Four times the revenue growth, twelve times the stock performance, and over 700 times the profit growth over an eleven year period.
What competitive advantage led to this huge margin in performance of one group of companies over another in similar industries? In a landmark study of over 200 firms by Harvard professors John Kotter and James Heskett, it was found that companies which equally focus on three key stakeholders (customers, employees, and shareholders) dramatically outperform companies which emphasize one over the others.
This means companies exclaiming that the customer is #1; or that employees are the most important asset; or that the main focus of business is making money for the shareholders/owners will be at a significant competitive disadvantage over those firms that see and treat all three key relationships as equally important.
Process/Activities
These three groups of people, in any business, are then engaged in only three main activities or processes: making or buying stuff; selling it; and keeping track of the transactions. I refer to this as the "process" or "activity" side of the business where the focus is on doing things better, faster, and cheaper (less costly, for those that cringe when they hear the word "cheap").
It's these three fundamental activities that determine the profitability of the business. Simply put, making and buying stuff generates costs. In turn, selling this stuff generates revenue. And, again, if you've structure the business model correctly, you'll have quite a bit of profit left over when you subtract one from the other.
Like with the balance sheet, this triumvirate of basic processes provides you a greatly simplified lens through which to understand and view your income or profit & loss (P&L) statement.
The Juggling Act
What you're left with is a model of business where you have three groups of people with whom you have to maintain a positive reputation; and three groups of activities you have to keep productive.
Like the tradeoffs between the balance sheet and the P&L; it's this reputation/productivity balance that is the essence of business. We want to make our customers, employees, and shareholders increasingly happier, which should lead to a more valuable company; but we can't give away the store in the process.
What the firm needs, then, are some key metrics that measure reputation and productivity on a daily or weekly basis. This brings us back to the six main areas of business we need to juggle and the challenge of finding easily measurable key performance indicators (KPIs) that let us know how we're progressing. Below are a few suggested KPIs for each of the six areas. You can also go to www.KPILibrary.com for additional ideas.
And once you have KPIs for each of the individual areas, you can create formulas that let you combine the "people" metrics into an overall Reputation Score; and combine the "process' metrics into an overall Productivity Score. With these two numbers, you'll be 90% ahead of those driving their business without a proper set of gauges – a key (and balanced) competitive advantage.
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- A Five-Year Goal for All Companies
- Build on What You Do Right
- Seven strata of strategy
- The Big Hairy Audacious Goal: Your Company's Most Important Long Term Decision
- Competitive Advantage: Juggling Six Balls
- Control the "Ink" in Your Industry: Write a Book
- Control the "Ink" Part Two: Blogging, Wikies, Squidoo and More
- 5 Crucial Techniques to Double Revenues
- 4 Decisions That Will Help Your Company Grow
- 4 Imperatives for Marketing
- 4 Strategic Questions
- 4 Trends Shaping the New Decade
- Go Global
- Guerilla Marketing
- Hire the Right #2
- Improving Markeing: 5 Techniques
- Improving Sales: 5 Techniques
- Is Going East in Your 2010 Plans?
- Market Intelligence
- Marketing
- Most Important Tool of the 21st Century
- More Sales Channels, More Sales
- One-Page Strategic Plan
- One-Phrase Strategic Plans
- Predicting the (Immediate) Future
- Revenue Per Employee
- Sales Fundamentals: Daily Meeting
- Selling Your Business
- Strategy: Stay Focused and Open
- Strategic thinking vs. Execution planning
- Strategic Preparation: Three Critical Steps
- Where Good Ideas Come From
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