How to Write a Business Profile
How to Write a Business Profile
A business profile is like a résumé for your company. It lists basic company details and gives you a chance to highlight your strengths. Just like a résumé, you should write each business profile with a purpose in mind. Use it as an opportunity to briefly state why potential clients should work with you, but give thorough and precise details.
Steps

Getting Down Company Information

Put your basic information first. Readers need to know who they’re looking at before you get into the specifics. It will also demonstrate how organized and efficient you are. Make sure to give the company name, the year established, what your company does, who the principal is, all your contact info, and your website. If there are additional basic details relevant to your business, give them here. For example, your header could be: XYZ Semantics, LLC Marketing Consultants | Est. 1975 in Las Vegas, NV 55 Corporation Drive, Las Vegas NV 56556 | ph. (555)555-5555, fax: (555)555-5556 Email: [email protected] | www.xyzsemanticsllc.com

Talk about your company’s ideas. If you have a mission statement, put it here. Otherwise, write out your company vision, guiding ethos, and a little about your history. Telling who you are and what drives you gives your company a human element. It also gives you a chance to do some subtle advertising early on. This is a place you can afford to be a little vague. Mission statements are legally necessary for some businesses, and may need to be specific. For everyone else, try to state what you do without limiting yourself. You don’t want to scare away potential business that thinks you wouldn’t consider expanding into adjacent industries. But it is easy to overdo vague language. A bad example: "XYZ Semantics is a company driven by the pursuit of its dreams. We want to bring you with us on this journey. Our dedication to solutions and innovation make us the leading marketing consultants west of the Mississippi." A good example: "XYZ Semantics is seasoned and talented team of marketing consultants. Since 1975 we have helped our clients grow their business and profits. Though our methods are complex, our goal is simple: we want to help you sell your product to more customers." EXPERT TIP Charbel Atala Charbel Atala Talent Acquisition Strategist & Managing Partner Charbel Atala is a Talent Acquisition Strategist & Managing Partner at Talent Gurus, a game-changing retained search firm located in the heart of San Francisco, California. With a unique blend of over five years in talent acquisition and a solid 15-year background in corporate law, Charbel crafts performance-driven talent solutions that are tailored to each client's unique culture and needs. Charbel Atala Charbel Atala Talent Acquisition Strategist & Managing Partner Shape an engaging narrative. Craft a company profile to highlight an organization's complete story — history, mission, products, differentiators — fused into a compelling, congruent narrative that resonates emotionally.

Find out more specific details. Check with your secretarial or human resource staff to find out up-to-date details in several areas. You may not need to use all these, but having them on hand will make it easier when you sit down to craft the profile. Set up a way to streamline this process in the future, as you will want to update this information in your profile regularly. Number of employees Turnover. Low turnover can indicate stability, but either way it’s a good statistic to have on-hand. List of all business activities. What are all the areas you work in? Unique equipment or specialties. If you are the only company that produces, say, a rare machine part, you need to mention that. Certifications Imports/exports Your methodology and/or what software you use. Volume of output you can handle. Prospective clients need to know if you are prepared to meet their needs. Delivery stats. How many units do you ship in a given period? Major accounts or clients. This is a way to show prospective clients whether or not you are used to doing business with companies like theirs. It’s also another chance for subtle advertising. Nail the basics of a business profile. "This made it very easy for me to get a direction of what my company's profile should be like, what to look for, and how to go about finding and creating a strong image in the process." - Mankoane S. Add a catchphrase for your business. "Registering my business name and writing a profile sounded easy, but I didn't like how I was presenting it. Thanks to this page, I have added a "catchphrase'' to my profile header and got my profile off the ground. Looking forward to receiving clients!" - Shigu H. We want to hear from you! Advice from our readers makes our articles better. If you have a story you’d like to share, tell us here.

Sift through all this information. Since you want to keep the profile short, you can’t include every possible detail. Also, not all of them might be strengths. Pick out what might be relevant to include in your profile in various contexts. Keep the other information on hand for future reference, but put the important stuff in one place for easy access.

Dressing up a Business Profile

Study other business profiles. Look first at competitors and other companies in the same type of business. Note the style and tone of the ones that stand out. If you have a business you really look up to, such as a leading national corporation, look at its profile. What do they do that stands out to you? Incorporate this style into your own.

Use accurate, up-to-date details. Before you sit down to write the profile, make sure you have the most recent numbers you can find. Prospective clients aren’t interested in your performance from five years ago. They want to know how you will deliver now. Get your staff to update you on these details regularly so you have to do less leg work when it comes time to write a new profile.

Keep it short. Most times, you want people to read your profile as potential customers. Make sure they read all the way through by keeping it short and engaging. Show you respect their time and you don’t want to waste it. Short business profiles also indicate that you don’t need a lot of flowery language and decorations to show you are the best. Let the numbers speak for themselves. For example, don't list every client you've had in the last 15 years. Keep the list short by including only the top 10 or so with high profiles. But make sure the language indicates they are not your only accounts!

Avoid overly specific jargon as well as general statements. You will inevitably use terms that people in your industry understand, but a fourth grader might not. However, don’t let the profile become an advertisement for your vocabulary. At the same time, avoid meaningless, vague statements. Experts in your industry will know fluff when they see it. Here are examples of poor wording: ” Simulated annealing and RPCs have the necessary infrastructure to interface with our overseas servers.” ” Our company optimizes synergy, productivity, and innovation while diminishing losses.” Here is an example of a targeted statement: ” We store data safely in our servers at home and in our international offices.”

Use clean formatting. Some companies and individuals let their creativity get away from them by going for excessively showy visual appeal. This doesn’t change the information presented, though. Pick a format that has lines and standard fonts to visually organize your profile. This is another way to ensure that the profile is easy to read.

Mention why your company is best. This is a kind of advertisement for your business, so don’t be afraid to talk about your strengths. Although, they should never worry about the accuracy of your business profile. Mention specific numbers or awards to quantify your performance. Make it creative but don’t exaggerate. Find a nice middle ground between good writing that makes you stand out and showy prose. Write something that sounds nice in two paragraphs, and then edit it down to one. For example, don't write: "We are marketing consultants based in Las Vegas, NV. We help businesses in the region sell their products and services. If you sign with us, we will be contractually obligated to advise you on ways to increase your business." But also don't write: "Semantics, LLC started in 1975, became the uncontested leader in marketing consultation in the United States by 1980. Our unrelenting and fervent attention to detail makes us the only good option for businesses hoping to increase sales. If you work with us, your profits will increase threefold in the first year." Opt instead for: "XYZ Semantics was named in Style & Marketing Magazine's 'Top 5 Marketing Consultants of the Southwest' list every year since 2005. Our team was selected from a variety of backgrounds to promote a creative environment. Choosing our services will not be the last good decision you make."

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