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Hub You - What About Doing Nothing?
Wisdom From The Wizard Of Westwood i.e. more profit. In practice, all of the above actions could also lead to more revenue with more expense, or less expense but lower revenues:John Wooden (a.k.a. The Wizard of Westwood) is arguably the most successful coach in the history of college basketball. I recently gained new insight into his brilliance from a friend who was privileged to witness The Wizard at work at a routine practice session during his glory years at UCLA.Beginning with The End in MindWooden's final practice assignment for his players was a simple exercise in free throw shooting. Players were permitted to end their practice session after making ten successive free throws. On that particular day, UCLA's All-America point guard, Henry Bibby was the first player to stroll off the court to the comfort of the locker room and a warm shower. He completed the assignment with perfect, ten for ten efficiency.Successful basketball coaches know that free throw success frequently determines the outcome of a game. Ma Product Development If the cost structure and performance of your products is in fact largely determined by the current technology (for example, in diagnostics the use of micro-titre wells) then the only long term way to eliminate constraints to cost and performance must be by adopting a new technology. Production Suppose that you can adopt a '6 sigma' philosophy. This will involve a large investment in training and staff. Their choice of projects will be compromised by the need to do things that fullfill Black Belt certification timescales (for example). Further, in a hig RETAIL GREETERS: Sales Builders or Customer Turnoff? “Change is the only constant”. We have had it drummed into us so much that we find it very strange to leave things as they are. But just think about the benefits to your organisation of changing nothing:Do you need greeters or should you avoid them? That is the perplexing question many retail organizations are struggling with today. Often touted in the press as the perennial example of the benefits to employing greeters,Walmart has hung on to its practice faithfully. But does it work and if so, will merely placing any warm body with a forced smile at the door to your store do the trick of converting entering customers into satisfied shoppers?Not necessarily, there is much more to successfully using retail greeters to affect a significant difference in your bottom line. The basic problem lies with retailers who do not adequately define what it is they hope to accomplish. Retailers and greeters need to fully understand their function.Establishing goodwill with customers is the sole reason for using greeters. Four fundamental purposes and their correspond * Your attention will not be diverted from the daily need to meet customers’ needs * You will not create anxiety amongst your people that they are about to be “restructured” * You will save the cost of the project resources needed to make those changes happen. So why are you hell-bent on throwing it all up in the air and changing everything? The issue is not really changing nothing, but not changing everything. You can be sure that there is something you must do to continue to compete. Have you identified what it is? Maybe you know that you need to change, but are not clear what and why. So you change more than you need in order to be sure that you nail the real problem. Let’s put this into context. Suppose that your business supplies healthcare equipment across the world. You have to develop products, market, sell, make, distribute, and service them to your customers. You expect to make a profit and you would like to make more. You call for ideas. In a typical organisation this is how different functions might react to such a call. * Product Development Make the best use of the technology that you have to develop new products with the minimum of effort and risk in the quickest time * Production Reduce Unit Manufacturing Cost * Distribution Use the 80-20 rule to sell more to the minority of customers that are most profitable * Field Service Reduce headcount * Marketing Seek new high value niches or new markets for existing products Is this the best approach? Resource Needed Whenever you try to do something differently, you must create a 'project' to make things happen. Projects absorb effort, even when managed by the existing staff. So, in the case of Product Development, for example, the efforts to work out how to match existing technology to new product needs will actually reduce the resource available to actually develop products. This may indeed pay off, but not necessarily so. Certainly in Production, reducing cost will require teams of professionals (industrial engineers, lean experts) to plan and manage what has to be done. Implementation will absorb the energies of the production staff as well as incur the expense of the change agents. Presumably Marketing will need to research new niches and then fight internal battles (often of a political nature) with their peers and managers to accept their new ideas. This is again resource sapping. Overall, investment of resource (and that boils down to money) is needed to make things happen across all these functions. The more things that you change, the more resource it will consume. Will it Lead to More Profit? In principle, all of the above actions could lead to more revenue for less expense, i.e. more profit. In practice, all of the above actions could also lead to more revenue with more expense, or less expense but lower revenues: Product Development If the cost structure and performance of your products is in fact largely determined by the current technology (for example, in diagnostics the use of micro-titre wells) then the only long term way to eliminate constraints to cost and performance must be by adopting a new technology. Production Suppose that you can adopt a '6 sigma' philosophy. This will involve a large investment in training and staff. Their choice of projects will be compromised by the need to do things that fullfill Black Belt certification timescales (for example). Further, in a high Promoting Your Fundraiser is? Maybe you know that you need to change, but are not clear what and why. So you change more than you need in order to be sure that you nail the real problem.To achieve a successful fundraising event you will need to create awareness and excitement for your fundraising event. The bigger the crowd of people you attract for your fundraiser, the bigger amount of money that will be raised for your group. Below are some tips for generating interest in