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Embrace Shades of Grey
July 18th, 2011

If you have ever overacted, you are not alone; however, you should recognize that one of the worst human tendencies is to overreact. Too often, our politicians overreact to a single transgression with a new law, rule, or regulation. Over the weekend, my wife joked about having to show ID when buying an alcoholic beverage. The waiter apologized and explained the restaurant policy of checking all customer IDs, as a result of a lawsuit by an intoxicated underage patron. It did not matter that the under aged patron used a fake ID, nor does it matter that 99% of the restaurant customers are 40+. All customers must provide ID. The people intent on cheating will still get fake IDs.


Although law makers and some jurists would have you believe otherwise, judgment and accountability cannot be replaced by laws and “zero tolerance” policies. It’s silly to suspend a 7-year-old from school for taking a nail clipper (with a nail file) to school, and it’s silly for us to run our businesses as if the world is black and white and subject to clear lines of demarcation.


A business, for which I provide training programs, recently developed a new employee manual. Their attorney reviewed the manual for conformance with applicable employment laws but recommended against an employee manual for two reasons. From a legal perspective, the attorney stated that an employer can inadvertently give up certain rights that may not be considered when the manual is being developed. From a practical perspective, the attorney advised that a manual can force a manager to classify an employee mistake or discretion as black or white, and may force the employer to make a decision that is not in the best interest of the businesses or the employee. Although I am not against employee manuals, businesses must be clear on the information that they are trying to present in the manual. All too often, employee manuals are used as a tool to enforce policies and to punish or terminate employees. The world is full of shades of grey, requiring judgment and, very often, toleration and forgiveness. Employee manuals, rules, regulations and reactive laws can prevent that from happening.


The most successful and profitable business with which I worked over the past 25+ years thrives in shades of gray. Their employee manual was developed to provide clarity and so all employees can provide consistent and superb service to all customers. The manual does not list rules, regulations or employee punishment guidelines. The CEO communicates a vision to work toward and parameters to work within. There are few rules. The business has grown from 20 to more than 1,000 employees, has enjoyed double digit revenue and net income growth for more than 20 consecutive years and has been named one of the best places to work – all because they like shades of grey.


Kevin

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Independence Day
July 3rd, 2011

I always find it surprising when I speak with a fellow American who does not know the actual meaning of the Fourth of July holiday.


Yesterday, I passed a park in South Carolina in which families were picnicking and barbecuing. The scene is probably the same on most summer weekends but this felt a little different as many had flags as well as red, white and blue tablecloths and plates. When we think of the Fourth of July, most think of the picnics, vacations and fireworks. My wife began looking at the fireworks schedule three weeks ago in an effort to find the best fireworks to watch. This year, we are going to a peach festival that will be followed by a fireworks display.


The commercialism of holidays is OK, as long as we remember the reason for the holiday. The Fourth of July is Independence Day. Independence is the reason that my mother’s ancestors came to this country in the 1600’s and the reason that my father’s family came to America in the 1800’s. It is the reason that so many people continue to immigrate to America today. Unfortunately, it is also a reason that terrorists and extremists hate our country but we’ll save that topic for another day.


As a young student I enjoyed learning about history but I was not a history buff. My passion was math and science. As I finished school, met people from around the world, and traveled, my interest in history increased. I wish that I studied history a bit more and I wish my parents took us to even more historic places. I hear this common.


And so, on this Independence Day weekend, I think about the history of our great nation. Growing up relatively close to Gettysburg, PA, I took the historic relevance of Gettysburg for granted. It was said that “the hallowed grounds of Gettysburg reveal the soul of this nation”.


Most people know of Abraham Lincoln’s Gettysburg address but just in case you do not know the background, I offer the following. It was July 1, 1863 when the Confederate forces approached Gettysburg with the intention of winning the war. In that small Pennsylvania town, the most important battle of the Civil War took place when more than 170,000 soldiers, 70,000 horses and 550 canons converged. The battle ended on July 3, with the Union Army stopping the Confederate Army, on Cemetery Ridge.


About four months later, President Lincoln visited Gettysburg to dedicate the Soldier’s National Cemetery. Lincoln was not the keynote speaker. Edward Everett, a politician, was the main speaker. Most American’s don’t know much about Everett and don’t know a word of his two hour speech. Lincoln spoke after Everett and with a two minute speech, containing 272 words that began “Four Score and seven years ago…”. President Lincoln set out to clam a nation and declare that those who had died had not died in vain, as he declared the notion of equality.


