Transforming businesses from obstacles to prosperity!

Thank you for taking the time to investigate what we have to offer. We created this service to assist you in making your company the very best. We differentiate ourselves from what others define as a consultant. The main difference between consulting versus counseling is preeminent in our mind.

A consultant is one that is employed or involved in giving professional advice to the public or to those practicing a profession. It is customary to offer a specific offering without regard to other parameters that may affect the ultimate outcome.

A counselor is one that is employed or involved in giving professional guidance in resolving conflicts and problems with the ultimate goal of affecting the net outcome of the whole business.

We believe this distinction is critical when you need assistance to improve the performance of your business. We have over thirty years of managing, operating, owning, and counseling experience. It is our desire to transform businesses from obstacles to prosperity.

I would request that you contact me and see what BMCS can do for you, just e-mail me at (cut and paste e-mail or web-site) stevehomola@gmail.com or visit my web-site http://businessmanagementcouselingservices.yolasite.com

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Mission, Vision, Founding Principle

Mission: To transform businesses from obstacles to prosperity

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Founding Principle: "Money will not make you happy, and happy will not make you money "
Groucho Marx

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STEWARDSHIP: We value the investments of all who contribute and ensure good use of their resources to achieve meaningful results.

HEALTHY RELATIONSHIPS: Healthy relationships with friends, colleagues, family and God create safe, secure and thriving communities.

ENTREPRENEURSHIP: Learning is enhanced when we are open to opportunities that stretch our thinking and seek innovation.

RESPECT: We value and appreciate the contributions of all people and treat others with integrity.

OUTCOMES: We are accountable for excellence in our performance and measure our progress.

Monday, February 21, 2011

The Modern Day CEO?

One of the most endearing and important qualities that uniquely define us as humans is the way we pass on what we’ve learned to subsequent generations. Fortunately, that doesn’t just happen in families. It happens in business, too.
And while one person’s experience may be the next person’s nonsense, there is the occasional rare gem to be cherished and passed on. Fred Wilson, a Venture Capitalist who’s been around a while, has decided to share some advice he received almost 25 years ago from another Venture Capitalist. Who knew Venture Capitalists could be so ancestral?
Anyway, the advice is the answer to the question “What exactly does a CEO do?”
As a sign of the tough economic times and other recent events, the jaded and sarcastic among us might respond with a satirical point of view:
What the public sees in the 21st Century CEO does (a satirical POV)
Has an inappropriate relationship with a marketing contractor, gets caught, gets fired, walks away with $35 million and a sweet job at his friend’s company. (Mark Hurd former CEO at HP)
Presides over a spectacular environmental disaster, promises to clean it up, whines about the toll it’s taking on him, tells congress he wasn’t involved. (Tony Hayward, former CEO BP)
Fuel the subprime mortgage bubble, hedge against it, get bailed out, pay out record bonuses, and document all of it in emails. (Loyd Blakenfein, CEO Goldman Sachs)
I can go on and on with this trip down memory lane, but we’ve probably heard enough CEO bashing to last us a good long while.
Anyway, according to Wilson, here’s what a CEO does (the Venture Capitalist POV)
Sets the overall vision and strategy of the company and communicates it to all stakeholders.
Recruits, hires, and retains the very best talent for the company.
Makes sure there is always enough cash in the bank.
According to the elder Venture Capitalist, CEO’s should delegate everything else to the management team. Wilson, on the other hand, who uses these metrics to evaluate CEOs, says that, while good CEOs often do more, he doesn’t believe you can be a great CEO unless you do these three things well.
Now, I’ve worked for and with a lot of CEOs over the past 30 years or so. Some of them weren’t terribly good at their jobs. A few were. And while I think Wilson hit the nail on the head, I think it needs to be qualified and expanded on a bit:
What a CEO should do (a personal perspective)
o   Sets the overall vision and strategy of the company and communicates it to all stakeholders. Doesn’t pull it out of his you-know-what, as many do, but derives a unique value proposition from an ongoing strategic process.
o   Makes sure there is always enough cash in the bank. Sets, oversees, and drives the operating and financial model for the company, including profit, expense, and growth targets.
o   Recruits, hires, and retains the very best talent for the company. Ensures the management team is motivated, aligned, and held accountable to achieve the company’s strategic and operating goals.

If a CEO doesn’t do those three things well, he does not have the capacity of a good CEO. I will reserve “great” for CEOs that actually accomplish great things, which would encompass a greater good to society, employees, and the act of passing forward a healthy business to the next generation. 

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