Saturday, December 15, 2007
The Leader's Passion
Dan's passion is typical of entrepreneurs. In fact, the Leader's Passion is often a company's major asset. Steve McGue is the President of the Shamrock Companies and a PAC Emeritus member. Steve talks about how he admires FedEx (http://www.fedex.com/). "Absolutely, positively overnight" says it all to Steve about the FedEx culture, and, in fact, the history of FedEx is full of stories about employees who felt empowered to take extraordinary steps to fulfill this simple, three-word Mission.
Too many times, when we hear about Vision Statements, Mission Statements, and Value Statements, our thoughts turn to wood plaques on reception area walls. Too often, these statements reflect superficial platitudes. After all, who can argue with "first class customer service" or "honesty?"
If you are a business leader, you have a passion for what you do, and you owe it to yourself and your stakeholders to articulate it. If you want another perspective on this, pick up a copy of "Lincoln on Leadership," a 15-year-old book that is an easy read, yet it clearly talks about timeless and powerful ideas for the business leader in the context of one of history's great leaders. http://www.navyreading.navy.mil/Covers/Lincoln%20on%20Leadership.htm
Put your passion into words. Call it whatever you want. Since your actions are a result of your passion, everything you do and say will reinforce it. The Leader's Passion will become the touchstone for your company and everyone who comes in contact with it.
Nick
Saturday, December 8, 2007
Use Your Value Proposition to Align Your Business
Sometimes this is because the Cubs blew the playoffs – again.
But most times, the problem is that your business processes are not aligned with your business goals, and neither is aligned with your customers’ wants. In short, instead of a seamless profit machine, you have a dysfunctional business.
How can you figure out if that is the case at your company? And if it is, how can you fix it?
A helpful tool is the Value Proposition, a description of your business in terms of value received by customers:
- Your target customers
- Benefits they receive
- What you charge (the difference = value received)
The challenge is specificity: for example, stating that you deliver “high quality” benefits is insufficient to help all parts of your company, plus your suppliers and partners, pull together. Instead, the Benefits must be understandable and measurable to guide actions and resolve conflicts within your extended organization.
Here are a few familiar examples of Value Propositions:
Volvo (http://www.volvo.com/) builds station wagons for safety-conscious upscale families who seek durability and safety, for a 20% premium.
Weyerhaeuser (http://www.weyerhaeuser.com/) manufactures particle board for furniture makers whose customers want a smooth appearance, which eliminates their need to laminate the material while providing a smoother final surface appearance, for a 35% premium.
You can use your Value Proposition in several ways.
- Measuring stick – are you doing what you say?
- Motivational tool – keep your employees aligned with the customer and focused on his prize.
- Planning and evaluation tool – stop doing things you shouldn’t and do more of what you should. In other words, if a piece of your operation doesn’t help you deliver your Value Proposition, fix it.
In short, your management task is to make sure everyone in your company and their counterparts with your vendors, suppliers, and channel partners know what your Value Proposition is, understand it, and use it to guide their everyday decision making.
-- Craig Elderkin
Tuesday, December 4, 2007
You talkin' to me?
The commonality of the presenters at all 3 events struck me and reinforced a common trait I see in most businesses. That is, they, and we, are all fluent in articulating the technical benefits of what we do, but they, and we, do not speak to our audience. In the case of the presenters at these 3 events, they all knew that the audience was a group of people with capital, or access to capital, who could invest in their new ventures. Unfortunately, almost without exception, the presentations were full of technical detail and spoke little to what the audience wanted to hear, which was the economic potential of the technology in the marketplace.
While graduate students and researchers can be excused for not thinking about the customer, we who run businesses cannot. How we communicate with our customers is critical to our topline success. Too often, we talk about the benefits of our product without considering the needs of our customer. At our PAC Cum Laude Forum last week, my colleague, Craig Elderkin, recommended the book "Strategic Selling" by Miller and Heiman (http://www.millerheiman.com/) . This nearly 20-year-old book has become a sales classic, and I highly recommend it. In it, you will learn, or be reminded of, the different types of buyers that influence the sales process, such as the Technical Buyer and the Economic Buyer.
Ron Crabtree (http://www.metaops.com/) is an adjunct professor at Villanova University, and he has developed useful tools to help the small business articulate the Voice of the Customer. Ron has spoken to our groups a number of times, and our members always benefit from hearing Ron speak on the topic.
Time and time again, I see business people design their sales and marketing messages around the question "What do I want?" The successful companies design their messages around "What does the customer want?" If you don't know what your customer wants, it's time you stopped and devoted some time and resources to figuring that out. The effort will yield a great return.
Happy holidays.
Nick
Wednesday, November 21, 2007
Welcome, Champion of Human Advancement!
Innovation thrives-indeed, it flourishes-in a free society, and, in a free society, the champion of innovation is the entrepreneur. If you've found your way to this blog, you likely have an entrepreneurial streak in you. Maybe you have nothing more than an idea, or maybe you lead a company with hundreds of employees. Wherever you are on the entrepreneurial spectrum, you are a Champion of Human Advancement.
I've been "accused" of being a serial entrepreneur, and I know that one of the many risks we face is a non-financial one. It is the risk of isolation. We are energetic, creative, dedicated, and self-sufficient. No one can do it like we can. Ah, but there's the rub. In fact, we don't know everything, and we need to step out on a regular basis and get fresh perspectives.
I hope you will return to this blog regularly to learn about resources that are available to the entrepreneur, the Champion of Human Advancement. PAC Leaders from around the country will be posting here on a regular basis to offer resources and direction to help you fulfill the dream you have for your business.
One such resource is The Entrepreneurship Institute (TEI). http://www.tei.net/ TEI is a non-profit organization based in Columbus, Ohio that produces events for entrepreneurs all across the U.S. TEI's website has a free library of presentations that have been given by outstanding business leaders throughout the country and over several years. Go to the "Hear About It" tab, and I'm sure you will find a presentation that can offer you an inspiring new insight.
If you prefer reading to listening, give the Edward Lowe Foundation a try. http://www.lowe.org/ Edward Lowe was the inventor of kitty litter, and he left most of his fortune to his Foundation, the mission of which is to champion the entrepreneurial spirit. You will find the Lowe Resource Center to be full of articles that are sortable by topic and might represent "out of the box" thinking for you.
This is the time of year when many of us think about long-term goals. If you sometimes find yourself isolated in business, make a commitment to yourself to carve out some time in that jam-packed calendar of yours to "step outside the box" and seek a new perspective on things. You'll be glad you did.
Nick Arvis