On this Fourth of July weekend, I wish all a happy Independence Day and recommend that you take a few minutes on this holiday, and all holidays, to consider the history and the reason behind the holiday. Also, if you have not had the opportunity, I recommend a visit to the Gettysburg National Military Park and the Gettysburg Battlegrounds as a place that everyone should visit. This is the 150th Anniversary of the Battle of Gettysburg. As you visit the battlegrounds and the original civil war homes and buildings, you will be awe inspired.


Happy Holiday!

kevin

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Airplanes Aren’t Made for People: And Other Unspoken but Relevant Truths
April 1st, 2011

Do you travel much? A friend, Alan Weiss, became frustrated during a recent flight to Europe. Consider this:


I’m sitting in the front of an Airbus A340, and I’m wondering why what I’ve been through is so strange. The plane carries 240 people, but we all go through the same bottleneck, one by one (blaah, blaah, blaah) to get on board.


Planes should really allow people to board through the entire side, so that everyone can get on in three minutes. But the new A380s, which can carry 800 people when configured completely for steerage, will have the same bovine boarding. Who thought this was the way to do it?


When we land, we walk a good half-mile or more, through winding corridors, to reach immigration. Here, at least, they have a multitude of stations, but still huge backups for those without special lines. Then we have to walk another hundred yards and take two elevators to reach the lot where the limo is parked.


The trouble is that airplanes were not built for passengers and neither were airports. Airframe designers, municipal engineers, and immigration officials don’t care about passenger comfort, they care about their own needs and avoiding litigation. How is “Let them walk a mile so that we save building costs” different from “Let them eat cake so we can save the best for ourselves”? (The “cake” to which the lady referred, was actually bread.)


Some years ago, an executive at Ford, appalled when she found she couldn’t gracefully get into one of her own new car designs, ordered her male design team to wear skits during business hours. She told them if they didn’t improve access for women, she’d also put them in heels. The design improved quite rapidly.


What if consumers, clients, customers and all other relevant alliterative categories were involved in the design of the structures, procedures, and processes they’d be using most often? Would the doctor still press a cold stethoscope to your chest? Would you wear those humiliating hospital gowns? Would the division of motor vehicles make you take a ticket and wait around for three hours? Would subway cars have the same kind of seating?


I doubt it.


I try to design experiences that my clients find attractive and compelling, which is not hard when you ask them. Why isn’t that a universal endeavor for all businesses?

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Is There Such A Thing As Too Much Cost Cutting?
February 23rd, 2011

At the conclusion of a workshop last week, I encouraged a question and answer session as I do at all of my workshops. After the final question, several attendees exchange business cards and asked if they could stay for a few minutes to network and get to know some of the other participants. They also asked if I would join them. As someone who encourages ” “networking for life”, I agreed.


Although most of the discussion revolved around the workshop, one person asked the other business owners about their top business concern. I was surprised when the first response was “cutting expenses”. Two other business owners agreed while the others stood quietly, listening. As the three business owners discussed various methods of reducing costs, including employee benefits, employee incentives, and customer benefits, I was biting my lip. After listening to their laundry lists of standard services and employee benefits that were being eliminated, I could not keep quiet and longer.


A significant reason for my success has been the ability to build efficient and lean businesses. Lean does not mean reducing services or cutting employee benefits. Lean means tracking the operational efficiency of everything from operational processes to the technology, tools, equipment, computers and vehicles. That does not mean having old equipment, computers or vehicles. It does mean determining the point at which it is best to invest in new and more efficient equipment.


As far as employees are concerned, highly successful businesses hire the best, most highly skilled, and most competent employees and pay them better than any of their competitors. It is incomprehensible to expect a low-paid, reduced benefits employee to stay around or not to look for a job at a competitor. One business owner responded that is why he uses non-compete agreements. I sincerely hope that that owner does not believe his own words — if an employee is terminated or has a justifiable reason for leaving, such as reduced benefits or pay, non-compete agreements are virtually impossible to enforce in most states. Besides, who would want an employee who doesn’t want to work at their company and why would a business owner want to invest their energy in suing an employee, rather than satisfying customers and generating new revenue? Keep in mind that most employees consider their compensation and benefits to be a reward for their performance and an indication of the appreciation that their employer has for them.


Cutting costs is a temporary and short term solution.


After leading dozens of successful business reorganization and turnaround initiatives, I learned that cost-cutting is often necessary but it is never the ultimate solution. In almost all cases, a maximum of 20% of costs can be cut from a business without having a significant effect on performance and on the quality of the product or service. In a business that is already somewhat lean, cost reductions of 10%, or less, are typical before the quality of their product or service will be noticeably impacted. Most companies went into cost reduction mode early in the recession and there should be no place for further cost cuts at this time, without reducing the quality of products or services that you deliver.


