Women's Network April 2018 | Page 19

Q TELL US A BIT ABOUT YOUR BUSINESS AND HOW HAVE YOUR SURVIVED? I had entertained the idea of starting my own business in 1998, whilst I was studying an MBA, as I believed I could make a difference in the way clients connected with consumers. When I first started Ruby Cha Cha, the GFC hit, we had to shrink budgets that sent some companies to the hit the wall. Tough times just make you stronger and we rode the storm. Throughout all of this, the business has retained its humour, energy and reputation for strategic, actionable research to put consumers at the heart of decision making – which is our value proposition. We built a strong and memorable brand. To this day, clients ask us how we got our name, love our unique caricatures as well as our strategic insight and planning. We have embraced the rise of digital research – one of the first businesses in our industry to use social listening and research platforms and continue to innovate in this area as well as writing papers on the disruptive impact of digital qualitative research. In the early days, we were award focused and we won quite a few, including BRW Fast Starters for a couple of years in a row, The Anthill Cool Company Awards, and research industry awards. A strong business needs more than awards, it needs a strong culture and great work, and we have all of that, even surviving the ‘great server meltdown of 2012’ which we still talk about, when we can’t find a document! WHAT THREE PIECES OF ADVICE WOULD YOU GIVE TO SOMEONE WHO WANTS TO BECOME CEO? 1) The title is not the job and you need to be prepared for not only ‘elbows in’ hard work but making and implementing really tough decisions. You do need to find some courage as you cant delegate everything. 2) Get an advisory board – you can’t do it all on your own. You need a qualified CFO in your corner as well as legal advisor and boilerplate legal docs. If you can, get a good HR advisor. Don’t be afraid to pay – this is an investment. 3) Never stop learning. Continue to be a student of your industry, but also of business, strategy and anything that intersects. WHAT HAVE BEEN SOME OF YOUR FAILURES AND HOW DID YOU LEARN FROM THEM? All failures are lessons. All the good ones are very expensive. 1) Being idealistic and thinking you can make things different – I have found that there are reasons for boilerplate procedures and protocols and you are much better off financially, morally and emotionally by using these. 2) Always get references on staff and document all behaviours (good and bad). I made the mistake of employing a guy from the UK who not only ripped off the business but also drove a toxic culture. in the clique should never have started the business with 3 people, and we paid enormously for that. BUSINESS I ADMIRE THE MOST.... The business I admire greatly is Aesop - a great story of a small business that has taken on the world. There are so many skincare products out there, but Aesop has great marketing and lives its brand philosophy. WHAT WOULD YOU SAY ARE THE TOP THREE SKILLS NEEDED TO BE SUCCESSFUL IN BUSINESS? 1) Be a business person not just a great technician – this means you need to learn about HR law, business law, financials, operations and much, much more. 2) You need to know your financials inside out. Cashflow forecasts, sales forecasts, Profit and Loss etc will become the best way you have of making business decisions. 3) HR is a key skillset if you need to employ people. They will likely cost a third of your budget (if you are doing well) and you need to manage this tightly. You also need to be good at balancing the emotional and economically rational. This is not as easy as it sounds! See Top Five Brand Ambassador Campaigns featured in this issue. 3) Early buyout of a founding partner was expensive. We Women’s Network Magazine 19