your fundraising event!Press Releases are vitally are a great way to make the community aware of your event and it will also be good for your group image. Send out your first press release announcing that you are having a fundraising event, why you are having your event, include your target amount and what the money is going to be used for. You can have your newsletter distributed online for free on many sites. You may be wondering what good will that do if my fundraiser is local, but you never know who may be interested in sponsoring and supporting your fundraising efforts Let’s put this into context. Suppose that your business supplies healthcare equipment across the world. You have to develop products, market, sell, make, distribute, and service them to your customers. You expect to make a profit and you would like to make more. You call for ideas. In a typical organisation this is how different functions might react to such a call. * Product Development Make the best use of the technology that you have to develop new products with the minimum of effort and risk in the quickest time * Production Reduce Unit Manufacturing Cost * Distribution Use the 80-20 rule to sell more to the minority of customers that are most profitable * Field Service Reduce headcount * Marketing Seek new high value niches or new markets for existing products Is this the best approach? Resource Needed Whenever you try to do something differently, you must create a 'project' to make things happen. Projects absorb effort, even when managed by the existing staff. So, in the case of Product Development, for example, the efforts to work out how to match existing technology to new product needs will actually reduce the resource available to actually develop products. This may indeed pay off, but not necessarily so. Certainly in Production, reducing cost will require teams of professionals (industrial engineers, lean experts) to plan and manage what has to be done. Implementation will absorb the energies of the production staff as well as incur the expense of the change agents. Presumably Marketing will need to research new niches and then fight internal battles (often of a political nature) with their peers and managers to accept their new ideas. This is again resource sapping. Overall, investment of resource (and that boils down to money) is needed to make things happen across all these functions. The more things that you change, the more resource it will consume. Will it Lead to More Profit? In principle, all of the above actions could lead to more revenue for less expense, i.e. more profit. In practice, all of the above actions could also lead to more revenue with more expense, or less expense but lower revenues: Product Development If the cost structure and performance of your products is in fact largely determined by the current technology (for example, in diagnostics the use of micro-titre wells) then the only long term way to eliminate constraints to cost and performance must be by adopting a new technology. Production Suppose that you can adopt a '6 sigma' philosophy. This will involve a large investment in training and staff. Their choice of projects will be compromised by the need to do things that fullfill Black Belt certification timescales (for example). Further, in a hig The Mobile Washing Businesses and Environmental Requirements /p>If you are running a mobile washing business you need to consider the importance of environmental controls to prevent dirty and polluted wash water from entering the storm drains. Not only is it the law but it is important for our Nations fresh water supplies.You may wish to know that solvents, like diesel fuel can pollute one million gallons of water with only one gallon of solvent. We run a mobile washing company and have put units in 23-states, our system blocks of storm drains and vacuums up the water for later discharge at a POTW, generally. However there are several different vendors who build custom units for us and others in the industry for various types of cleaning, such as rail cars, truck washing, washouts, forklifts and oil stains on gas station facilities.Generally it is our understanding of the law that no water may enter a storm drain. So * Distribution Use the 80-20 rule to sell more to the minority of customers that are most profitable * Field Service Reduce headcount * Marketing Seek new high value niches or new markets for existing products Is this the best approach? Resource Needed Whenever you try to do something differently, you must create a 'project' to make things happen. Projects absorb effort, even when managed by the existing staff. So, in the case of Product Development, for example, the efforts to work out how to match existing technology to new product needs will actually reduce the resource available to actually develop products. This may indeed pay off, but not necessarily so. Certainly in Production, reducing cost will require teams of professionals (industrial engineers, lean experts) to plan and manage what has to be done. Implementation will absorb the energies of the production staff as well as incur the expense of the change agents. Presumably Marketing will need to research new niches and then fight internal battles (often of a political nature) with their peers and managers to accept their new ideas. This is again resource sapping. Overall, investment of resource (and that boils down to money) is needed to make things happen across all these functions. The more things that you change, the more resource it will consume. Will it Lead to More Profit? In principle, all of the above actions could lead to more revenue for less expense, i.e. more profit. In practice, all of the above actions could also lead to more revenue with more expense, or less expense but lower revenues: Product Development If the cost structure and performance of your products is in fact largely determined by the current technology (for example, in diagnostics the use of micro-titre wells) then the only long term way to eliminate constraints to cost and performance must be by adopting a new technology. Production Suppose that you can adopt a '6 sigma' philosophy. This will involve a large investment in training and staff. Their choice of projects will be compromised by the need to do things that fullfill Black Belt certification timescales (for example). Further, in a hig Success Depends on Carrying Over Your Marketing Message to the Retail Floor l require teams of professionals (industrial engineers, lean experts) to plan and manage what has to be done. Implementation will absorb the energies of the production staff as well as incur the expense of the change agents. Presumably