Archive for the ‘Transforming Your Business’ Category

Remember the Forgotten II

Thursday, December 30th, 2010

Part two of a three part series on Proactive Improvement

Blog Article Written By: Dave Mills, Managing Partner – Columbus

In our last conversation, we discussed how supplier relationships are a common “forgotten” element of many businesses. Did you have a chance to think about any other forgotten elements of your business? What were they?

It seems that even the President has been thinking about what he forgot in 2010 so he can focus on how to most effectively spend his time in 2011. According to senior advisor Valerie Jarrett, “the President’s ‘biggest regret’ was that because of economic turmoil – ‘he had to spend almost every waking hour in Washington working on solving that crisis.’”

For Obama, spending his time almost exclusively with politicians and advisors meant he was not connecting with the public, something that, over time, could diminish his chances of re-election. What are the implications of the forgotten elements of your business?

Let’s analyze customer relationships. As a good businessperson, you know the value of spending time with customers. But how deeply do you delve into those relationships? We have found that engaging deeply with customers is usually forgotten.

With superficial relationships, it’s what you miss that matters. Specifically, you miss an opportunity to gather market intelligence and consumer insights. Your customers have a valuable perspective. They can provide information about potential future demand that is important to keep in mind when budgeting, scheduling and purchasing. They can also help you identify product improvements and gaps in the marketplace.

Consider this story from our friend Ron Stibich, President of ITW Fibre Glass Evercoat. Stibich’s team has spent hundreds of hours with customers observing them using ITW products.  By dissecting the customers’ behavior and processes, his team gained a better understanding of how the products were being used and what problems occurred in the process.  This knowledge lead to new and improved products.

Many times, Stichich’s customers hadn’t been able to articulate that they needed anything new. They had accepted the products as they were. By remembering to engage deeply with customers, ITW found new opportunities to lead the industry.

Like the President, the emergency of the day can prevent you from spending time on other important business matters. Great leaders have to learn to juggle them all. How well do you handle all of the elements of your business?

In the last blog of our series, we will be going through our proven strategy that allows leaders to have confidence in their middle managers so they can step away from the daily Run to turn their attention to future focused matters that can lead to growth. Do you have the time to join us for that helpful conversation?

It is a Time for Change. Transform Your Business for Sustainable Profits By Ray Attiyah, Founder and Chief Innovation Officer, Definity Partners

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010

In today’s economy, many companies are feeling pain like never before. Business is declining. Growth is extremely difficult. Everyone is seemingly caught in a cycle of fear and experiencing extraordinary levels of stress.

In this landscape of challenge, however, opportunities exist. To find them, companies need to look beyond traditional process improvement initiatives and consider a complete transformation.

Organizations that thrive in a down economy focus on the future. They continually re-think their process, structure and culture, and focus on evolving demands of the marketplace.

If you are looking to grow profitability and improve cash flow in a down market, just removing waste from an existing process may not get you there. Instead of looking to improve productivity by 10 to 15 percent over the next year, focus on transformation, and you will achieve dramatically higher returns.

We have one client whose profits doubled in three years after initiating the transformational journey. We helped another company effectively ramp up to meet massive new market opportunities. A new and nimble approach grew revenues from $10 million to $1.5 billion during a 10-year period.

Transforming a Business Versus Continuous Improvement

Continuous improvement takes an existing process and removes the activities that do not add value – the problems that prevent you from generating good, reliable business results. It looks at where you are today and how to improve business outcomes. It is change with a small “c” – addressing the low hanging fruit to survive.

Business transformation, on the other hand, is redesigning your entire system. The focus is not about what you are currently doing right or wrong. Rather, it looks at where your business has to go to accommodate future demands. It is about defining a vision and executing a plan for sustainable success. Transformation is change with a capital “C” – building a new business enterprise that thrives.

Transformational changes commonly deliver 10 to 20 times the benefits of continuous improvements initiatives. A real paradigm shift can help achieve results never before imaginable. It is a fundamental change in how you run, improve and grow your business.

The First Step in Transforming Your Business

Start by understanding how your markets are evolving and how you need to reposition your company in the emerging marketplace. Envision a new future. What are the benefits in terms of cost, growth and market share?

Your business model evolves over time. New trends and technologies can make existing processes obsolete and ineffective. It is like trying to improve the buggy whip production process, while the marketplace adopts gasoline-powered vehicles. Even the most effective production process will not deliver profitability.

Transformation starts with a vision for success, then work backwards. Redesign your business based on future needs rather than today’s operations. Ask yourself, “If we started all over again, what would we be doing and how would we do it best?”

Addressing Employee Resistance to Change

It is human nature to resist change. Many established organizations are unable and/or unwilling to take the necessary steps for success. Generally, the most resistance comes from management. Other employees often are more open because they experience the flawed system on a daily basis. In fact, some of the best employees may be frustrated because a stagnant environment has squelched their ideas for improvement. Transformation requires structural change.

