Extreme Revenue Growth: Startup Secrets to Growing Your Sales from $1 Million to $25 Million in Any Industry

Extreme Revenue Growth: Startup Secrets to Growing Your Sales from $1 Million to $25 Million in Any Industry

  • Downloads:6322
  • Type:Epub+TxT+PDF+Mobi
  • Create Date:2021-06-24 09:54:29
  • Update Date:2025-09-06
  • Status:finish
  • Author:Victor Cheng
  • ISBN:0984183515
  • Environment:PC/Android/iPhone/iPad/Kindle

Summary

What separates the CEOs that run hyper-growth companies from those running slow-growth ones? What do they do differently that matters? Victor Cheng deconstructs the management practices used by fast growing technology companies and adapts these practices for use in other industries。 While most business books tout one new big idea that will magically solve all your problems, Extreme Revenue Growth provides a refreshingly different and practical approach, combining many cross- functional practices to create a blueprint for explosive growth。 The big secret to growth isn't getting your strategic planning, sales, marketing, R&D, operations, or human resources right。 The big "secret" is getting them all right at the same time。 Optimize any one functional area for growth, and you get modest growth。 Do it all at once, and you get a multiplier effect that triggers rapid growth。 In Extreme Revenue Growth, you'll discover how。

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Reviews

Jonathan Lu

Written in the simple language of the author whose newsletters I love, this book provides a great overview of simple tactics that are very hard to execute。 Not rocket science to understand, but even harder to implement, this is an easy 1hr read for anyone that needs a good reminder about critical business fundamentals from a top consultant。Chapter 1 - Revenue GrowthWhy do inferior products often outsell a superior one? Brand Promiset- Customers don't know the difference between two products unle Written in the simple language of the author whose newsletters I love, this book provides a great overview of simple tactics that are very hard to execute。 Not rocket science to understand, but even harder to implement, this is an easy 1hr read for anyone that needs a good reminder about critical business fundamentals from a top consultant。Chapter 1 - Revenue GrowthWhy do inferior products often outsell a superior one? Brand Promiset- Customers don't know the difference between two products unless they buy and use botht- Most customers only buy one product and never experience which is bettert- Choose based on which one offers a more compelling benefit or more credible promiseCriticality of Distribution channelt- Example of enterprise software as part of a larger system implementation。 Much better than competition and 80% cheaper - failed because too easy to use, SI's could not charge for service revenue。 Price was too low to recruit top sales people because commissions would be too low; Customers did not want to buy a piece of larger implementation direct, they only wanted to buy the full systemMinimal effort to growth - easier to adjust target customer / promise / distribution channel than productt- Example: change label on baby aspirin to sell towards those at risk of heart attack Chapter 2 - When Revenue doesn't growt1) Guessing incorrectly about what the target customer wantst2) Customer doesn't want to buy what you want to sellt3) Customer has a problem, but not a severe problemt4) Adjacent customer segments are growing faster than your markett5) Not recognizing that your existing customers may be different from those you want to targetChapter 3 - When Promises are not believedt1) Promise is not unique enough compared to competition - more unique promise = more memorablet- Consider promising the polar opposite of competitiontt○ Bundle features to justify the highest pricett○ Promise simplicity or just the features you need if competition is more comprehensivett○ Most thorough setup if competition setup is fastert- Be #1 at something, even if it means being mediocre at everything elset- Solve a bigger problem: look at what customers do before/after buying your producttt○ e。g。 itunes = portable music vs。 mp3 player = devicett○ Bundle 3rd party products with yourstt○ Niche your product for the target customer (for retail, for travel)t2) No compelling benefit - easier to change the customer than the productt3) Unique promise, but target customer does not believe yout- Customer testimonialst- Demos and free trialst- Increase the specificity of your proofChapter 4 - Distribution is keyt- Avg: 80% of sales & marketing goes to new customer acquisitiont- Selling 3P is often ignored - have we tried to sell for our partners?t- Is there a duplicative process to follow? Analyze which sales rep is hitting #'s - what are we doing right?tt○ If you can't duplicate your process, you're just getting luckytt○ Need to find the duplicative process and lean in on it - not double down on luckttt§ AE's unable to provide a demo is a problem - indicative that our AE's can't selltt○ A/B test the selling process: value prop, segment, scriptttt§ 3% improvement per week = 150% increase in sales per yearChapter 5 - you can't build a product to solve a problem you don't understandt- Acid test: what's the first and last name of an actual person who typifies the target customer?t- How many engineering hours are needed to build the product vs。 engineering hours spent with the customer?t- Product build priority: feature list sorted by revenue growth enginet- Customer comes before the technology - how intuitive is the UI? Must be process-orientedtt○ Must have an ROI reporttt○ Also must have a "suggest a feature" buttonChapter 6 - Competitive advantaget- Why did Amazon start with 6 warehouses - enables shipping to every zip code in 1-2days (start from promise)tDifference between a professional CEO and startup CEO? Processt- Goal of a CEO is to identify repeatable processes and resolve bottlenecks - Biggest limitation is not thinking big enough 。。。more

Alán Fierro Jokonov

Readable&practical with some interesting concepts

Josh Fern

Clearly laid out and actionable。I am also always on board for a mercifully short book on business。 Some business writers out there get long-winded / repetitive。

Adii Pienaar

Recommendation from Dan Martell。 Read it in one sitting。 Super excited to implement a few of these tactics。 Some of it (like firing the bottom 10% of your team every year) does not resonate and is probably a compromise on the model that Victor Cheng proposes, but I'm fine with that。I'll update this to 5 stars once the advice works。 :) Recommendation from Dan Martell。 Read it in one sitting。 Super excited to implement a few of these tactics。 Some of it (like firing the bottom 10% of your team every year) does not resonate and is probably a compromise on the model that Victor Cheng proposes, but I'm fine with that。I'll update this to 5 stars once the advice works。 :) 。。。more

Syed Bukhari

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