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Posted: Mon 4:12, 10 Jan 2011 Post subject: you can then change |
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Four Keys to Operational Excellence by Mark AkerleyAs we've stated before, operational excellence is no longer a competitive advantage. Globalization, access to technology, sophisticated communications and highly demanding and knowledgeable customers make it a competitive necessity. If your company is not world class now or becoming world class, chances are it won't be any class in the not too distant future. The good news is that world class business tools and techniques are available and affordable for virtually any company. The brutal truth, however, is that operational excellence has as much to do with the will, drive and focus of the company's leaders as it does with scientific management. Here are a few of those key characteristics that go hand in hand with operational excellence, along with some tips on how to make them work for you.1. An Obsession With Quality. People who take pride in the quality and value of their products and services deliver great quality. Such people are embarrassed to provide anything less. Whether it's manufacturing auto parts, counseling a client, building a computer or teaching a workshop, quality obsessed people will find a way to do it right. Although a few of us are born with this obsession,[link widoczny dla zalogowanych], most of us are not. However, you can take deliberate action to cultivate this obsession in your company. First, define the value equation for your products and services, the simple and very definitive statement of why customers should buy from you. Second, repeatedly communicate your value equation to all associates and business partners, letting everyone know that it takes discipline and collaboration to meet customer needs. Last, make it clear to everyone that products and services falling short of customer needs are simply not acceptable. Call it pride of workmanship. People who understand the value equation care about quality and will always search for ways to do it better.2. A Relentless Focus on Productivity. Any way you look at it, improving operations means reducing cycle time or "doing more with less." Such improvements go straight to the bottom line. This is as true for the one-person real-estate franchise as it is for the multi-national manufacturer. To encourage this kind of thinking throughout your company, develop macro productivity measures,[link widoczny dla zalogowanych], chart and communicate them frequently and benchmark them against tough standards. Macro measures, such as products/services to market, campaigns to profitability, staff to revenue,[link widoczny dla zalogowanych], expenses to sales, etc., provide a simple and clear picture of productivity, how your company is doing and how it must continually improve. Tracking productivity is the first step to influencing, controlling and improving it. Although you should never look at it as the sole indicator of company performance, you must view it as a requisite for "staying in the game" and remaining competitive.3. A Continuous Search for the Voice of the Customer. With all the demands for your attention, listening to the customer can get pushed down the priority list. Unfortunately, this can be a serious oversight since all that other important stuff �� systems, human resources, budgets, planning, etc. �� should really be driven by what customers are telling you. To optimize business processes, you must find out what customers are saying and thinking, what they like and don't like, what they value and what they need from you to give you their business. By understanding what your customers want,[link widoczny dla zalogowanych], you can then change,[link widoczny dla zalogowanych], simplify and modify processes to meet their needs.4. A Willingness to Change. Operational excellence lasts for but a fleeting moment �� just ask the leaders of most "top" companies who have been in business for more than a few years. Once you design products and services for your ideal customer and you finely tune your operations to deliver those products and services at a world-class level, customer expectations, markets, technology, the economy, will change. You cannot be enamored with or wed to the way your company operates; you must look for opportunities to initiate positive change. As Jack Welch once stated, "Change before you have to." So, how will you change your company to become even better?Operational excellence is not simply the result of applying analytical business tools (although they, too, are helpful). It is the development and nurturing of key "excellence" characteristics �� quality, productivity, customer focus and change �� that will lead you to continued success.CDs and Movies and Books, Oh My! by Rand GolletzA while ago, Tower Music and Books announced its bankruptcy. For those of you who aren't familiar with Tower, they were a hipper version of Borders and Barnes and Noble. In order, their product emphasis was music first, movies second and books/magazines third.A walk through a Tower store revealed their focus. Their customers were younger than those you'd see at their competitors. Their store music blared. Their staff displayed all manner of body piercing and hues of hair coloration.Tower's young, I-Pod-weaned customers flew to the internet and Tower died!I stopped recently at their Rockville, Md., store, as a street sign announced their liquidation sale. I roamed through the store and one thing struck me: Their prices still couldn't compete with Amazon �� even though they were in liquidation!Duuuuhhhhhhh!?Several days later,[link widoczny dla zalogowanych], I spoke to a (now) former Tower Records executive who shared the following blinding flashes of the obvious:? They couldn't compete on cost with online product distribution.? CD sales were plummeting, as music downloading was rapidly "stealing" (his word, as if it was unfair and should've been declared illegal) market share from them.Double duuuhhhhhhh!Where were these amazing strategic insights when they could've informed their competitive strategy rather than provide excuses after the fact? What were their executives thinking?If they knew that their "brick and mortar" presence made cost competition difficult, could they not have differentiated their products and services another way �C and I'm not talking about the ubiquitous coffee bars that are now a staple of booksellers?These geniuses just rode their horse until it collapsed and died on the track,[link widoczny dla zalogowanych]!Lessons for you from Tower's demise:? Drive to the brutal truth. That's the condition of complete objectivity, honesty and candor. The most successful people confront reality head-on, or as close to it as humanly possible. They also recognize that it's painful and difficult to do that, so they create mechanisms to make sure it happens.? By the time the rules of engagement are clear, the windows of opportunity are closed. In both strategy creation and execution, you must drive to create the bases of competition rather than waiting for your competitors to do so and then reacting to them. You also have to make decisions without complete, perfect information.? You can either eat lunch, or you can be lunch. I do believe in an abundant world. I do believe in the law of attraction (more in a future article). I also believe, however, that while you need to be patient and benevolent, you also need to be part samurai warrior.? There are no victims; there are only volunteers. If you assume that "the world out there" is determining your fate, the world out there will determine your fate. We have become too enamored in our society with excuses and/or blame. It's as if no one is accountable for anything. Overweight: It��s the fault of the food processors or the fast food joints! Drink too much, drive a car and get in an accident: Blame the bartender,[link widoczny dla zalogowanych]! Business failure: It must have been the competition, or the economy or the weather!Get real, take the reins and run your life and business!? Winning beats whining. I would say that nobody likes whiners, but we've become a nation of whiners. The reason �C we indulge excuses!Learn to be the example for others rather than following the example of others. Never whine; never make excuses; never complain! When you hear someone else do it, call them on it!Copyright 2006 Value Connection, All rights reserved.
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