How to Scale Your B2B Services Company

Independent and ambitious Freelancers, like other business owners, are inclined to brainstorm strategies and tactics that may have the potential to increase their company’s revenue and profit. Central to the entrepreneurial dream is building an entity that attains success as you define it and that often entails making money. But as with all business decisions, it’s necessary to determine which strategy and tactics have the greatest likelihood to reach the pot of gold. As always, the most reliable way to answer that question is to conduct comprehensive marketplace research and examine your company’s key performance indicators.

Grow, scale, or expand?

It is imperative that you recognize which KPIs point to a particular revenue and profit boosting strategy and give you the confidence to follow that solution. To earn more revenue and become more profitable, there are three options—expand, grow, or scale. Each strategy requires certain marketplace conditions and financial and other resources and carries its own kind of risk.

Expansion is a much bigger investment, especially for Freelance professionals, who typically operate a service business, work alone and deliver the service yourself. Launching your operation in a new location typically places a significant demand on financial and logistical capabilities, making growth or scaling, which both entail relatively fewer demands on resources, more accessible to Freelancers.

OK, so how can you recognize which option makes more sense for you? First, let’s know what we’re talking about. Many business owners and Freelancers misunderstand the meanings of growth and scale, so let’s take a sidebar and examine their definitions. Growth means adding more projects, new services and/or signing additional clients as the engine of your strategy to boost revenue and profit—activities that mostly entail more expenses. Scale focuses on increasing revenue and profit without significantly increasing the associated production costs. Essentially, scaling means working smarter, not just harder, and aligns well with the financial and logistical capabilities of the typical Freelance professional.

Nevertheless, scaling a business, particularly a small, service-based company, will require extensive preparation and a well-designed strategy to make it work. To evaluate the possibility of scaling your operation, you’ll dive into company KPIs and conduct an extensive financial analysis, marketplace research and strategic planning. Data-driven decision-making will yield the most trustworthy information and outcomes.

Furthermore, when contemplating your scale, or any other significant business investment, as you study the data, contact your business accountant, who is familiar with your financial situation and is positioned to be your Sherpa and guide you as you climb (scale!) the mountain. There are a couple of obvious questions that you should address before calling the accountant.

  • So, how’s business? Are clients lining up to do business with you? Are you meeting, if not exceeding, your revenue targets? How many clients are on your roster? If business is off the chain, then get your accountant on the phone and share the good news. However, if you’re merely pleased with your performance metrics, set higher goals and observe what happens during the next two or three quarters. if you surpass those metrics by an impressive margin, it may be time to call the accountant and discuss next steps.
  • Client feedback Listening to what clients observe or experience can steer your business toward success and it’s good business to invite them to give their perspective. Invite clients to share their thoughts and suggestions regarding your services. Client insights may open your eyes to add-ons, upgrades and/or new services you can provide and what they tell you could contribute substantially to your scale. Make giving feedback convenient by occasionally including surveys in marketing emails, soliciting online reviews, maintaining an active presence on social media, or making yourself available for in-person conversations. Your objective is to hear and assess what clients say about your services, company and the customer experience you provide. You can use their feedback to better understand what clients like, what you can do better and get early warnings of emerging trends and how your clients feel about what’s on the horizon. With this knowledge, you can tailor your services to meet this demand and strengthen your positioning as a go-to provider in the industry, whether or not you decide to scale.

Use data to evaluate a potential scale

Analyzing and interpreting company performance data will do more than answer the expand, grow, or scale question. KPIs will also spotlight company strengths and weaknesses, help you recognize competitive advantages and call your attention to gaps that limit progress and need fixing. With the help of your accountant, your KPI data analysis will also indicate the overhead expenses, staffing and other resources, so that a realistic budget can be developed.

Moreover, your analytics tools can build reliable data-driven sales forecasts for the proposed scale that will include the number of new clients needed, average billable hours/ hourly rate and sales revenue you must generate within a particular time frame. BTW, if you were wondering when and how to incorporate AI into business operations, evaluating a potential scale could be your motivation.

Find your money-making niche

Turn to marketplace and industry data to point you to a niche you might enter. You might also consider how you to diversify your current service line? In either scenario, consult your data projections to suggest whether client price tolerance will allow you to achieve a profit margin that covers the expense of delivering at scale. Competitive intel is also likely to be useful; for example, there may be few competitors in certain market segments because there’s no money to be made. Once you’ve learned where the opportunities are, you can start making changes to scale successfully.

Upgrade marketing and branding

Build up company visibility and reputation with robust marketing and branding. Sharpen your marketing messages and establish a presence on inbound and outbound marketing channels that are a fit for your services. Search Engine Optimization, social media and content marketing should be especially useful. Nearly half of all clicks on search engines come from organic searches, which suggests that prospects are more likely to trust the results they find naturally.

Your marketing and branding strategies will also be more impactful when guided by data. By analyzing metrics such as website traffic, conversion rates and client engagement, you’ll be likely to discover actionable insights that may shape marketing strategies and campaigns that produce the results you need.

Standardize service delivery, invest in automation

Scaling a service-based business requires being able to deliver those services in the same way, every time. A strategy that will both save time and ensure that your profit margin is sufficient to cover the expense of delivering at scale is to package your services as a menu of products and eliminate the need for you to customize every order. Next, create standard operating procedures to ensure quality, efficiency and consistency in how your services are delivered. Map the step-by-step workflow, provide written or video instructions for clients and if applicable, ensure that your team is trained on best practices, so that clients will receive the same excellent results every time.

With a service-based business it is you, Freelancer friend, perhaps assisted by a team member, who will provide your services. In order to scale, you must develop and perfect turn-key, streamlined processes that allow you to work with the number of clients necessary to realize the scale. From your client onboarding procedure to billing and invoicing, automation will make your organization more efficient, appear more professional, inspire trust and build your brand at every touch point. Not only that, you’ll have more time to focus on improving your business and optimizing the scale.

Thanks for reading,

Kim

Image: Jack’s First Beanstalk, illustration from Jack and the Beanstalk, a circa 1734 English fairy tale. Author and illustrator unknown.