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Four Decision Growth Tools – Strategy Yields Top Line Revenue Growth

Posted by Douglas A Wick on Thu, Feb 12, 2015

Nothing affects your business more than the quality and timing of the decisions you make.  In Execution or Bad Choices – Why Do Businesses Fail we examined the reason most businesses fail. 

Decisions equal success – and there are four decisions, in growing your business, that you must get right or risk leaving significant revenues, profits, and time on the table. These four decisions are: People, Strategy, Execution, and Cash.

Getting these Four Decisions provides a significant impact to your business.  Our decision today, Strategy is strong topline revenue growth.  Strategy   Building Championship Disciplines resized 600Each of the strategy tools and resources we will discuss in this blog will enhance your businesses ability to produce greater revenue.

Let’s examine some of the Strategy tools and resources Positioning Systems and our fellow Gazelles coaches provide our customers to help them produce greater revenue.

Strategy Statement: This is a specific tool that is for advanced customers.  It’s not specifically in the Gazelles Tool kit and Positioning Systems developed this based on the Harvard Business Review article Can You Say What Your Strategy Is? by David J. Collis and Michael G. Rukstad.  The article starts by asking the following two questions: Can you summarize your company’s strategy in 35 words or less? If so, would your colleagues put it the same way?

When we asks this question in our public and private workshops, soliciting feedback from the participants, it’s amazing to discover who different and divergent the responses are within a specific company.  If this question were researched I believe the results would be exactly what an Inc. Magazine survey which revealed 92% of CEOs believe their leadership teams agrees with and can communicate their strategy. In Reality:  The same survey discovered: ONLY 2% OF THE LEADERSHIP TEAMS COULD!

The article provides a wonderful example of Edward Jones Company’s strategy statement.  Can You Say What Your Strategy Is identifies three critical components of a good strategy statement—objective, scope, and advantage—and believes that executives should be forced to be crystal clear about them.

At Positioning Systems we’ve developed a presentation to walk our customers through each of these stages to develop a powerful 35 word Strategy Statement for their company. It’s proven invaluable to not only communicating the company’s strategy and gaining alignment throughout the company, but by succinctly and specifically crunching your strategy to 35 words it powerfully focuses a business on the clarity of how it differentiates itself in the market, where it’s going and how it plans to achieve it.

Core Ideoloogies – Core Purpose & Core Values

In his book ‘Good to Great,’ Jim Collins studied the attributes of top performing companies – enduring top performing companies that had both great cultures AND delivered consistently strong financial performance for shareholders.

In ‘Good to Great,’ he identified that great companies did 3 things consistently:

  1. They had the RIGHT people on the bus (in the company)
  2. The RIGHT people were doing the RIGHT things (focused on the most important priorities and not unimportant activities)
  3. The RIGHT people would do the RIGHT things RIGHT (they would execute with excellence)

In order to have the RIGHT people on the bus (the company) – it is vital that a company have clarity in their Core Purpose (why they exist) AND in their Core Values (a handful of cultural rules that they will not compromise on). Great companies have defined and regularly used their Core Ideologies in their day-to-day business culture, companies like Hewlett Packard, Walgreens and Nucor

Core Purpose

An organization’s Core Purpose is their reason for being according to Jim Collins’ work and also answers the question “What difference are we making in the world?” It goes deeper than profit and job creation.

Jim Collins, in his research and book “Good to Great,” discovered important information about Core Purpose from the “Great” Companies.

Here are 5 important attributes of Core Purpose, gleaned from the research, as we move toward helping you consider, craft and refine your Core Purpose:

  1. Higher purpose beyond profit
  2. Does not change, but inspires change
  3. Works around obstacles
  4. Inspires team and volunteerism
  5. The difference you make in the world

Core Purpose often has its origin with the Founder. If your Founder is still in the business, or you have access to them, simply ask the question: “Why did you start the business, tell me your story?” and then listen carefully. Often you will find the Core Purpose in the this story!

Other important questions to ask the leadership team include: Why do we exist? What would happen if we went away? and Why do I devote my creative energies here?