Marketing will need to research new niches and then fight internal battles (often of a political nature) with their peers and managers to accept their new ideas. This is again resource sapping. Overall, investment of resource (and that boils down to money) is needed to make things happen across all these functions. The more things that you change, the more resource it will consume.Over the Thanksgiving holiday, I decided to spend a day in the yard raking up the last of my fall leaves. Not wanting to lose my belt-clipped cell phone during the process, I removed it, placed it on the counter and did my best to corral the leaves that ultimately would fill 23 yard bags.After completing my chore, I went to retrieve my phone, but instead of finding it on the counter where I had left it, I found it submerged in the dog’s water dish at my feet. It seems that the vibrating ring tone gave my cell phone just enough mobility to walk to the edge of the counter and take the plunge into the drink.Replacing the phone involved a sales procedure I’m sure all marketers would like to mimic, but very few can. It involved me setting an appointment with a sales consultant –who actually understood the various cell phones being offered and the service plan Will it Lead to More Profit? In principle, all of the above actions could lead to more revenue for less expense, i.e. more profit. In practice, all of the above actions could also lead to more revenue with more expense, or less expense but lower revenues: Product Development If the cost structure and performance of your products is in fact largely determined by the current technology (for example, in diagnostics the use of micro-titre wells) then the only long term way to eliminate constraints to cost and performance must be by adopting a new technology. Production Suppose that you can adopt a '6 sigma' philosophy. This will involve a large investment in training and staff. Their choice of projects will be compromised by the need to do things that fullfill Black Belt certification timescales (for example). Further, in a hig Coaching Employees to Improve Performance: Finding the Coachable Moment i.e. more profit. In practice, all of the above actions could also lead to more revenue with more expense, or less expense but lower revenues:Coaching to help people improve their performance is one of those skills that is easy to talk about and a whole lot harder to do. A recent experience has driven home for me just how important having a good coach can be.My seven-year old daughter takes ice-skating lessons. To help make it fun, I join her on the ice after her lesson for an hour of free-skating. I wish I could say I cut a graceful figure on the ice. In fact about all I can do is skate within an arm’s length of the railing so I can steady myself if I start to lose control. Recently, I decided to teach myself how to skate backwards. I observed the skillful and highly experienced skaters in the center of the ice rink skating backwards as they launched themselves into athletic jumps and turns.“How hard can it be to skate backwards?” I asked myself. After an hour of wiggling, twisting, and turni Product Development If the cost structure and performance of your products is in fact largely determined by the current technology (for example, in diagnostics the use of micro-titre wells) then the only long term way to eliminate constraints to cost and performance must be by adopting a new technology. Production Suppose that you can adopt a '6 sigma' philosophy. This will involve a large investment in training and staff. Their choice of projects will be compromised by the need to do things that fullfill Black Belt certification timescales (for example). Further, in a highly regulated environment, you will soon find that you need to change things that will involve validation that is expensive or takes too long. At the end of this exercise, you might be lucky to get your money back on the investment. Distribution You may decide to promote a current best-selling product to more of your best customers. However, their calculation of “profit” will be based on transfer prices from the factory. The true profit margins may well be completely different. This means that the organisation as a whole may end up making less profit from the change. Field Service This department is widely regarded as just expense. The only way to reduce it is to reduce headcount. This could well lead to poorer service to the customer. Eventually you pay the price in losing customers. You reduce expense, but then reduce revenue too. Marketing It will be difficult for marketing to assess the incremental operating expense for any new markets that they enter. If the extra revenues are not up to expectation, then profits will not be as good as they hoped. Could You Do Better? It is clear that an uncoordinated approach will definitely involve extra expense in the short term and is unlikely to produce the best possible increase in profit for that extra effort. This means that at best you will have improved profitability, but you will certainly have spent more effort than you needed to do so. There is a worse scenario. Suppose the key constraint on profitability lies outside the individual remit of any of the departments, or more probably depends on actions across departments. In this case, you will not achieve any kind of “breakthrough” improvement at all. You will effectively get nothing for your money. Doing nothing in this situation is better than doing a lot that is ineffective. Of course, you WILL hit the jackpot if you identify just one project that removes the key obstacle to improving profitability and apply resource to making just that happen. Elsewhere you simply change nothing. Is that so outrageous? ***************************** by James La Trobe-Bateman, Founder of reMODEL Consultants International Ltd. About the Author: James La Trobe-Bateman. Co-author of NEW BOOK 'Bridge Of Faith for Operations with examples in Medical Device & Diagnostics'. Presented with 'Global Innovation Award' by Bristol-Myers Squibb. Nicknamed the 'dynamic duo' by operations director for a division of Johnson & Johnson. Over 25 years ago in oil & petrochemical industry, he first started predicting the effects of one change on all parts of the organization. Inspired by Eli Goldratt in the early 80's. For over 15 years now in the Healthcare Manufacturing Industry, James very passionately continues to drive highly successful, ongoing Operations Improvements as well as resolve New Product Development & Market issues Internationally. James has won various prestigious awards over
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