It is 2011, four years since the recession began, and the economy is gradually but steadily improving. It is incomprehensible that any business is operating with a primary focus on cutting costs. It is time to bear the fruits of the cost cutting and efficiency improvement measures that should have been implemented years ago and maintained.


During the past two years, a select group of businesses have doubled revenue, doubled and even tripled profit margin, expanded their marketing area and expanded into new industries. Each company is unique but each of those business owner approached me with the desire to maximize opportunities. The “cost cutters” are often the business owners who decided to “hunker down” until the economy fully improves and until things “get back to normal”. Either strategy is okay. The problem is the economy is not going to return to the previous “normal” and “hunkering down” is only going to help a business to lose market share and the profit that they could be earning.


When I travel on business, I often stay at business class hotels such as Holiday Inn Express or Homewood Suites. Last week, I stayed at a Holiday Inn Express in Philadelphia. In my room, I noticed that several of the complementary items that had been standard were gone. There was no complementary coffee. The mouthwash, shampoo and conditioner were gone from the bathroom. When I went to iron my clothes, there was no ironing board. I called the front desk and was informed that ironing board are now available on request and one was delivered to my room about 30 minutes later. I thought it was a joke. The ironing board was only about 24 inches high, which is significantly lower than the bathroom countertop. When checking out, in response to my question about the noticeable elimination of basic amenities, the front desk manager rolled her eyes and stated that the reductions were cost savings efforts. Meanwhile, the price of the room increased by $20 per night since my last stay. The front desk manager added that they have not been quite as full as in the past, ever since cutting the services.


When I went to the business center to print my boarding pass, the printer and copy machine were gone. I had to wait in line at the front desk to get my boarding pass because some bean counter decided to eliminate the $200 printer from the business center.


When traveling on business, I always stay at a business class hotel, rather than a 4-star hotel. The weekday business traveler is the lifeblood of these hotels. The front desk manager stated that there has been a noticeable reduction in business guests. I will add to that reduction as this hotel chain has been demoted to my “last resort” list vs. my “preferred hotel choices” list. All this so they could save $3 on an ironing board, $.05 on a printer page (boarding pass) and $.10 on a bottle of shampoo?


In tough economic times, the single most important activity is retaining customers. It is five times as expensive to gain new customers as it is to keep existing customers. As the economy improves, customers and employees will remember, perhaps more than ever, how they were treated by businesses during the recession. There is a reason why some companies have weathered the recession well and others have suffered tremendously. For some it is due to industry trends or market conditions that were out of their control, but there are many times when the business owner could have been more successful by being proactive rather than reactive. Cost-cutting is a purely reactive and short term, tactical move. It is not a strategic move and will not provide long-term benefits.


It is often the bean counters who recommend the cost cutting. Business owners must realize that the financial/accounting function is only one skill set of the many that are required by a successful business. Success requires integration of technical, operational, process, marketing and financial skills. As someone with a strong financial background, I cringe when a business owner states that they are relying primarily on the advice of a CFO, controller or financial advisor to determine what actions they should take, without integrating the advice of people with experience in each of those other key skill sets.


When you make the mistake of Holiday Inn, you fall short of the customer’s expectation in the name of lowered cost. Don’t take the cheap route, like Holiday Inn or the three business owners that I met at the workshop. You will lose a customer over a few bucks. It’s always better to over-spend on customer retention than under-spend. If you lose the customer, you can’t “un-ring” that bell. The same goes for employees.


Venting aside, low-cost business models can be a powerful ally. And they were helpful for many businesses early in the recession. However, now is not the time for most businesses to be focused on cost cutting. Make sure that the level of customer service and satisfaction is acceptable as well.

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Review Your Beliefs
January 17th, 2011

A colleague recently asked me to speak with his brother-in-law, who owns a manufacturing company. The brother-in-law was having some problems with the business. I was surprised at how defensive he was during our call. When I offered to meet with him, he said that he devotes all of his time to his business, he has no free time to meet, and there is nothing different that can be done to change his business.


My response was “maybe, or maybe not; you never know but it could be worth your time to meet”.


The businesses owner believed that he is doing everything that can be done for his business and his solution is to do what he has always done and — work long hours, 7 days a week. That belief is wrong. Doing more of what got you there isn’t going to change things.


Common wisdom is that there are two certainties in life >>> death and taxes. Here is another certainty: If you keep believing what you have always believed, your future well-being and success will pretty much mirror your current state of well-being and success.


This is true in both your personal life and in business. Keep in mind that any change is tough. That’s why over 86% of change initiatives in business fail. It’s also the reason why business owners that are truly committed to change ask for help and quadruple their odds of success.


Are you open to changing or updating your beliefs?

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