To overcome opposition, it is important to create a compelling vision, communicate the benefits and get some quick wins.

Getting Employees to Help Transform the Business

Most improvement efforts hit roadblocks based on silos. People are trying to make departmental improvements, rather than looking at the big picture. Eliminate that mindset. Look outward, not just inward. Get your team focused on the whole system and the external marketplace, with an eye on the future. Make sure they understand how the sum is more than each individual part. Then, identify the champions – the top 10- to 20-percent that have demonstrated prior initiative, capabilities, competencies and a willingness to try new things. Provide them with a vision for success and get them engaged for real business transformation.

Sustaining the New Culture

Sustainable improvement requires effective management. It is all about driving the right behavior. Too often, conflict develops between day-to-day operations and transformation efforts. Eliminate this conflict by aligning your management approach with your transformational process. Managers are typically skilled at leading operational tasks, but they often lack the experience and confidence to drive true business transformation.

Change needs to be definitive and implemented with bold leadership. No one will embrace the new approach, if old ways remain intact. There always will be a place for process improvement. Yet, to build a new culture, you must make the old one obsolete. Completely usher in the new and better system, and implement the transformation throughout the entire organization.

Taking The Fear Out of IT by Tim Holman, President, lyteITup, technology division of Definity Partners

Tuesday, April 6th, 2010

How to Bring Information Technology into the Sustainable Improvement Process

The reaction of many business owners faced with information technology (IT) choices is fear. While they are very knowledgeable about what they do, they may not know as much about the technology that could help them better run their businesses. Simplifying, standardizing and automating your processes can help businesses overcome that fear. It is taking that large, complicated process, breaking it down into smaller steps and identifying what the value-add and nonvalue-add steps of that process are. When you do that, you can make the process run more effectively from beginning to end.

The Fear of IT

The most common technology issues business leaders are facing is the fear of IT. Most people are very passionate about what they do. Clients are usually good at products and processes but not necessarily technology. A lot of leaders have received faulty advice along the way, and, because of that, they have concerns about what the next step is going forward from a technology standpoint. 

You need to remove that fear; the way you do that is by understanding your processes, and then simplifying, standardizing and automating them with technology

Simplifying Your Processes

It starts with understanding your overall business strategy and objectives. Once you understand a process from a strategic point of view, even a complicated process, it is easier to understand the improvement opportunities that exist within that process.

The first step in simplifying is to identify what the nonvalue-add items are in a process and eliminate them. You do that by asking lots of questions and by really understanding what is important to your business, what keeps you up at night and what the roadblocks are to your ultimate business objectives. 

Typically, as a result, you will see a significant reduction in the number of steps in the process and gain a better understanding of what that process really is. At that point, the whole conversation becomes less difficult to understand and, therefore, much easier to implement. In the end, the process must be concise and support the overall objectives in as few steps as possible.

Working to Standardize and Automate Your Processes 

As you begin to standardize, you will often find that it is unclear to everyone how they affect the process. The most important step is to ensure that your associates are trained on the process and that they understand it from beginning to end so they know how they can affect the result of that process. Without this understanding, it is difficult to build a process that is executed consistently throughout the business.

To automate your process, look at what you can do to leverage technology to make the process more effective. Whether it is something as simple as data entry or as complicated as doing database work to help mine data, it all runs more efficiently after you have simplified and standardized your processes. As a result, your processes become repeatable and sustainable.

A good example of this is the Electronic Medical Record (EMR) process being discussed within the health care industry today. The objective is clear: allow any medical record to follow an individual as needed. The challenge is determining who needs what information when and in what format. Once this process is agreed upon, or simplified and standardized, the automation becomes easier. Until then, automation of the process is ineffective at best.

The Biggest Mistakes Companies Make When Going Through This Process

If everyone does not understand the process, then you cannot improve it. You cannot understand how you may be affecting someone negatively if you do not know everyone’s roles throughout the process.

Not understanding your business processes hurts your business flow because you may be constantly doing things that are non-value added or causing pain. If the processes are not aligned with your business strategies and objectives, leaders have to realign them to ensure they are supporting overall objectives. 

Using Technology to Improve Processes Applies to All Industries

It does not matter what industry you are in. Every business has processes, which can each be broken down into simplified steps to understand what the beginning is, what the end is and what the outcomes need to be. It does not matter whether it is health care, construction, manufacturing or distribution; if you understand what is key to your business, and the inputs and outputs required to meet those objectives, you can improve processes.

 The Right Time to Get Started

The right time is when a business leader understands that the pain exists and has the self-awareness that there is an issue preventing the business from running better. This self-awareness comes through asking questions, talking to peers, a lot of reading and/or asking the question, ‘How do I get better?’

Business leaders need to understand when the technical skills are outside their area of passion or expertise. At that point, leaders need to bring in an outside perspective to build on an understanding of business’ processes focusing on how to simplify, standardize and automate them with technology.

