Never Waiver
Never Waiver
Article source: “Early To Rise” newsletter
http://www.earlytorise.com/2007/10/29/the-secret-of-incremental-degradation.html#main
"Quality, quality, quality:
never waver from it, even when you don’t see how you can afford to keep it up.
When you compromise, you become a commodity and then you die."
Gary Hirshberg
Two Business Concepts Every
Entrepreneur Must Understand, Part 1: The Secret of Incremental Degradation
By Michael Masterson
If you are involved in a growing business, there are two complementary
concepts you should be aware of.
One explains why a business or product, after a long string of success,
suddenly fails. This concept is called incremental degradation. The
theory goes that you can eventually ruin your business by making many very small
downgrades in the quality of the product or service you offer. These downgrades
are usually implemented to cut costs. You might, for example, switch to a
cheaper grade of paper stock for your sales letters. Or reduce the number of
screws you use per stud from six to five.
A good example of what I’m taking about was a soda that originally had 32
flavoring ingredients. But then a cost-conscious executive noticed that they
could remove one of those ingredients - at considerable savings in production
costs - without affecting the taste. Removing a second ingredient some time
later also saved the company a lot of money… again without noticeably affecting
the taste.
They repeated this cost-cutting strategy a dozen times over two years with no
problems. But then, people suddenly stopped buying it. Why? Because the taste
had finally deteriorated to the point where the decrease in quality was
obvious.
The moral is that small reductions may go unnoticed by your customers and
have no measurable impact on sales. And since they result in savings, they will
produce short-term benefits to your bottom line. But in the long run, the
accumulation of these incremental degradations results in something noticeable.
Suddenly, sales slump and profits tumble.
Understanding this concept will dissuade you from trying to eke out more
profits by reducing the cost (and thus the quality) of your products - a common,
yet fundamentally destructive, business practice.
As the soda-company example above illustrates, the effect of small reductions
in the quality of your product may not be immediately apparent - but if it
continues, your customers will eventually stop buying it. And when that happens,
it will be too late for you to do anything about it because your relationship
with them will have been irreparably damaged.
Quality matters. You either believe it or you don’t.
I once worked for a business that sold knock-offs of name-brand perfume. It
was, as I recall, about a $10 million business at the time. I had the idea of
sending out all our products in beautiful boxes and establishing a Tiffany-like
standard of customer service. I thought that would distinguish us from our
competitors, who were continually cutting the quality of their packaging and
reducing customer service to save money.
I presented my idea to the company’s CEO, arguing that although it would
reduce profits in the short run it would increase them over time as the
marketplace became more aware of the increased quality we were providing. He
listened, but wasn’t persuaded. He argued that our customers didn’t know the
difference between good and bad packaging and didn’t care. "We are giving them a
good value for what they are paying us, aren’t we?" he asked.
I agreed.
"And we are making only a 12 percent profit, right?"
I agreed again.
"Okay then," he said. "Don’t be bringing me any more ideas about spending
more money. Tell me how we can spend less."
So we cut costs to keep up with our competitors, but the entire knock-off
perfume industry continued to degrade. And despite all the cost cutting, our
profits never increased because the market became even more competitive. After a
few years, it "died."
Well, it didn’t die entirely. One company, which was (and still is) run by a
friend of mine, implemented my strategy of gradually increasing the quality of
their packaging and service. And today, that company is in the $50 million to
$100 million range, thriving primarily because of the goodwill they have
established with millions of customers over the years.
Many businesspeople brag about cutting costs. And that’s not surprising,
since the image of the penny-pinching, multimillionaire industrialist is such a
fundamental part of business folklore. (Think John D. Rockefeller.)
For a business to grow, it must be profitable. And if you want your business
to be profitable, you have to spend less than you make. But that doesn’t mean
you should cheapen your product or customer service. Yes, it is less expensive
to deliver a bottle of faux perfume in a manila envelope than in a box with
ribbon tied around it, but what is the psychological impact on the customer of
the one versus the other?
