What's the best advice you've used in your business?

To celebrate International Women's Day, on 8 March, we posed that question to a group of successful business owners.

Their answers may help you if you're facing any challenges within your company and are looking for help, or you're seeking inspiration to boss your business and keep things moving in the right direction.

Here's what they have to say…

Understand your finances

Start networking

Don't try to do it all

Be yourself

Stay focused on the main thing

Grow your network

Understand how much you charge

Save time by automating tasks

Learn from others

Be prepared

Understand your finances

Alison Parsons, Sage development manager at Albert Goodman LLP : ''Make sure you know exactly where you stand financially at any point. You have to know your starting point, in order to plan a successful route to where you want to be.

'Knowing where you are at present will allow you make the most of any opportunities which come your way, but also spot when you need to take timely positive action or seek advice to avoid getting into serious financial difficulties.

'Cloud accounting is great for this, taking the stress and a lot of the time out of financial record-keeping.'

Start networking

Antonia Chitty, founder of Family Friendly Working: 'The best bit of advice I have had is to start networking. I have met a fabulous selection of business women, and lots of freelancers who have been able to work with me as we both grew our businesses.'

Don't try to do it all

Amanda Webb, founder of Spiderworking: 'Focus. I fell into one of the pitfalls that many businesses fall into.

'I was doing a bit of everything but not telling anyone what it was that I actually did. That meant I did a bit of social advertising, a bit of content creation, a bit of video editing, a bit of training and a bit of consultation.

'It was a bit random and although it was bringing in a good income, I was working all hours and didn't really have a chance to focus on anything.

'It was during a training session that I got the advice. Focus on one product, package it and name it.

'It took me a while to develop the product but it's been the focus of my marketing ever since and although I still do two other things (and they are now packaged too), it's been much easier to focus on selling that one thing.

'I now have more time off, I finish work earlier and my income has increased.'

Stay focused on the main thing

Joanna Booth, founder and managing director of Social Media Makes Sense< /a>: 'The main thing, is to keep the main thing, the main thing.

'The more you rely on this, the more focused your business and mind becomes.

'This little mantra has saved me endless hours of distraction and helped me make hard decisions. It's also how I pivoted my business to go completely niche.

'Once I started focusing on one key market, my business doubled - even though I had to turn away work.'

Be yourself

Janice B Gordon, founder of Scale Your Sales : 'Oscar Wilde is said to have quoted: 'Be yourself; everyone else is already taken.'

'This is essential in business otherwise your customer cannot distinguish you from other similar businesses. The more me I am in my business, the more my customer engage with me.'

Grow your network

Jennifer Stirrup, CEO and founder of Data Relis h: 'The best advice I've had, and can offer others, is to use your soft skills to increase your reach as a business owner.

'We need to have a wide, broad network of shallow contacts as well as a small network of deep, close contacts.

'What's the best way to grow your network? Offer to help others.

'Whether that's on LinkedIn, Facebook, or at virtual events such as the local Chamber of Commerce, you'll increase your network and gain satisfaction from helping others as you grow. You'll learn something as well. Lift as you climb!'

Understand how much you charge

Jenny Garrett, founder of Jenny Garrett Glob al: 'The best piece of business advice that I received when starting out was to really understand how much I charge.

'As a company that provides a service, it's not possible to provide chargeable work 100% of my time.

'More likely that around a third of my time is spent on chargeable work and the rest on business development and administrative work, so a third of my work needed to provide a 100% of my salary.

'It was turning point for me to understand this and it helped me create a more sustainable business model.'

Save time by automating tasks

Noreen Cesareo, founder of Market Acce nts: 'During my start-up years, a mentor advised: 'Focus on your key skills and core offering and don't waste valuable energy and time on what can easily be done with software and automated tools. Similarly, buy in services that make your life easier.'

'The thinking matched my own. So I did.

'I went virtual before it was a trend. I invested in software and then cloud, and used automated tools whenever possible.

'I have worked abroad and also on client-side, engaging with my team and international partners online.

'Today I run a business which is #virtual and #digital and they have never been an issue.'

Learn from others

Stella Holman, founder of The Connector Int Online: 'I have regularly attended networking events since that have been offline at various national locations and also internationally. I have networked with other people who also offer similar services.

'This was a great way to learn by listening to wisdom and guidance of others who have made mistakes and learn ways of correcting them, also to get some new ideas and discuss new ideas with others.

'Build advocacy when others are confident that you are the real deal. I agreed and continued with the ethos of open, random and supportive. Which I got by communicating and sharing articles via Twitter and joining in with various conversations on Twitter and used the #hasthtag #UKBusinessLunch where I hosted a lunchtime chat with others over a period of three years.

'This then migrated on to my own hashtag #theconnectorint and weekly hashtag #EngagORS chat organised by a business connection, which encouraged others who are interested to mix social and business networking online.'

Be prepared

Alina Cincan, managing director of Inbox Transla tion: 'Not exactly what Miguel de Cervantes had in mind (in fact, I am sure he was not thinking of business, at least not in the traditional sense) when he wrote: 'The man who is prepared has his battle half fought.'

'But it is good advice nonetheless, and it can be applied to basically anything in life. I have applied it in my business, and it helped.

'To be more specific, in order to prepare for the unknown that Brexit was going to be, I set up a second business in my native country (in the European Union), in addition to my UK one, so as to have as little interruption as possible.

'Time will tell if it has made my business prosper, but what it did was give me some peace of mind, which in turn allowed me to focus on my business instead of worrying incessantly.'

Final thoughts

Inspirational stuff from a group of business owners who are truly bossing it. They've learnt a lot on their business journeys and are putting the advice they've received into good practice.

So back to the original question: What's the best advice you've used in your business?

Feel free to share your answers in the comments below.

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Disclaimer

Sage Group plc published this content on 05 March 2021 and is solely responsible for the information contained therein. Distributed by Public, unedited and unaltered, on 05 March 2021 10:04:06 UTC.