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Deloitte Acquires ReportSource

by Tony Rice 25. February 2010 09:48
Equiteq is pleased to communicate the acquisition of ReportSource, the UK’s leading business performance and information management consultancy, by Deloitte, the business advisory firm. The deal will see 66 people join Deloitte’s 2,500 strong UK Consulting practice, with Ian Harrison, the managing director of ReportSource, joining Deloitte as a partner.
 
Ian commented: “Having developed the UK’s most respected and largest niche performance management practice, Deloitte was the only logical home for ReportSource. In joining Deloitte we are able to put our skills and experience to work, in the service of our clients, by ensuring that our staff work alongside the world’s most sought-after talent, drawn by Deloitte’s eminence, culture and diversity. I am very proud of what ReportSource has achieved and delighted to have joined Deloitte.”
 
Equiteq has enjoyed a long working relationship with ReportSource and supported the business in its growth plans, as well as advising on the transaction.
 
Paul Collins, Equiteq's managing director, said: "I am extremely pleased that ReportSource have concluded this deal with such a premier consulting firm as Deloitte. It has been a delight to work
with Ian and his team, and we wish the combined group every success in developing further their leading market position in this field."
 
Deloitte Press Release

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Keep radishes out of your sales pitch

by Bruce Ramsay 23. February 2010 14:32

Unless you are in the Fresh Produce Sector!

This is Equiteq's contribution to the RainToday.com Selling Services Challenge

So what is a radish in the context of a sales pitch?
Imagine that you are home lazily watching television, and an advertisement comes on for a fancy, up-market, kitchen food-processor.

“Dries and shreds lettuce in a moment” claims the announcer.
In the summer we are always having salads with our barbeques you think, so that would be really useful.

“Chops potatoes into perfect chip size”
Fantastic, as I would like have fish and chips every Friday, but am put off by having to chop by hand.

“slices cucumbers in an instance”
That will be great when the mother-in-law comes for tea, and is an easy way to impress her.

“…..peels radishes….”
Yuurrrgghhhch, you think.  I hate radishes.

In an instant you are put totally off a product that otherwise has great features and benefits. And so it is that you must avoid having ‘radishes’ in your consulting or service sales pitches.  These are items that can put a buyer, often totally irrationally, off your solution.  For example, the client maybe happy with your price of $200,000, and happy that you are planning to spend about 120 days, but if you explicitly mention a day rate of over $1,600 that may cause a negative reaction.  It could be a simple as a spelling error or incorrect piece of data. The reason radishes must be avoided is that they become firmly embedded in the buyer’s mind and can be difficult to overcome.

These are not the same as objections.


A good sales person will always be pushing to find the buyers objections – the reasons that they will not place the order there and then – so that these can be addressed and the sale advanced. So, hunt for objections but avoid planting radishes!

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Increasing Sales

Grow consulting sales with this pragmatic pipeline management approach

by Bruce Ramsay 11. February 2010 16:34

Growing the sales pipeline and generating revenue is the number one priority for leaders of the small and medium sized consulting businesses we serve, not just for cash flow reasons, but also for equity value.  A strong, growing pipeline and the ability to predict sales, and therefore cash flow and profit, with a reasonable degree of accuracy is manna from heaven on both counts.
 
However many firms fall short of their revenue targets and most experience erratic, unpredictable performance with peaks and troughs over the years. While there are of course many contributing factors to sales performance; marketing process, the power of the value proposition and sales skills to name but three, one of the least difficult to fix is the way in which you manage your pipeline.

There are three questions we are frequently asked by our clients in order to help them put a plan in place to drive up sales through the behaviour of senior customer facing staff and to forecast the cash flow resulting from their activities:

  • How do we measure the pipeline and reliably forecast sales?
  • What stretch target should we be setting our principals and partners?
  • How do we manage them towards achieving it?
1.How do we measure the pipeline and reliably forecast sales?

If you are going to drive up sales you need an effective way of measuring progress from current state and beyond. You also want a reliable way of predicting sales in order to manage the business and when you come to sell the firm, predictable sales and profit growth increases the equity value of your firm. In order to do this you want to:

  • Create a simple database of TRUE sales opportunities
  • Categorise each opportunity with a success probability
  • Regularly assess the overall health of the pipeline
Create a simple database of TRUE sales opportunities

There has to be a line drawn between a marketing lead and a real sales opportunity.