When you sell something, you are starting a commercial relationship with your
customer. The customer will expect something from you based on the promises and
claims you made in your advertising. If you deliver less than he expects, he
will be disappointed in you - and that, my friend, is not a good way to begin
this relationship.
If you begin the relationship by meeting or even exceeding his expectations,
he will think well of you - and he will be more inclined to buy another product
from you. But when you deliver that second product, he will still scrutinize it
with some degree of skepticism. He’s been fooled before by other commercial
relationships. It will take more than one or two very good transactions before
he fully trusts you and puts you in his mental A category.
We all have those mental categories, don’t we - ranging from, at the lowest
end, the D category for people and companies that have cheated us to the A
category for people and companies we trust completely?
When you begin a commercial relationship with a customer, you should assume
that you are in the C category. So doesn’t it make sense to work hard to move on
up to B and A rather than stay at C or - worse - fall back to D?
Businesspeople who like cost cutting too much - who are willing to reduce the
quality of the customer’s experience to increase profits - are setting
themselves and their businesses up for disintegration. Truth, as the old bard
said, will out. And in today’s world of Internet communications, the truth about
your company’s product quality and customer service will be made public -
whether you like it or not.
I am not entirely opposed to cutting costs, though, so long as you do it this
way:
1. Cut costs when you can do so without degrading - in any way and to any
degree - the quality of the product. If, for example, you find a supplier who
can provide you with the same service or product component for less (and you
aren’t sacrificing a good business relationship with another supplier to get
it), go for it.
2. Pass those cost reductions to your customers. From Thomas Edison making
electricity more affordable to Henry Ford making automobiles cheaper to Bill
Gates and Steve Jobs making personal computing accessible to the masses, the
greatest business fortunes have been the result of reducing product costs and,
thus, increasing the value of the commercial relationship with the customer.
This is very different from cutting costs for the purpose of increasing
profits. You have to be very careful not to cut costs simply because
you can. I know some businesspeople with that mentality who actually get a
perverse pleasure out of putting the financial squeeze on vendors, suppliers,
and employees. I remember one colleague of mine gloating over the fact that his
printer was "losing money" on a job he had contracted him to do.
The concept of incremental degradation reminds us of the danger inherent in
that kind of thinking. As a businessperson interested in growing a profitable,
entrepreneurial business in the Internet age, you should make it your job to
increase - not decrease - the value you give to your customers.
Which brings us to the second key concept I want to talk about - one that I
have been advocating to my clients for about 15 years. This concept is closely
related to incremental degradation, but it is more positive and actually more
powerful. If you can teach it to your employees and make it an integral part of
your business culture, your business growth will be almost guaranteed. I’ll tell
you all about it in Friday’s ETR.
[Ed. Note: Michael Masterson is one of the core contributors behind ETR’s new
Internet business-building program, which gives you an all-inclusive, A-to-Z
blueprint for starting your own powerhouse Internet business - from learning how
to pick a product and set up a website to discovering copywriting secrets from
the masters, techniques to help you create an e-mail list, the best ways to
market your product, and more. Our hotlist has first access to the 250 spots
we’ve opened up for this breakthrough program, but keep reading ETR to take
immediate action when and if we have any spots left.]
Opinion of the message in this
article:
A prime example of why it isn’t
good enough to reduce cost if the essence is lost!!...says Susan Z., founder of
ARTS Z CRAFTS Z, Ltd. and the creator of the product line called PINIATURES.
Vision and a passion toward ultimate refinement means, it’s a constant
re-evaluation, a never ending desire to achieve betterment with unwillingness to
devalue. It’s a delicate balance, if any side should be tipped it should be in
favor of the many, to the benefit of many and that my friend usually equates to
quality.
Article source:
“Early To Rise” newsletter
http://www.earlytorise.com/2007/10/29/the-secret-of-incremental-degradation.html#main