Monthly Archives: July 2018

Success Story – Bill Gnan, PE

Time for another success story. This one is about Bill Gnan (PE) who started his engineering consulting firm 16 years ago.

Obviously, he has been a success, and proof that it can be done. Engineers, take note!

Met Bill at an engineering seminar I taught last week. Even in semi-retirement, I remain involved through teaching. At this stage in life, it is most satisfying to share my years of experience, just as I do with JumpToConsulting.

Actually, we first met almost 20 years ago, when Bill worked for a past client. He reminded me of a long forgotten design guide I developed for them, and which he graciously shared with me. Kind of neat that he kept it, and proof that our consulting efforts can live on for years. And a sincere pleasure to reforge an old connection.

Here is Bill’s success story: 


(1) What prompted you to consider consulting? Was there an event, like a layoff, or was it just a general itch to be on your own?

My wife and I were middle managers with significant commutes. We had young children (6 and 4) who were in after school and pre -school care (dropped off at 7:30 and picked up between 5-6PM). It was a struggle.

We were involved with our kids in church, Cub Scouts and youth sports – something was going to break (our marriage or our kids). The pressure of being a middle manager (all responsibility – very little control) were tremendous. One of us needed to have more schedule flexibility.

We decided that as a PE with good reputation in a niche field (facility electrical engineering), I could work from home – that was the genesis of the need to be “on my own”.

(2) How has it been going? Since started sixteen years ago, you are obviously well established in your business.

It has gone very well.

Early on it was about having more time for my family and for leadership roles in volunteer organizations and making similar (a bit less) money to my previous job.

It took 7-8 years (as kids became more independent) for it to be lucrative.

(3) What do you like MOST about consulting?

The schedule freedom.

(4) What do you like LEAST about consulting?

That we are always on the job!

(5) How do you get your clients? (BTW, the number one question I get asked when someone finds out I’m a consultant.) What marketing techniques work best for you?

When I started I was able to keep my employer as a client which was key (in fact they are still a client)!

I had been working so long in our area that I had many contacts and specific expertise in unique niche areas that are subsets of the electrical facilities engineering discipline (theme park, health care, water wastewater) where engineering services are not a commodity.

(6) How do you set your fees? (Second question I get asked.)

I initially charged my former employer a rate slightly higher than my hourly rate (adding my contribution to FICA, and a small amount for overhead), wanted to keep them as a client.

Slowly over time I increased my rates to what the market would bear (even large firms). Determined that I would not attempt to compete on fee/price. Goal was and is to be the very best at what we do.

(7) How did you decide what to consult about? And why? (Third question I get asked.)

Simply offered services for which I had become or was becoming viewed as an expert.

(8) Lessons learned since you started consulting?

Wow – too many to list…

  • Don’t compete on price, it is a downward race to the bottom for those who get involved in such a race.
  • Set up my practice as something like a country physician’s medical practice, I know, care for and even love my clients, the service is what is important. I make house calls and accept emergency calls in the middle of the night, payment secondary matter – give preliminary advice over the phone.
  • Don’t go along with foolishness, we are professionals (like doctors), We must listen to the patient, but the patient doesn’t direct treatment unless I agree.
  • Walk away from bad or risky deal. Write proposal carefully (include what you will do, what others will do and what you will not do).

(9) What next? Do you plan to do this the rest of your career (like I did?) Or is this a stepping stone to other things?

Will do it for the rest of my career.

Currently have two other employees who work on large, long term design projects. I plan to scale back to just me doing niche studies/consulting – selectively accepting assignments.

So, within the next 5-10 years, I will look to hand off many of my large projects (6 months – 1 year in schedule duration, 100’s of design drawings) type clients to trusted younger engineers in our area who I am trying to coach into becoming consultants!

(10) Finally, what one piece of advice would you give to our fellow engineers who might be thinking about consulting?

Helps to have some security (dual income/working spouse with benefits, etc) to lessen the pressure to earn money, provide stable cash flow, so that you can make good long term decisions not panicky short term decisions (like acceptably risky or undesirable work or cutting fees to get work).

(Ed. Note – If married, VERY important to have the support of a spouse. Would not have made it without the support I got, for which I am forever grateful! — Daryl) 


Thanks, Bill. It was great to reconnect with an old client who went on to bigger and better things. And glad you were so successful in your JumpToConsulting.


Do you have a success story to share? If so, please send it in…


Here is Bill’s contact information:

Gnan Engineering Services, Inc.
3521 Wild Eagle Run 
Oviedo, FL 32766 
407.971.1861 
www.gnanengineering.com 
info@gnanengineering.com 


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From the mail bag… Handling phone calls…

Long time friend and recent returnee to the consulting ranks wrote:

Just got an unusual series of email inquiries from a prospect:

  • I’d like to talk to you.
  • Sorry, I’m going on a trip. Let’s connect in a week.
  • I’d like to talk to you tomorrow.
  • Sorry, I’m busy so I’d like to talk to you next week.
  • I’d like to spend an hour on the phone with you. Oh, we currently have no budget for consulting.

I told him I’m on vacation and can’t talk with him for an hour at the moment. Hopefully, I won’t hear back. He clearly does not value my time.

I agree. No consideration — no budget. Not a good potential client. Don’t call him back.

BTW, I just tried something for a one hour consultation that worked well. It was an EMI question, so I explained I no longer traveled for consultations (I still do for training.)

I asked for some details so I could refer him, but I added I’d be happy to answer any quick questions ( a few minutes) he might have.

He felt he needed more time, and asked could he pay for that? I said OK – CC or PayPal, and we talked for a hour followed up another hour of research. No problem paying — no rush — and no guilt about imposing on me.

 A colleague has a policy of offering a half hour, and then letting the client decide if it was worth it and whether to continue. I did the same here — suggested if not happy he did not owe me anything.

He told me how much he appreciated the help (and my “policy”), and asked if he could call again. It all worked out well, and I now have a new “phone client.”  Not a lot of $$$, but it will buy dinner out a few times.

I reworked the EMIGURU web site to reflect that. My past policy was always “no charge” for phone calls, but some would go on for a while. I still do that for old clients or friends. But I think this might be a good way to handle new inquiries, and weed out those not serious.

Steve added:

Good advice. I’d add “If a prospect wants to set up a 1-hour phone call with an open agenda, quote them a 1-hour consulting fee. They’ll quickly self-sort into prospect or suspect buckets.”

Give it a try and see how it works for you.


There is a wonderful Chinese proverb that goes like this…

‘A single conversation across the table with a wise man is worth a month’s study of books.

 — Graham McGregor – The Expensive Marketing Solution

Got a question or comment?  Send me an e-mail and I may share it with our readers.

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