Learning from your mistakes… Turning your ship around (Part 1)

A tale of how (NOT) to run your business into the ground ! I was inspired by this story from Emonitized: Mistaking your Way To Success. In other words, “why I don’t post so much right now!” I’m too busy…

The article I mentioned lists some interesting ways to kill your business:

  • * Overexpansion.
  • * Poor capital structure.
  • * Overspending.
  • * Lack of reserve funds.
  • * Bad business location.
  • * Poor execution and internal controls.
  • * An inadequate business plan.
  • * Failure to change with the times.
  • * Ineffective marketing and self-promotion.
  • * Underestimating the competition.

PHTO0158We achieved an amazing 80% on that scale, once I tell you the story, you’ll understand. Perhaps then you’ll see what we did wrong… and why things are better now…

It’s always difficult to know which episode to start the tale. A brief introduction. We started running our business unofficially in 2000, we had very little idea of how the business would ‘take’, how much money we could or couldn’t earn, how to hire/fire, how to get/keep customers, etc… We were, the Chinese say, “Vegetable Birds”, Greenhorns through and through.

Given the success/failure rates in business in the first five or ten years, we have been remarkably successful: we’re still here after seven years, we’re still making a ‘little’ money, and we have created a thriving business. But it was in the seventh year that we faced our biggest challenge: falling enrolments, unmotivated staff, poor advertising/marketing, budgets out of control, and lousy management (yes, I mean we did a lousy job at managing things!).

The ESL Business in Taiwan
T100 1100o explain, The Language School Business in Taiwan is a fiercely competitive business with numerous chains and independents. Of course, we are the latter category. There are also a lot of crossover businesses, schools who provide other services that also provide language teaching. This can be done in a number of ways: after-school classes with English, kindergarten with English, English and other subjects, and general cram schools. Schools can also be categorized by the age of students, e.g. children and adults, kindergarten and children, children and teenagers. So there are a number of ways to look at the market. There are of course language schools that teach a number of languages, including Chinese, Japanese, and so on.

The Competition
PHTO0127Our school has focused on solely teaching English to children aged 6 to 16. We don’t mix our products with anything else. This has been both good and bad, but it makes us different from almost all of the schools in the immediate area who teach English, and from most of the schools in the surrounding area. We have achieved a good reputation for that subject teaching alone, BUT we sometimes lose students because we don’t offer after school care, or kindergarten, or whatever. Some parents really need the convenience of multi-service schools. However, we excel at preparing students for standard examinations in EFL (which are not compulsory), and we teach students to USE the language (you have no idea how rare that is in Taiwan!).

PHTO0044Challenges
There are also challenging factors in that for schools, student retention rates are also critically important. Student semesters are generally only 3 months, and in many school attrition rates are attrociously high, often 50% of students leave after six months. Staff attrition rates are also a problem, as several of the schools I worked experienced staff turnover rates well in excess of 100% per year. The two factors are, if you know teaching, very much inter-related. In short, keeping the teachers happy helps you to retain students. When students stay, they learn well. Other students stay, too. Success in the language school rests on creating a virtuous cycle, not a vicious one.

Tuition Fees
With lots of competition, if you aren’t a first rank school in a large city, then pricing pressure restrains your upper price limits considerably. In addition, there are expectations for discounts on the prices from parents that you have to factor into your pricing scheme. Many schools try to charge extra fees for books and materials to cover their additional expenses, but in general this is not easy, either. Taiwanese customers tend to focus largely on the material costs of books and use very practical ways to measure books’ values.

32735A good example to illustrate: if a book has 100 pages, then it’s upper price tends to be restricted to about NT$200 or thereabouts (because that’s how much it costs to photocopy a page). Additional value can be extracted by adding color for the children, and CDs and so on. But in general, it can be very difficult to get purchasers to appreciate why a 50-page book costs more than a reasonable amount, almost regardless of what’s in the book.

Competitors: Local and International
There are, despite these problems, considerable opportunities in many markets for these kinds of schools. In fact, the presence of lots of competition indicates a strong desire for many of the services already being provided, and a willingness for parents to try new schools, as well as new services. Elementary schools and high schools are increasing slowly the quality of instruction within their communities, but the parents’ desires are far from even being recognised by the local education authorities. It’s that gap that allows so many schools to exist in the private sector.

making faces sean simonIn addition, from being a largely homegrown market with staples, like Hess Kindergartens, Joy Schools, Kojen, and a few others, increasingly foreign competitors are entering the marketplace, such as Shane Schools (from Japan), Geos (from Japan), PopularKids (from Singapore), etc.. Suffice to say, the international chains have few advantages in the local market, except perhaps deeper pockets than local companies. Local chains also operate in the same environment. All of them face the same typical problems. Therefore, in many areas of Taipei City and County, and around the island, local independent (or boutique) schools do well because they can compete very effectively on Quality of Service.

