Showing posts with label cajobportal.com. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cajobportal.com. Show all posts

Thursday, 1 October 2015

@cajobportal : Lessons from the journey so far

In the B2B recruitment space with well entrenched players, ours has been a David Vs Goliath journey. As we clocked our first Rs 1 million of revenue, it has been a scintillating journey so far.

The key lessons learnt were

1) A startup has to solve a real problem and only then will people be willing to listen. It needs to have a compelling value proposition for stakeholders to even consider switiching. In our case, the positioning was that we were India's first for CAs and MBAs, that we, as recruitment consultants, could talk IFRS, Forex, Derivatives, Valuation and Cenvat Rules, rather than merely the cliched Current CTC, Expected CTC and notice period that most recruitment consultants would do. This helped us get an entry into 35+ marquee Indian companies hitherto being serviced by Micahel Page, Mafoi Ranstad and ABCs of the world

2)  If you are sincere and honest, and especially have a pedigree in terms of professional and educational background, most people are willing to give you that ONE chance to prove yourself. Just like the proverbial Alchemist story, if you are destined to be successful, you will find strangers along the way to keep you moving. None of our known friends, relatives and acquaintances helped us bag even a single client but strangers we met randomly on IIMA campus, finance conferences and online did


3) As an entrepreneur, don't delay startup, trying to figure out the exact strategy or financial forecasts. Once the rubber hits the road, once you make the first dozen business development calls, once you work on the first couple of mandates, everything change and the market participants will teach  you everything. Not sure whether spending a lot of time chalking strategy maps on a  whiteboard or working out projections in Excel will help


4) Keep fixed costs low if you are bootstrapping. The initial period will be full of shock-waves; say in our case, suddenly candidates backed out after being selected and since the entire model is based on 'success fee' ,  we were paid nothing. It was disastrous. Our first payment came in June; 6 months after we started. Having a lean structure always helped. We didn't and even still don't have an office. All our employees work from home , collaborating on a cloud based application


5) Entrepreneurship isn't that cool a journey as one would imagine from the fringes or reading about startups being valued at crazy numbers. No newspaper generally covers the ones one fail miserably. So entrepreneurship cannot be a panacea for a frustrated employee who has started hating corporate life. if you can't manage one boss, here you will need to manage hundreds. Every client is a boss in his/her own right

A lot of sweat and blood gets into it. Its a bitter, lonely journey ; bereft of any glamour. People won't listen to you at all, there is so much inertia, people just don't want a new vendor . Why should they take the headache of dealing with an additional vendor. Less than 1% people open e-mails. Receptionists just don't transfer calls.  You will find it so difficult to hire your first full-time employee as you have no brand.

It's your dream , not theirs. So don't expect to barge into a sales call and expect that the client will instantly give you business just because you are from a premiere school.Yet, if you persist over a period of time, they slowly melt. Be prepared to start small, give a free trial.

6) People will pay only if they have a pain; else they simply won't. There are no 'low hanging fruits' for sure










Rgds

Anurag & Sonia








Tuesday, 31 March 2015

An entrepreneur’s skirmishes on the marketing turf!!














“Dear Sir/Madam Greetings of the Day!! Trust you are doing well.

Recruiting the right finance professionals can be one of the most challenging, yet equally rewarding aspects of the company's human capital leaders. This realization was the precursor to the launch of cajobportal.com. Yet, you will appreciate that the entrepreneurial journey is beset with suo-moto approaching people in the remote hope that 5% of them might have an unfulfilled need which your product can offer. Hence please pardon me for my unsolicited mails

I am a student @ IIMA and have a startup – cajobportal.com – India‟s first recruitment website exclusively for Chartered Accountants “

This is how dozen of clichéd emails originate in my mailbox and are whipped off the back of gmail.com horses to the stables of those awe inspiring CFOs and HR Heads.

Hardly 1% of these emails see the light at the end of the tunnel; the rest die a premature death in the spam folders! And yet, we commit the heinous crimes of sending them!

 Similar is the fate of those calls to the Board lines

 “Hi, I am Anurag from cajobportal.com. Can you please connect me to Ms.  Pallavi Amin in HR?” “Purpose?” comes the terse reply from the receptionist. After you explain, either she hangs up or transfers the line to some perpetually ringing number or the HR picks it, listens to you for 2 minutes and then says “Sorry, I am heading into a meeting. Can we talk later? Or “Sorry, we currently are not looking for another finance hiring partner”

The question is WHY? Why this relentless pursuit of chasing people when they are simply NOT interested?

 If you are good, won’ they come automatically?

 Isnt it hara kiri‟? Each denial is literally a slap on the face, an assault on the ego and downgrading of your esteem!! As an IIMA grad, is that why we came here for?

 Jon Buscal‟s quote “Marketing is a commitment and not merely a campaign” fits in so aptly here. 

You remind yourself that the world existed without you and will continue to exist even without you.
 Life existed even without an I-Phone or a bottle of Coke or a naukri.com or a zomato.com! And so would it even without cajobportal.com!

Bitter truth but a realization that gets you going! So it is up to you and ONLY you to convince the world that it would be a better place if its citizens adopted what you had on offer.

You pull up your socks and are now willing to face rejection!

You are ready to market yourself to the world.

Google throws up 1.85 billion results in 0.40 seconds when you search the term “Marketing”. It is the most glamorous word that can excite the human imagination.

You wonder what could be that magic marketing mantra that could make 3000 Indian company sign up for cajobportal.com.

“Non deficere”, the Latin equivalent of “Never Give Up”! This to my mind is the fundamental tenet of marketing. Once this is in place, the 4 Ps and the 5Cs simply land in place.

 Who knows, you might end up selling refrigerators to Eskimos.

As a Chartered Accountant before PGPX, for 10 years, I have spent endless hours on those dull and drab Excel sheets that refused to talk. In Marketing, the best part that I now relish is that rush of dopamine in your brain when I talk about cajobportal. com

From focusing on rejections, you now start focusing on those 1% conversions and the Lifetime Value from the relationship that could run into millions of dollars.

You realise that a marketing pitch is simply an emotionally charges stimulus, a promise to a customer’s amygdala, that the anticipated gains are far in excess of what he/she is paying. It is this perpetual drift between the affect and the cognitive that you need to conquer. 

A fulfilled demand brings smiles and a brand relationship. You might need to slog yourself to the hilt to fulfil the craziest of requisitions for a Chartered Accountant is put forth.

If you goof up, your doors to the consumer’s sub conscious are closed forever. Yet if you do succeed, henceforth you have no competition. The episodic memory will bring you an impulse purchase next time. You will become a habit. And that’s the goal

Prof Sahay taught us that marketing, eventually, is all about moving from the functional to the emotional value. The best of marketers don’t exist in the consumer’s mind but in his/her heart.

Warm Regards
Sonia Singal & Anurag Singal