Cart
Free US shipping over $10
Proud to be B-Corp

Value-Based Fees Alan Weiss

Value-Based Fees By Alan Weiss

Value-Based Fees by Alan Weiss


$54.99
Condition - Very Good
Only 1 left

Summary

In this thoroughly revised edition of his classic book, Alan Weiss shows how consulting fees are dependent on only two things: value provided in the perception of the buyer and the intent of the buyer and the consultant to act ethically.

Value-Based Fees Summary

Value-Based Fees: How to Charge - and Get - What You're Worth by Alan Weiss

In this thoroughly revised edition of his classic book, Alan Weiss shows how consulting fees are dependent on only two things: value provided in the perception of the buyer and the intent of the buyer and the consultant to act ethically. Many consultants, however, fail to understand that perceived value is the basis of the fee, or that they must translate the importance of their advice into long-term gains for the client in the client's perception. Still others fail to have the courage and the belief system that support the high value delivered to clients, thereby reducing fees to a level commensurate with the consultant's own low self-esteem. Ultimately, says Weiss, consultants, not clients, are the main cause of low consulting fees.

About Alan Weiss

Alan Weiss -consultant, speaker, and author of the best-selling The Ultimate Consultant-is the founder and CEO of Summit Consulting Group, Inc. His clients have included Merck, Hewlett-Packard, General Electric, State Street Corporation, and Times Mirror Group. He is a highly sought-after keynote speaker. Success Magazine declared him A worldwide expert in executive education.

Table of Contents

Introduction. Preface to the Second Edition. Acknowledgments. Chapter 1: The Concept of Fees. Will People Actually Give Me Their Money for My Advice? The Ethical Nature of Capitalism. The Mercedes-Benz Syndrome. The Importance of Buyer Commitment, Not Compliance. Critical Steps for Buyer Commitment. The Buoyancy of Brands: How Brands Help Fees. Creating Shared Success. Chapter ROI. Interlude: A Case of Bottom-Line Blindness. Chapter 2: The Lunacy of Time-and-Materials Models. Who Wants to Be as Dumb as a Lawyer? Supply-and-Demand Illogic. Ethical Confl icts of Interest and Other Small Matters. Limiting Profi ts, or Why Not Just Forget Domani? Why Lawyers and CPAs Do So Poorly. Educating the Buyer Incorrectly. Chapter ROI. Chapter 3: The Basics of Value-Based Fees. It's Better to Be an Artist Than to Be an Engineer. Focusing on Outcomes, Not Inputs. The Fallacy and Subversive Nature of Deliverables. Quantitative and Qualitative Measures and Criteria. Measuring the Unmeasurable. Serving the Client's Self-Interest. The Subtle Transformation: Consultant Past to Client Future. Perpetual Motion, Perpetual Progress. Chapter ROI. Interlude: The Case of the Annoying Accountants. Chapter 4: How to Establish Value-Based Fees. If You Read Only One Chapter ... Conceptual Agreement: The Foundation of Value. Establishing Your Unique Value. Creating the Good Deal Dynamic. The Incredibly Powerful Choice of Yeses. Some Formulas for the Faint of Heart. Chapter ROI. Chapter 5: How to Convert Existing Clients. Correcting Your Own Mistakes. Setting Priorities Among Existing Clients. Offering New Value. Finding New Buyers Within Existing Clients. Finding New Circumstances. What If Clients Resist Conversion? Abandoning Business. Chapter ROI. Interlude: The Case of the Loaded Loading Dock. Chapter 6: The Fine and High Art of Using Retainers. It's Just the Smarts, Stupid. Optimal Conditions for Retainer Arrangements. Choosing Time Frames and Creating Realistic Expectations. Organizing the Scope and Managing Projects Within the Retainer. Capitalizing on Retainer Relationships. Aggressively Marketing Retainer Relationships. Chapter ROI. Ethics and Fees, Fees and Ethics: A Midbook Practicum. Chapter 7: Seventy Ways to Raise Fees and/or Increase Profi ts Immediately. Act Today and Receive the Bass-o-Matic Free of Charge! Chapter ROI. Interlude: The Case of the Rebounding Retainer. Chapter 8: How to Prevent and Rebut Fee Objections. Since You've Heard Them All Before, How Can You Not Know All the Answers? The Four Fundamental Areas of Resistance. Maintaining the Focus on Value. Boring In on the Subject. Offering Discounts. Using Smack to the Head Comparisons. Ignoring the Competition. Chapter ROI. Interlude: The Case of the Perverse Purchasing Agent. Chapter 9: Setting Fees for Nonconsulting Opportunities. How to Make Money While You Sleep, Eat, Play, and Make Money Elsewhere. Keynote Speaking: Don't Charge for Your Spoken Words. Highly Leveraged Practices for Working with Bureaus. Products. Exploring New Lucrative Fields. And Now for Some Perspective. Chapter ROI. Chapter 10: Fee Progression Strategies. Why You Fall Behind When You Stand Still. Entry-Level Fees. Transition to a Going Concern. Transition to Word-of-Mouth. Transition to the Brand Phase. Transition to the Ultimate Consultant. The Book's ROI: Alan's Axioms for the Good Deal. Interlude: The Case of the Fee Feng Shui. Chapter 11: Technology and Fees. Greater Wealth in the Brave New World. The Service Enhancement. The Publishing Prerogative. The Remote Consultant. Passive Income. The Bottom Line. Chapter ROI. Appendix A: Questions for Qualifying the Economic Buyer. Appendix B: Questions for Establishing Business Objectives. Appendix C: Questions for Establishing Measures of Success. Appendix D: Questions for Establishing Value. Appendix E: Questions for Assessing Personal Value Contribution. Appendix F: The Difference Between Inputs and Business Outputs. Index.

Additional information

GOR004559994
9780470275849
0470275847
Value-Based Fees: How to Charge - and Get - What You're Worth by Alan Weiss
Used - Very Good
Hardback
John Wiley and Sons Ltd
20080912
288
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - Value-Based Fees