KEY TAKEAWAYS
• Cultivating business relationships with outside providers of expertise is crucial to the success of a business.
• Good employee and customer relationships are of primary importance.
• Necessary professionals include bankers, accountants, lawyers, insurance representatives, marketers, specific skills trainers, and technology consultants.
Business Support Team Members
Depending on the nature of the business, its support group includes customers, employees, bankers, accountant/tax specialists, lawyers, insurance representatives, sales/marketing professionals, skills trainers, and technology consultants. As it is unlikely that all this expertise will be available in-house, it is crucial for owners to develop and maintain close working relationships with many of these outside providers before any emergency need arises. Here's a look at how cultivating relationships with each of these groups can favorably impact a business.
Employees
The financial duties of a business owner begin with their relationship with their employees. It is probably the most important one to cultivate. Good employees represent a major resource in a business, so the time and effort the owner invests in nurturing those relationships have a huge return on investment (ROI). Employees who feel respected, listened to, and appreciated by management generally produce at higher levels.
In addition, employees represent the company to its customers. The business relationship with customers largely depends on their experience and interaction with the firm's employees. Happy employees tend to want to satisfy the customers, do a good job, and work hard to retain that job. This is important to the continuity of high-quality customer service and avoids the significant expense of employee turnover, retraining, and the inevitable rookie mistakes of new, inexperienced employees. Having trusted long-term employees can also free up the owner to handle offsite duties as needed.
Bankers
A banking relationship is an obvious need—not only for routine business banking but also for growing capital, increasing inventory, buying a building, bridging a short-term gap between payables and receivables, or addressing the seasonality of the cash flow in the business. The banker to whom an owner goes for a loan should know the business owner, understand the history of the business, and have an understanding of the owner’s judgment and credibility regarding the reason for and ability to pay back the loan.
If the long-term relationship is there, or is at least in the process of being built, the loan request has a much better chance of being approved. If the business has borrowed and repaid loans in the past, the established track record and relationship greatly enhance the prospects of being approved.
Manyl businesses try to find an accountant who can also double as their tax specialist in order to save time and money.
Accountant and Tax Specialist
A relationship with an accountant is equally important if the business owner is to be confident in the quality, clarity, timeliness, and understanding of the financial reporting provided. A relationship with an accountant can also enhance the business’ credibility with a banker when seeking additional capital.
Many businesses combine the accountant and tax-specialist functions in one outside entity for reasons of convenience, time saving, and cost. This may be advantageous if the accountant has broad tax experience for the relevant industry and expertise in tax management for the specific business the accounting firm serves.
Legal Professional
Every business owner should have a relationship with a business lawyer, liability attorney, or legal firm. When an owner invests money and effort in building a business, it must be safeguarded from loss that arises from a lawsuit. While it is important to work with an attorney whom you can trust, it is also critical to choose one with extensive experience in the area of law for which you require their services.
Insurance Representative
As part of its risk management, a business should have a relationship with and seek out the trusted advice of an insurance representative. This professional should help provide the optimal levels of coverage in the areas of needed protection, keeping in mind any budgetary constraints.
Marketing Professional
Depending on the owner’s sales and marketing expertise, a relationship with a marketing professional is highly advised. Most businesses start with an entrepreneur who has a specific technical skill, trade certification, or loyal customers for good work done. When the owner wants to grow the business beyond the established customer base, they should have a well-defined marketing plan that addresses the following issues:
• Targeting the market
• Optimizing the media used in marketing efforts
• Creating a brand strategy
• Assessing the competition
• Getting the best value for any marketing money spent
Business Trainer
It's often the case that the owner and the employees are in need of training. In a small business, especially in a startup, the owner may not have had time to acquire the types of skills necessary for managing a growing business with more employees, constantly evolving digital tools and systems, enlarging inventory, acquiring additional vehicles or equipment, and managing more customers. A relationship with an independent business-skills trainer can fill that need.
IT Specialist
A more recent arrival on the required-relationship list is the enterprise systems or information technology (IT) specialist. The business owner should have someone who can come in to analyze the existing digital systems and suggest ways to effectively and efficiently manage costs and optimize processes. That person (or organization) should suggest specific strategies to keep the business competitive in terms of administrative, project management, and operating costs while ensuring the scalability of the business model through process improvements, enhanced system capacity, flexibility, and information security best practices.
The Bottom Line
The importance of connections between people in business can’t be overstated. While these relationships can be many, they aren’t necessarily time-consuming. They are, however, absolutely essential to long-term business success and worth their weight in gold when the business needs experts to help solve problems or take full advantage of a business window of opportunity.