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Apr 2011 - Vol 6, Issue 4
In This Issue
InfoComm Seminars
Commentary
Closing Thoughts
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Hello Again,

April is winding down and I have not had a spare moment to even think about this month's newsletter. However, I have been thinking a lot about the challenges I've been seeing in companies, and I have come to one conclusion: You can't grow your business if sales people are involved in the product delivery. But most of our companies are designed to keep sales involved in the process - to protect the customer from our operations. And you can't fix this without a fundamental redesign of, well everything

This month I share a brief commentary on why we should fundamentally re-think business models. I go old-school to show that the solutions we need aren't even possible with the tools we have. In the months to come I will resume my Best Practices Series with ideas on how to accomplish this. Be advised, in these times as soon as an idea is known, it's obsolete - so work fast!

In just six weeks it will be time for InfoComm 2011. I promise next month a bigger issue and ideas about how to maximize your time investment in the most important event in our industry.

Thank-you for this email with your co-workers,

Tom Stimson
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Staged Event Awards
Staged Event Awards 2011
The deadline for your submission to the Lighting & Sound America Staged Event Awards is April 28. The awards are announced during InfoComm in Orlando June 15-17. 

Don't miss the opportunity to let the world know how good you are! For more information, please contact Benjamin Le Hay, benjamin.lehay@plasa.org or call 212-352-2334, ext. 14.

 

Register for InfoComm
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Stimson Group at InfoCommInfoComm 2011 Logo

Survival Kit Courses Updated


InfoComm is upon us once again and that means it is time for me to update my seminars for the show. Registration is open!

Rental & Staging Business Survival Kit

IS053 - Thursday, 6/16/2011 08:00 AM - 10:00 AM
This course will present real challenges and applied solutions for rental and staging companies. Focus on doing business in the new economy and how that paradigm shift affects sales, operations and finance. Topics include the new sales value proposition, using credit lines as a strategic advantage, and developing an enterprise understanding of pricing and margins. Leave this seminar with the know-how to survive - and thrive - in the changing rental and staging market. Learn more here.

 

Systems Integration Business Survival Kit

IS065 - Thursday, 6/16/2011 10:30 AM - 12:00 PM  This course will present real challenges and applied solutions for systems integration and contracting companies. Focus on doing business in the new economy and how that paradigm shift affects sales, operations and finance. Topics include the new sales value proposition, using credit lines as a strategic advantage, and developing an enterprise understanding of pricing and margins. Leave this seminar with the know-how to survive - and thrive -in the systems integration market. Learn more here.

Want a preview? Just email me!


Commentary

Tinkering With A Classic

Business as a precision instrument


I get nostalgic for the automobiles of my youth. They were simple enough for me to work on, and forgiving when I didn't know what I was doing. The cars I owned needed tinkering all the time and I enjoyed doing it. I proudly drove a 1968 Triumph for two years that required opening the hood 50% of the time just to get it started. I don't think I have opened the hood on my six year old Hyundai more than ten times. There's nothing in there I understand. The majority of company founders I encounter today are from this era as well. The really smart ones have hired folks trained in running modern businesses. However, most are trying to use hand tools to fix computerized engines. At the same time, these companies must create fresh models chocked full of innovation just to keep the customers interested. It's not working.

Some of you will remember that Hyundai sent over a batch of really cheap cars in the 1980's. The Korean manufacturing giant (they build just about anything you can imagine) decided that Japan had too much of the automobile market and set about to use inexpensive Korean labor and factories to compete. They got the price right, but the cars were junk. What they overlooked was that the initial success of Japanese cars was their price. Japan's market share came from the increasing reliability and quality of their vehicles. (OK, it didn't hurt that the American auto manufacturers were building inferior products.) What Japan got right, and Hyundai eventually learned was that every step of every process mattered. Hyundai's CEO challenged the auto division to exceed the Japanese model - and succeeded. 

Hyundai didn't retool their factories; they tore them down and re-invented how cars are made.

Today's small businesses need retooling too. While I do enjoy tinkering with a 1960's style business - the old models won't win any races. If managed efficiently, they break even and remain flat on revenue while winning uninteresting projects. The good employees will eventually move on, and the owners won't have anything of value to sell when they want to retire. Some businesses follow the first Hyundai automobile strategy and try to compete with the innovators - without actually innovating. They grow without understanding what makes businesses successful and profits disappear. Only a small handful re-engineer from the ground up and create truly innovative and efficient companies: companies that can grow and remain profitable. 

At the risk of over-using my metaphor, imagine updating a 1968 Triumph to compete with a modern production sports car. No amount of tinkering or re-engineering will change the fact that the chassis wasn't designed for the speeds and agility of today's engines and suspension systems. Our small business operations are like the mechanical systems of a classic car.  The styling is our sales and marketing effort. There will always be buyers for classic cars, but  - when the job is mission-critical - customers will always go for the latest precision-built, cutting-edge design.

Closing Thoughts

Here's a few scribbles from the margins:
  • When I ask for that quick quote via the link on your website, am I going to be pleasantly surprised or will I think, "I better shop around, this is going to be harder than I hoped"? 
  • From Seth Godin: "The nature of the last era was that repetition and management of results increased profits. The nature of this one is the opposite: if someone can tell you precisely what to do, it's too late. Art and novelty and innovation cannot be reliably and successfully industrialized."
  • 80% of your losses come from 20% of your business. Better figure out which 20% that is. 

 

About Thomas R. Stimson, MBA, CTS
Stimson Portrait
 


Tom Stimson has thrived for over twenty-five years in the information communications technology industry. As a Consultant, Tom helps companies define their goals and then design a plan that will take them there. For more information visit the website.