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How to Take Your Business to the Next Level Consider these three successful strategies to kick-start growth in your company.

By Kelly K. Spors

entrepreneur daily

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

How to Take Your Business to the Next LevelIn today's tumultuous economy, many business owners are in need of a jolt -- something that helps their companies grow, whether it's finding new ways to sell their products or to broaden their customer base. Of course, there are many potential avenues for achieving growth, and each business needs to assess at its own business model and determine its own path.

Not sure where to start? Consider these three strategies to take your business to the next level, along with the entrepreneurs that are succeeding at them.

Related: Three Ways to Find an Edge in a Crowded Market

1. Find new ways to sell your product.

Ellie Whalen, CEO of Sprayology
Ellie Whalen, co-founder of Sprayology
Courtesy: Mary Connell Gaynor

Forging new effective sales channels for your product can help diversify your brand and attract more customers. Take Sprayology, a Tinton Falls, N.J., company that sells 24 homeopathic and vitamin sprays -- such as 'AllergEase' and 'ImmunoBooster.' Since its launch in 2004, the company positioned itself as a maker of luxury wellness products. It sold primarily through hotel and day spas looking to offer their clientele a unique way to treat common health complaints, be it insomnia or a hangover. But when the hotel and spa markets tanked with the economy in 2008, the company realized it needed to diversify.

"It was dreadful," says co-founder and CEO Ellie Whalen. "You would call up and they'd say, 'all of our buying is on hold.'" Sales fell more than 30% in 2009.

The company decided to pursue new sales channels, yet maintain its image as a high-end beauty and lifestyle product. It did not want to be narrowly categorized as a homeopathic medication you might find tucked away in the health-food aisle. So, the company began offering limited-time specials through fashion deals sites, including HauteLook.com and Gilt.com, which helped raise awareness of the products. Whalen also started reaching out to beauty-product buyers of retailers looking to expand with unique brands. In 2010, Sprayology started testing its sprays in ULTA stores, selling on the web site and in six stores in Maryland and New Jersey. The company also recently began selling through drugstore chain Duane Reade's new LOOK Boutiques, which sell higher-end beauty products than its traditional corner stores.

These two retailers make up about 7% of Sprayology's sales, while spas account for about 55%. The company is expected to generate roughly $750,000 in revenue this year. "We want to keep building our retail sales," Whalen adds, "but we want to do it in a way that makes sense for our brand."

2. Introduce new products and services that add value.

Mike Bacile, founder of The Daily Java
Mike Bacile, founder of The Daily Java
Courtesy of the company

Introducing items that complement what you already sell can generate new sales and improve customer satisfaction.

The Daily Java, a Dallas-based coffee and teahouse supplier, originally supplied espresso machines and other coffee-making mixes and supplies to coffeehouses and restaurants. But in 2008, founder Mike Bacile decided to create his own powder-based blended iced-coffee drinks to sell to his clients.

"I knew if we wanted to grow and get to the next level, we needed to become a manufacturer of something," he says.

He contacted a few food co-packers across the U.S. and eventually found one in Dallas that offered drink flavors he liked at an agreeable price. He also spent nearly $80,000 on a branding company to help develop logos, and build awareness of the line.

In mid-2010, the company introduced Tazza Di Risa, a line of blended-ice drinks, including eight flavors of frappes and two chais. Bacile sent sample packs of his new products to his current customers -- and 30% switched from other brands. He also started offering tastings for new clients so they could compare his drinks with other popular brands his company sells.

Related: Stumptown's Duane Sorenson, the Coffee Connoisseur

While initially concerned at how competitor brands his company sells would react to his new beverage line, Bacile says he hasn't lost other brands because of it. Currently Tazza Di Risa makes up about 16% of The Daily Java's roughly $1 million in annual revenues, and Bacile expects that share will double over the next year. He also has started marketing the brand to coffee distributors in other cities across the southern U.S.

3. Reorganize your company to better serve customers.

Eric Keiles and Mike Lieberman of Square 2 Marketing
Eric Keiles and Mike Lieberman, co-founders of Square 2 Marketing
Courtesy of the company

Entrepreneur Eric Keiles and his business partner found a path to success by rethinking their company's sales organization. Since its 2002 founding, Square 2 Marketing, a Warrington, Pa., marketing consulting firm, had relied on salespeople to cold-call prospective clients and generate leads. But apparently the traditional method wasn't working: Annual revenues had flat-lined around $1 million between 2004 and 2007. Many salespeople didn't stick around for more than six months.

"We started to realize the businesses we were trying to market to really didn't want a salesperson hounding them or cold-calling them," says Keiles, co-founder and chief marketing officer of the firm.

In 2007, after researching and contemplating possible sales methods, Keiles and his co-founder Mike Lieberman, laid off their three salespeople and trained their five marketing consultants to close sales using less pressure and more guidance. They started focusing their sales and marketing efforts on public speaking at conferences, writing articles and using Internet and video marketing, rather than relying solely on the traditional sales approach.

Related: A Guide to Generating Leads on LinkedIn

Since changing their methods, sales have doubled to $2 million annually and the 16-employee company has been among the fastest-growing firms in the Philadelphia region the past few years, according to Philadelphia 100, a group of mostly entrepreneur organizations that compile the annual list. Square 2 Marketing also changed its compensation model so employees are now paid more on a profit-sharing method based on customer satisfaction surveys rather than commissions on specific sales.

"It's more of a team effort rather than 'I sold more than you,' " he adds.

[Photo: Eric Milos / Shutterstock]

Kelly K. Spors is a freelance writer in St. Louis Park, Minn.

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