appreciate how this works, you can see how it applies to employees of large corporations. When an employee thinks like an independent consultant, they will offer more to customers without the dangling carrot of a bonus or raise (although those things tend to happen to those people anyway). Rather than working from a position of fear (losing their job), they will automatically be supporting the company in a more positive way by equating the company’s success with their own.

This economy is not simply “down.” It’s changing in a huge, huge way. People can’t afford to be “employees” anymore. Every single working person needs to be independent, even if they have a “contract” that calls them “employee.”

As home office warriors, we’re already ahead of the game. We need to stay ahead of the game by distinguishing ourselves as the highest value support around.

Think about it.

David Billings is an illustrator, animator, and writer. He currently runs two businesses from his home studio near beautiful Mount Hood, Oregon.

Sparky Firepants Images is focused on building kids’ brains to ginormous sizes while they have a crazy time. David creates fantastic, colorful images that complement books and educational media for preschool and elementary-level kids. A unique perspective on children’s publishing and the business of illustration can be found on his blog.

He also uses his technical expertise in creating corporate graphics and presentations to consult with and assist presenters of all types, keeping their audiences rapt with attention. Prepared Graphics focuses on helping individuals and small business owners with great content who don’t want to mess around with that PowerPoint stuff.

David lives with his wife and children on an alpaca farm. No, they don’t really smell that bad.

How Exactly is This Different Again?

 

Welcome to the fantastic secret universe of the home office worker. Check your former ways of working, living, and thinking at the door.

If you’re like me, you’ve come to this new world of freedom from a 9-5 (okay, 8-7) corporate job. In my former career there were things I saw that made me want to hurl my laptop out the window. Office politics, blundering management, new policies that were too broad to be effective for everyone but enforced nonetheless… the list goes on.

Not one to point all ten fingers at The Man – I was guilty myself of some poor practices when I worked in an office. Complacency (sometimes), e-mail avoidance (often), procrastination (daily) were my main corporate vices.

©2009 Sparky Firepants Images

©2009 Sparky Firepants Images

 

Now that I find myself sans boss, in my home office (studio) environment, I’m starting to get a handle on what it means to be in charge of my every day.

The advantages of being independent are obvious:

  • No boss hovering around or scheduling impromptu unnecessary meetings
  • I can plan my day around personal errands, meals, time with family
  • My studio/office is my own to set up according to my comfort and convenience
  • I decide what projects I take on, my rates, and how to approach clients

Just about everyone dreams of this world. It sounds like heaven to most people headed toward Independent Land.

While these things are all happy little pieces of this home office universe, I struggled at first, trying to understand how this was different from what I used to do. The only tangible changes were lack of a regular paycheck, no commute, and no co-workers.

Over the course of my first year at home I realized that this couldn’t be simply a shift in location, it was a complete mindset overhaul. I wasn’t just trading in my ties for a t-shirt and wool hat.

I realized that:

  • Complacency kills, but when you’re on your own it hurts more
  • I have to find my own “co-workers.” Networking, networking, networking.
  • Sometimes I have to take on projects that aren’t my ultimate dream.
  • My family comes first, but they also respect my need to work (it’s our nuts and berries)
  • My bosses were good at challenging me. I have to find other people to do that now.

I no longer have the luxury of a large company’s sales force to fall back on. If I procrastinate or slack off in my marketing, I will feel the stress a month later.

The reality is that the Deep Pockets Corporation doesn’t exist. People are experiencing layoffs and belt-tightening because of the myth that large corporations have bottomless wells of cash. They act accordingly in their day-to-day “just get me to the weekend” mindset and at some point the bill comes due.

Those corporations are just like my small business, only the scale is different. Which reminds me of another realization:

The reality is, there is no weekend. That’s not a Zen koan, it’s just the truth.

Does that scare you? No weekend? No holidays? No paid vacation?

If you want to be a member of the super secret society of home office professionals, you’re going to have to realize that you cannot shut off your brain at 5:30 PM. You can’t “forget about the office” for the Superbowl.

If you’re going to really make a go of this independence thing, you’re going to have to do more than switch your location and your clothes.

That’s why I say “welcome to a different universe.” It really is.

David Billings is an illustrator, animator, and writer. He currently runs two businesses from his home studio near beautiful Mount Hood, Oregon.

Sparky Firepants Images is focused on building kids’ brains to ginormous sizes while they have a crazy time. David creates fantastic, colorful images that complement books and educational media for preschool and elementary-level kids. A unique perspective on children’s publishing and the business of illustration can be found on his blog.

He also uses his technical expertise in creating corporate graphics and presentations to consult with and assist presenters of all types, keeping their audiences rapt with attention. Prepared Graphics focuses on helping individuals and small business owners with great content who don’t want to mess around with that PowerPoint stuff.

David lives with his wife and children on an alpaca farm. No, they don’t really smell that bad.

Using a Mindmap to develop a new blog

ProBlogger had a post called, Starting a New Blog? Start With a Mind Map. And it reminded me of a promise I made when we first started Home Office Warrior. I stated that I used a MindMap when we first started working on the idea of HOW and that I would publish it someday.

Well that day is today. Below is an image of the actually MindMap I used for HOW. I don’t believe I am giving away any secrets by doing so. In fact, when we are doing blogs for other individuals or businesses, we still do a MindMap. It is just a great way to put your thoughts down on paper. Or in my case, my computer. I use Mindjet and their product MindManger 7 Mac. It is wonderful.

Here is my Map:

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