Challenging Times Dictate Challenging Past Standards by Jay Kuhn, President

Friday, July 31st, 2009

In most circles, business is down about 30 percent compared to last year. While most companies are doing their best to hang on, other companies are leveraging this time to grab market share. Successful growth has come from staunch non-acceptance of the status quo and an informed relationship with the marketplace.

A quick realization of the market changes and understanding what customers want is key today. Mediocre performance is no longer acceptable. During the past couple of years, our leverage was high due to a lack of capacity in the marketplace. It was a seller’s market and most of us were struggling to keep up with orders. The high capacity in the marketplace allowed us to overlook measurements that were lagging. Poor on-time delivery and sub-par quality were acceptable because customers had few options.

How quickly things can change! We are now in an environment where we are fighting for every sale. Our customers are asking for more concessions, and they have a multitude of options for suppliers.

Successful companies are those who quickly identified the coming shift in the marketplace and were able to adapt their businesses accordingly. They were able to radically transform their organization, so that the old “standards of performance” were no longer acceptable. Lead times were cut in half; anything less than 100 percent quality and delivery was unacceptable. Productivity levels were expected to increase.

All of these factors will have an even greater impact as business comes back from the recession. The competitors are amending their processes and incrementally making things better. Their measurements have gotten an up-tick because volumes are down, but they have not gotten in touch with their customers to understand expectations. They do not have a handle on how to gain business in these times. They have cut spending. Their employees are frustrated and looking for other opportunities.

Case Study #1

One client radically changed its business recently. Although business levels have been down, this company increased its ability to respond to the market – which is now more important than ever. Last summer, the leadership team believed it was at capacity and could not take on more business within its physical and labor constraints. It had poor inventory control that drove up levels of raw materials and finished goods. This had the detrimental effect of limiting the company’s ability to take on more business. This lack of confidence slowed sales efforts.

Fortunately, the company was able to transform prior to the slowdown. It is now paying dividends – making more money on 20 percent less sales, and positioned to handle 25 percent more business than previously thought possible. This has freed up the sales and R&D departments to generate more work.

The confidence to go get more work began with an understanding of customer needs. This led to changes in the business to meet these expectations. Poor inventory control metrics and perceived physical constraints in their building were no longer acceptable. In the old days, it was unheard of to keep an accurate inventory count. Now, 97 percent location and inventory accuracy is the norm. Any dip below 95 percent causes a team to investigate the cause and make improvements. The cash reallocated from being able to lower inventory has been used to invest in speeding up the R&D process. This allows our client to gain customers at a quicker pace and to take advantage of more opportunities.

Case Study #2

Another client is number two within their industry. While its main competitor has cut R&D out of its budgets, our client is working hard to implement new products. Last year, more than 80 percent of sales were attributed to products not available three years prior. This success was made possible because of a radical transformation in its operational methods, which allowed the company to cut its scrap in half and improve machine throughput significantly. This transformation started with a realization that historical numbers were not acceptable; scrap rates and utilization needed to be addressed. Production methods that had been in place for years were being questioned and transformed. The marketplace’s quality standards had risen, but the company’s quality process had not. Simple re-training was no longer enough to gain market share. Radical change had to permeate the group in order to improve product production.

It takes leadership courage to invest the time and money to transform your organization in poor economic times. This often requires traveling outside of your comfort zone and taking the time to learn enough about your customers to make the necessary changes. However, the companies that are doing so will continue to see results as their organizations improve.

Transforming Your Business – WNKU BusinessWise Interview of Ray Attiyah, Founder and Chief Innovation Officer (4 of 4)

Monday, June 22nd, 2009

Transforming People. Originally aired on Friday, June 5th on 89.7 FM WNKU.  Broadcast as part of the BusinessWise feature during the Consider This program, heard weekdays from 4:00-5:30pm.

Transforming Your Business – WNKU BusinessWise Interview of Ray Attiyah, Founder and Chief Innovation Officer (3 of 4)

Monday, June 22nd, 2009

Driving Innovation and Process Improvements. Originally aired on Friday, June 5th on 89.7 FM WNKU.  Broadcast as part of the BusinessWise feature during the Consider This program, heard weekdays from 4:00-5:30pm.

Transforming Your Business – WNKU BusinessWise Interview of Ray Attiyah, Founder and Chief Innovation Officer (2 of 4)

Monday, June 15th, 2009

Continuous Improvement vs. Transformation. Originally aired on Thursday, June 4th on 89.7 FM WNKU.  Broadcast as part of the BusinessWise feature during the Consider This program, heard weekdays from 4:00-5:30pm.

Transforming Your Business – WNKU BusinessWise Interview of Ray Attiyah, Founder and Chief Innovation Officer (1 of 4)

Monday, June 15th, 2009

Transforming Your Business. Originally aired on Thursday, June 4th on 89.7 FM WNKU.  Broadcast as part of the BusinessWise feature during the Consider This program, heard weekdays from 4:00-5:30pm.