📺 Stream EntrepreneurTV for Free 📺

Proven And Tested Propositions To Add Better Value To Your Business Ventures Spencer Vann suggests focusing on customer-centricity to get great results for clients and help businesses grow more

By Monir Islam

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

You're reading Entrepreneur Asia Pacific, an international franchise of Entrepreneur Media.

Spencer Vann

In today's highly competitive economy, every business strives to provide greater value to its clients. Spencer Vann, the co-founder and CEO of SurplusFund.com, shares his top recommendations for other business venturers to consider and live by. His venture is one of America's known surplus fund recovery agencies helping homeowners and real estate investors alike in recovering claimables from foreclosed homes and building and growing one's surplus fund recovery business. Here are Spencer Vann's top five recommendations.

Hyper-optimization

Around 50-60 per cent of the financial coaching industry had reduced or stopped spending money on advertising ever since the coronavirus pandemic broke out. Vann doubled down his marketing and advertising budget and started spending more. The reason many people in the industry stopped or reduced their online ads spending is because their ACAP (a term Lucas made up which stands for automated customer acquisition process) could be inefficient. And, when the environment and markets changed it could have caused the ACAP to be no longer profitable. This happens due to non-optimization of every single detail of the acquisition process including the product delivery itself. Intense focus on one core process while optimizing everything else thus proves profitable.

Creating a blue ocean

You can't sell what someone else is already selling. In an industry where there are a lot of competitors selling the same products and services, it's a little easier to get away with still closing sales because of the different markets and demographics a business can market and sell to. But quite frankly, if you want to hit bigger numbers you have to have something unique. Your own set of value propositions that will help you stand out among many options for buyers or paying customers. Whether it's your strategy, product or traffic source. Something needs to be different.

Spencer Vann

Extreme customer focus

The business world is filled with people who might not take care of their customers like they are family, especially in the financial coaching industry. This is hard to do at scale but is very vital for success, one thing that most coaches and mentors fail to consider. Your business should not be designed to make you money. Your business should be designed to solve a customer's problem better than anyone else offering the same services or programs. The byproduct of this is making money. Many financial coaches and mentors who focus so much on money forget who actually gives it to them: the loyal paying customers.

Majoring on major things

This is quite contradictory to the first point in a certain angle. Although the first recommendation points out that you need to optimize everything else in your business, you need to also pay attention to one core process that will get you the best stream of incoming customers and sales. Spencer is naturally very analytical. He can spend all day looking at spreadsheets and dissecting every tiny detail to better understand the story a certain sheet tells. This is something Spencer Vann really loves doing. But this is not what gets you results. Always remember the 80-20 rule. Focus on the 20 per cent of the business (that specific core process that gets you customers and sales) that will produce 80 per cent of the results. Use leverage.

North Star alignment

Every owner, employee, contractor and customer needs to understand the goal and the mission of every business. Earlier on in Spencer Vann's career, it felt like he was going in one direction while his business partner was contrarily going another and their coaches were also heading in another, etc. One thing you always need to keep your eyes on is to always be aligned toward the BHAG (big hairy audacious goal). In other words, every member of your team must be working towards a certain, single-end goal to drive the business and its excellence forward in one single direction. Otherwise the business will get lost in limbo. This, for Spencer, is key to scale.

Having these fundamentals within your skill set will help you create and build credibility and value for your business, rather than focusing on generating sales.

Monir Islam

Chief visionary officer and co-founder, BE

British entrepreneur and businessman Monir Islam is the chief visionary officer and co-founder of BE, an evolutionary company equipping individuals to prepare them for the future of work. 

His avant-garde ideas and concepts have taken his business venture a notch higher in the digital innovations space, making him one of the most reputable chief visionary officers in the industry.

Social Media

The Next Big Thing on the Web: Sites Tailored for You

Dynamic website personalization is a powerful tool that can boost business.

Career

Why Entrepreneur Stands Against the PRO Act

The Protecting the Right to Organize Act could do lasting harm to the small-business and franchise community.

Side Hustle

These Coworkers-Turned-Friends Started a Side Hustle on Amazon — Now It's a 'Full Hustle' Earning Over $20 Million a Year: 'Jump in With Both Feet'

Achal Patel and Russell Gong met at a large consulting firm and "bonded over a shared vision to create a mission-led company."

Thought Leaders

Tony Robbins Reveals the Key to Making Coaching Work For You

No matter what industry, behind most successful entrepreneurs is at least one supportive figure in the form of a coach or mentor who pushed them to their limits.

Career

Women Franchise Owners Fear the PRO Act

Franchising helped them become small business owners, and they don't want to be forced back under the corporate thumb.

Career

What Lawmakers Don't Understand About the PRO Act, According to Franchise Owners

Lawmakers are confused about what franchising is, and are threatening the whole business model with a bad bill, experts say.