Only the latter should be included in your forecast and do not allow hype or hope to cloud your clinical judgement! A lead turns into an opportunity when the prospect has been qualified into a piece of work he/she may execute and initial interest in your solution has been established.

Setting up a simple database of opportunities is easy to do, at least in spreadsheet form, but ideally in a CRM system. A good CRM system will enable you to integrate all communications with clients and prospects into a single view and provide you with effortless ability to monitor actual activity between your firm and the people you are selling to.

Categorise each opportunity with a success probability

Within your database, as well as defining the expected project revenue per month and including other data, all opportunities should be categorised as follows:

There is often a tendency to use many different percentages for probability of sale in the belief that this will somehow generate some kind of statistically accurate forecast. This will not happen!

Much better to keep to the four simple definitions above and then there will be a shared language throughout the organisation and everyone will understand the pipeline.  There will be no loss in ‘accuracy’ of future events and level of business. However your accuracy will improve as you learn to interpret the way your consultants describe their opportunities and filter the wheat from the chaff!

You will now have two sets of revenue numbers per month looking forward:

  • The total value of pipeline opportunities
  • Sales value discounted by percentage probability (0%, 35%, 65%)
     

Here is a sample pipeline table…

Regularly assess the overall health of the pipeline

The simplest way of doing this is to create a ‘stacked bar graph’ of the revenue per month of booked projects and discounted opportunities.

Monthly Revenue £000s


A healthy business will see a declining stream of booked revenue, but a bow-wave of discounted opportunities.  Over time you will quickly get a ‘feel’ for what looks good and what does not!

If, rather than just a visual impression, you want to create numbers that you can monitor over time, then the values you can track are:

  • The total value of forward booked revenue (i.e. sum of Feb-Aug green bars in example above)
  • The total value of the discounted pipeline (ie Feb-Aug, total column height)
  • Divide the numbers above by the monthly delivery capacity of the business to get a ‘number of months work’ (even with projects going out 6 and nine months, a ratio of 3 to 4 is quite good)
2.What stretch targets should we be setting our principals and partners?

Within a typical small or medium-sized consulting business, the stretch revenue target of a principal or senior manager could be anywhere between £1m and £3m depending on the size of support team and blended day rate for the services you offer.  In a business where:

  • A partner’s role is client (not project) management and sales conversion
  • The business turns over £5m to £10m
  • A typical ‘good sized’ project is £350k, but £1m projects are achieved
  • A strong client base exists
  • The business has a market presence and reputation in their specific field, with some sales  leads coming into the company
     

then the target should be £2m. Adjust up or down depending on where your business sits against these factors.

In order to hit the target they will need to convert to ‘booked revenue’ £200k every month (that’s £50k a week!).  At the same time they will need to get verbal commitment for £300k every month (£75k a week), as well as adding a further £600k of good prospects to the pipeline (£150k a week).

This sounds like a difficult task, but it can be made much easier if you create discipline through a constant drumbeat of sales pipeline management activity.

3.How do we manage them towards achieving their targets? 

There are three main drivers to making this happen:

  • Getting them to set sales meetings
  • Setting regular sales pipeline management meetings
  • Keeping the pipeline moving
     
Getting them to set sales meetings 

The target can only be achieved through setting and holding meetings, understanding the prospect’s problems and pains, proposing solutions and progressing those sales opportunities to a close.

The starting point is therefore to record and measure the level of ‘front-end pro-activity’ in your selling teams in terms of meetings set and held, without which you have little chance of extending the business. 

We are not in the arena of a sales rep’s five-calls-a-day, but consultants are often reluctant to get new contacts from clients and make calls, so a simple measurement will provide the necessary ‘encouragement’. These should not include meetings that take place as a natural course within programmes of work, but only those specifically for prospecting. 

To ensure a forward view, Include meetings set, as well as held. As you develop you can be more granular by categorising ‘first’ and ‘second follow-up’.  If you are selling a high-value solution, the number of these will not be large and are easily tracked.

