Archive for the 'Process' Category

VOC : A Term To Know

Tuesday, June 10th, 2008

Voice of the customer. Great companies listen to it, and mediocre companies try to listen to it.

The issue of truly hearing your customers isn’t as simple as just reading complaints and comments. If you don’t think it’s a tricky task, think of these issues:

  • Who will analyze the problem?
  • Who reports it to CEO/COO?
  • How will the customer be notified problem is fixed to see if they are pleased?
  • How to we effectively sift through the mounds of data to make sense of it all?
  • Will the CEO see these as important money making resolutions?

A sound VOC system will take care of these issues and more. This is where it helps to thrive in ambiguity. It’s obvious that a great company needs to hear their customers. The real problem is how does that happen with piles of data and teams already swimming in tasks. Shall we make a system, outsource it, rent software (which one!), hire a consultant, train employees in house, etc.

Regardless of the attack, a great company must attack it.

Goodman, in a study of 100 companies over three years, identifies 8 problems that great companies have already fixed, and mediocre ones haven’t, when it comes to their VOC process:

  1. Inefficient and costly data collection
  2. Analysis in a vacuum
  3. Inconsistent classification schemes
  4. Old data
  5. Analysis without priorities
  6. Analysis that is not actionable
  7. Ineffective presentation of data and findings
  8. Failure to track the impact of corrective actions resulting
    from the VOC process

Another interesting observation is the need to reward the marketing department for their attention to the data:

While many companies have satisfaction related incentive systems for operations and service management personnel, they rarely exist for marketing and sales. This is a critical oversight;
TARP’s research has shown that 30% to 40% of customer problems are tied to marketing and sales.

Resources:

Stay Close to thy customers

EFM (enterprise feedback management) blog

Goodman, Depalma: Maximizing the Value of Customer Feedback

Book Report: The E-Myth

Sunday, May 4th, 2008

A colleague at work suggested I read The E-Myth . After picking it up Friday, I couldn’t stop thinking about it, and finished it Saturday. It’s on my top 5 for business, so far. Here is what I learned.
The E is for entrepreneur. The E myth, which Gerber goes on to dispel, says entrepreneurs are super-human. Only these heroes have the right to start businesses. Really what goes on in the rest of the book is a intro to business development. But that would have made a terribly boring title. What’s so exciting about business development? It’s the fact that you didn’t know you needed it.

Gerber first starts with a bit of psychology. Inside of everyone involved in business, there are three personalities:

  • Entreprener – This is the dreamer
  • Manager – Likes order and predictability
  • Technician – Likes the art of the craft, the end product.

According to Gerber, most folks start small businesses because they are a good technician. Technician meaning anything technical; baking pies, programming, styling hair etc. . They make a faulty assumption:

The Fatal Assumption is: if you understand the technical work of the business, you understand a business that does that technical work. pg 13

A clear difference from a bird’s eye view, but this misunderstanding is the most common reason small businesses fail. Each of these personalities has a vital role. For example, you inner technician should be the master of the product, documenting exactly how to reproduce it. You inner manager should implement that system, and be consistent. Your inner entrepreneur should always ask, “what would the customer want?”, and not be contented until they have it.

The enigma with a start up happens after your first couple of employees, when you hand off management by abdication, not delegation. For some reason, the widgets have scratches on the, or they come unglued all the time. In other words, your employees aren’t doing as good as you did when you wore every hat. It only gets worse as you get a larger workforce, until you get so stressed, that you throw your hands up and go back to a one man shop.

So why are the big guys big? The big guys had systems in place to control and reproduce everything worth doing right. Everything! They had a system to teach every employee that process. See, every time you are getting something done, you have to think how can this be reproduced exactly right, thousands more times. A franchise mentality! This is a major shift in thinking for a technician. Many folks start businesses because they don’t want their lame incompetent boss directing their life. The problem is technicians aren’t good at running businesses. Managers and Entrepreneurs are, so you must give them space to work.

My favorite idea found in the E-Myth is not to create a business to work at, but create a business that works. Every piece of your business should be perfectly documented, and adhered too. It should provide a structure for employees to flourish, a “game” for them to play. They can flourish and earn rewards by following the rules. It’s a rule of thumb to document the position well enough for the lowest skilled employee can become great under it. Money saver!

There are more tasty morsels that I didn’t mention, and some good insight on what your system should look like. Worth a read if you ask me.