If You Don't Focus, Innovate and Evolve, You Die
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===============================================================================Summary:
Holding on to the old way of doing business might cause you to
become extinct. Continuous focus, innovation and evolution are
needed to maintain a competitive advantage.
===============================================================================
If You Don't Focus, Innovate and Evolve, You Die
by Mark Rosenberger
After 128 years of business, a household word, Montgomery Wards,
Inc., closed their doors forever and filed bankruptcy.
With 258 stores and 28,000 employees in 30 states, Wards fell
victim to competition from service-driven retailers like
Wal-Mart, Home Depot and Circuit City. Wards claimed a "poor
retail environment" for the failure. Interestingly, Wal-Mart and
Home Depot didn't shut down. (Editorial sarcasm).
Wards is a perfect example of a company that thought it was in
the retail business and missed the fact they're in the service
business.
Perhaps they rested on their laurels. After all, 128 years in
business is rather noteworthy in today's ever evolving economy.
And clearly, size nor name recognition saved this organization
from distinction.
The 28,000 employees will soon be looking for work. Why? Because
the organization missed the mark. They remained retailers when
the competition had evolved to a more personal, service oriented
approach. And I'm willing to bet that most of the employees are
"stunned," "surprised," "confused". They thought the old way of
doing business was just "fine".
Perhaps this can be a wake up call for every business. What
exactly does your business do? The quick answer is generally,
"we make, manufacture, service the best darn 'Gismos' in the
universe".
The focus is on the "stuff". The focus needs to be on the
outcome.
Sure you might "make, manufacture, service the best darn Gismos
in the universe" but if the end result isn't happy, satisfied
customers who enthusiastically spend more of their monėy with
you while telling friends, family and associates, you're
destined for short term success, at best.
Remember, Wards was in the "retail business". Now their
inventory is being liquidated at 40% to 50% savings.
A further wake up call might be on the horizon. If the U.S.
economy moves toward a slow down, customers are going to be
harder to find and still harder to keep. Following years of
rapid growth, stunning salės with record profits, most
organizations have felt little need to focus on customer
retention, customer satisfaction, keeping customers, customer
loyalty, customer service, customers for life or any of the
current "service" mantras.
In fact, talk to just about any executive and they'll tell you
their organization is "committed" to customer loyalty. Give them
a few more minutes and they're likely to brag about the level of
service their organization is currently providing. And just look
at the numbers-they must be doing something right.
But just wait. The companies that spent the time to build and
grow a powerful workforce with a focus on excellence and service
will be light years ahead of the game as competition increases.
In other words - "Good times can camouflage poor pėrformance".
So what's this mean to you and me?
First, FOCUS, Re-Focus and continue to RE-Focus. What is your
company in business to do? What role does your department play
in the process? How can each player move pėrformance to the next
level? Keep answering and re-answering these core questions.
Second, EVALUATE, Re-Evaluate and continue to RE-Evaluate. Take
a hard look at the service offered by your company, your
department, your team from the customers' eyes. Be on the
lookout for opportunities to take performance to the next
level.
Evaluate opportunities to enhance performance internally with
your important Trapeze Buddies - the people you count on most
often to complete a task, function or provide you with
information so you can get your job done.
And nėver assume that "no news is good news". Your customers are
talking - it just might not be to you.
Third, INNOVATE, Re-Innovate and continue RE-Innovating. Buggy
whips sold well in their day but if you're in the buggy whip
business today, you're short on customers.
Innovation is essential for continued, long-term growth. Look
for innovation opportunities in the following areas: 1.
Enhancing your core product or service; 2. Saving customers time
or money; 3. Reducing customer's headaches and hassles; 4.
Helping your customers gain a competitive advantage.
The rules of the game keep changing but one universal truth is
this: the job of every business is to attract and keep satisfied
customers. Period.
2005 © Mark Rosenberger All rights reserved.
Mark Rosenberger, CSP helps companies transform employee
performance, productivity and sanity. He is a sought after
speaker, performance strategist and author of six books. Do you
count on certain people to make your life work? Discover how to
be caught more and dropped less, plus achieve more than you ever
thought possible - download the FR.EE Trapeze Buddy e-book at
www.NoSplatZone.com
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