Meetings set and held
Keeping the pipeline moving

It is amazing how consultants can present a forward pipeline that looks healthy, but always seems to be ‘moving to the right’ as orders are delayed!

The way to avoid this is to ensure that prospects are adequately ‘worked’ and to measure the movement in the pipeline.  Earlier we described what a selling consultant must do on a monthly basis to deliver £2m. The most important metric is the total value of new contracts won and therefore converted to ‘booked’ in the pipeline. However, you can only get converted orders from existing Hot and Good prospects, so it is important to also measure the value of new Good prospects added to the pipeline each month, as well as the value of projects moved into the status of ‘Hot’.

Monthly pipeline movement

Setting regular sales pipeline management meetings

Holding all this data is one step forward, but to gain real benefit it needs to be monitored and managed.

To do these we suggest the Managing Director or Partner runs a regular meeting with consultants holding sales responsibility.  On a weekly basis there should be a phone call either one-on-one or to a small group.  The purpose is quite simply to maintain that drumbeat of activity and demonstrate that sales are important to the business. 

Aim to set regular time slot and discuss key activities and achievements for the week and follow-up on any tasks created the previous week.  On a monthly basis there should be a formal sales meeting, that again can be one-to-one or as a group, but should ideally be face-to-face. 

Create a standard report pack, and send to all attendees beforehand, then review revenue, forward pipeline and activity against plan.  Discuss in detail the specific steps required to move prospects through the pipeline and activities to drive more prospects into the ‘top of the sales funnel’.

Conclusion

The content of this article may not be entirely new to you as we are presenting only the basic principles of sales pipeline management. However it may be a timely reminder to reinforce or invigorate your process. That said it is surprising how many firms do not practice these important steps!  This approach will not guarantee you any sales growth as this depends on a range of additional factors, however at the very least it should help to ensure that you do not lose revenue that you could and should be winning.

Finally, if you believe that £2m per partner or principal is out of reach, we’d love to hear from you and we would be happy for you to test our thinking against the practical factors in your firm!

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Consulting sector M&A market update February 2010

by Paul Collins 11. February 2010 13:11

It’s fair to say that 2009 was a year to forget from an M&A perspective. At Equiteq we spent most of the year helping consulting firms to survive the recession and M&A transactions were very thin on the ground. The chart below show the sorry state of the market last year as compared with 2007 and 2008 but even these numbers (131 deals closed in 2009 as compared with 197 in 2008) don’t tell the full story. Many of those deals in the first part of the year were those that started in 2008 and many were ‘distressed sales’ at prices that most sellers wouldn’t want to advertise!

2010 feels completely different. All the big 4 consulting firms have put aside large budgets to acquire this year. PWC started the rush last August by stating that they were going to triple their consulting fees. The rest have followed and it looks like 2010 is going to be a year of consolidation. This month KPMG announced similar plans to triple the size of their consulting practice. We completed our first deal this year in January with a sale to Deloitte and 3 more sales are due to close in the near-term horizon. Each week at the moment we are talking to buyers from all over the world who are looking to acquire in the UK. Exchange rate movements and publicly-quoted value multiples in the UK have made this part of the world an attractive place to acquire. Expect to see many firms change hands in the next 12 months and beyond into 2011.

Our expectation is that price multiples will follow the increase in demand shown by the interest from all of the big 4. At the peak of the last economic cycle in late 2006 firms were selling for a 40% premium on a 5 yr rolling average price. This premium dropped to a 10% discount at the start of 2009 – a much smaller discount than one might have expected given the press of recent times – and now prices are back to the average of the last 5 years. We expect premium prices to start to appear in the second half of 2010 and increase through 2011 and 2012. Whether they will ever reach the peak of the 40% premium achieved in 2006 is debatable but there is no doubt that later this year and 2011/12 will be good timing to sell your firm.

So if you have a growing consulting firm that has weathered the recession well ie you haven’t shrunk! and you have sales in excess of £5m with profits of greater than £1m, do give us a call. There are many buyers out there who will be interested in your firm!

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About this Blog

 Paul CollinsTony RiceDavid CheesmanPhil BaxterBruce Ramsay

Authored by the senior team at Equiteq, this blog is focused entirely on growing sales, profits and equity value in a consulting business.

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