In his book “Conscious Capitalism,” John Mackey identifies four types of Core Purposes that are helpful as we consider what your company’s purpose is; let’s take a look at them.”

Core Values

Core Values are simply a handful of rules that your company has in place and lives by regularly – most companies have not stopped to clearly define their Core Values, but they do exist and they operate by them each day. The more clear and deliberate you are in your Core Values, the better for your culture and the easier the path from Good to Great.

Let’s illustrate with a story. Several years ago a Dell executive was a new father and he attended a Parent Effectiveness Training (PET) class to sharpen his parenting skills. He came in one morning and explained to his counterparts that parenting was very similar to being a great leader – it only required 3 simple actions:

  • Have a handful of rules (not too many)
  • Share and repeat them often (regularly)
  • Live by them yourself (model them)

The simplicity of this perspective is astounding and illustrates the importance and worth of Core Values. Remember, Core Values are NOT who you want to be as an organization, THEY ARE WHO YOU ARE TODAY – too many companies post Core Values that are who they want to be, but then live quite differently from their Core Values. This is hypocrisy and will turn off team members and create a chasm of credibility between leadership and team members.

Let’s make this real – brutally real. In order for a Core Value to stand, it must withstand some important criteria and tests. The best is time and adversity, but for now, the 3 simple tests of a Core Value are:

  1. Would you fire a team member who consistently or blatantly violated one of your Core Values?
  2. Would your company be willing to take a financial hit (lose money) in order to maintain the integrity of a Core Value?
  3. Is this Core Value alive among your team today (can you identify the name of a team member that is living out each of your Core Values in an energetic and obvious manner)?

Let’s use an example: Brandy Marsh is the president of Area Floors, a Pacific Northwest flooring company serving the residential home market. Brandy’s leadership team attended a 2-day MRH workshop, built a One-Page Plan, and over a 2-year period seriously applied the 10 Rockefeller Habits on the checklist. She had a long-term, top-performing sales representative that attended the roll out of the Core Values, but consistently acted contrary to one of Core Values: “Ownership Mentality,” which meant everyone had the responsibility and authority to think like an owner and make decisions based on an owner’s perspective – long-term gain not just short term AND spend money like it was their own. The sales rep was warned once for blatantly violating the Core Values after being trained on them and then was terminated for once again not taking the Core Values seriously through improper behavior and inappropriate use of resources. The sales rep was shocked that Area Floors would be so serious about their use of Core Values – it sent a message to everyone on the team of the importance of character and the use of Core Values – for the good of everyone.

After the sales rep was terminated, the team adjusted very nicely. Junior sales reps stepped up and eventually became stars and several team members commented to Brandy, “Thank you for promoting and being serious about a culture of integrity and values in an industry where it is rare! We love working at Area Floors!”

We have a lot of ground to cover with Strategy to help business achieve significant top line revenue growth.  Still ahead for Strategy: Core Competencies, SWOT, SWT, Words You Own, Seven Strata of Strategy, WHO: Your Core Customer, Brand Promise, Core Processes, Profit Per X, Actions to Live By, Catalytic Mechanism, X Factor, 3-5 Year Plan and the Innovation Window. We’re looking at 2-3 more blogs to cover these.  Monday I’ll be back with more on Strategy. 

Topics: Business Growth, Core Values, Core Purpose, Strategy Statement, growth tools

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Positioning Systems Brand Promise

1. Priorities: Determine your #1 Priority. Achieve measurable progress in 90 days.

2. Metrics: Develop measurable Key Performance Indicators. 

3. Meetings: Establish effective meeting rhythms. (Cadence of Accountability)  Compounding the value of your priority and metrics. 

(BRAND PROMISE GUARANTEE): We will refund all compensation if our disciplined coaching and proprietary tools fail to meet your expectations.

Certified Gazelles Coach

Doug Wick, President

Positioning Systems

 

The Strategic Discipline Blog focuses on midsize business owners with a ravenous appetite to improve his or her leadership skills and business results.

Our 3 disciplines include:

- Priorities
- Metrics
- Meeting Rhythms

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