So, with the usual business concerns, pressures from competition, and pricing challenges from customers, we were quite surprised by our initial success in the local market where we are. We grew quickly year-on-year, and soon found ourselves with a popular little school in a well-defined market.

It’s that context that we will explore in the next posting as we explain how we achieved a failing grade of 80%! It’s been an interesting journey!… Bet you can’t wait…! Oh, and thanks to our wonderful students, Peter, my first class, some students and teachers at a recent demo, a naughty class! and some flowers!).

Flea Markets: Can they be fun?

It’s fun to try different things when you have your own business. I’d seen a ‘flea market’ in the TV show ‘The Apprentice’, in fact in the first series when the contestants were asked to sell items at a flea market. I’d always wondered what we’d learn about doing that.

Well, on the weekend last, our community had its own flea market, and so we decided to see if we could sell some English Books to passersby. Terry, Christine, and I set out our stall in the main area, with a lot of traffic walking by. Our target market was parents who wanted to buy books for their children, and children who liked books.

Our price points were about US$3.00 for paperback books and $7.00 for hardback children’s books. Generally, for new books, in Taiwan, these prices were already good value. But for English language, American books, the prices were extraordinary value.

100 2087

Terry checking the stand to see if the books would stand up or not against the wind. They didn’t.

100 2088

“Now where should we put those books?”

100 2090

We’re all taking a breather, and reading the books to see what we could sell.

At the start, we all were quite excited: business was brisk as we sold 6 in about 15 minutes. But the next few hours didn’t produce any more sales at all. At about lunch time, we started wrapping things up as we realized the heat of the day was coming and most people would be taking a siesta after lunch.

Overall, we learned a lot about taking part in a flea market, though. We talked it over and here are the benefits of our experience:

1. Pick your product: not all products can sell well in a flea market. People don’t go to them to buy NEW items, but rather items that are second hand usually.

2. Pick your price point: in a flea market, people will readily hand over good cash for junk, but are often reluctant to part with cash for things of value. Perversely, they seem willing to throw away $100 on a piece of junk that they may never use. Yet, to buy a book at the same price, esp. a new one, a great deal, seems weird.

3. Selling books: there are places to sell books, and places NOT to sell books. Most bookstores carve out a real atmosphere for themselves, even 2nd hand ones. A flea market like the one we attended has none. Nada. Zip.

4. Market well!: we originally had intended to do other marketing of our books to our students, but we didn’t. Big mistake. If some of our own students and their parents had dropped by, we might have sold MANY more books than we did.

5. Our profit margins: we didn’t have sufficient profit margins on the books to make the whole effort worthwhile. While we charged a 35% markup on the books, we figured that buying a cup of coffee basically killed any money that we made. We realized that to make any money on books, … well, it’s difficult.

Unfortunately, for #4 above, we failed to market our books to our students and we failed to market our courses and classes to our book customers. This had been the primary set of objectives (not making money as in #5). In this respect, we absolutely failed.

So if I was sitting in the boardroom with Donald Trump, I’m afraid that I’d be the one taking the rap for failing on so many counts! But then we aren’t. We were happy to try this approach, and see what we could make of it. Perhaps we’ll try it again, perhaps not. We’ll see. Did we learn anything? You bet, a whole lot! And it was kind of fun!

Have you ever sold anything in a flea market? How did you approach the whole thing?

Do you want to be your own boss? 84% in Taiwan…!

Here’s an interesting story from the local press in Taiwan.

Over 84 percent of office workers polled in Taiwan have great interest in starting their own business, according to the results of a survey released yesterday by an online employment service provider.

Taiwan office workers want to be boss: poll – The China Post

As a part owner in my own business for the last seven years, I’ll say it has been a major challenge in ways that you wouldn’t expect, as well as ways you might realize.

  • It’s a time sink – Holidays and sick days are much fewer if you’re the boss;
  • Managing money is a continual activity;
  • You can never really take your eyes off the ball;
  • There’s no real sense of “I made it”;
  • and You have a lot more control of your day to day affairs!

Would I change it? I don’t think so. If I weren’t running this business full-time, I’d surely have something else up my sleeve (I have usually had several pokers in the fire at one time!). Are the sacrifices worth it? I don’t know. Yet. I hope so.