What Business Are You Really In?
It seems like a pretty simple question, but I can guarantee you that if you ask your leadership team and your employees ‘What business are we in?’, you will get all sorts of different answers, including ‘I don’t know’. And most will think that’s okay because they believe it doesn’t make much difference. But it does.
Active Knowledge Question:
Are you in business to produce, deliver or fulfil?
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Six Questions
Meeting customer needs is the only business to be in.
Here is?a challenge, ask your leadership team members and other key people in your organisation to answer the following six questions as succinctly as possible:
Their?answers will reveal an enormous amount about your team and business.?Not only the alignment across your team but also how they will think about strategy, growth and competitiveness. And be careful not to blend all the responses together by thinking that even though you received lots of different responses, you can understand what each is saying, and none of them is really that different.
Consider what each individual response says about their possible views and thinking on strategy, growth and competitiveness??
Let’s look at each question and delve into what they can reveal:
Often the responses fall into two broad categories. Those who think of the business in terms of:?
The Business Of Meeting Needs
Businesses?exist to meet the needs of their customers, and if they do that well, then they make a profit.?
But businesses should not see themselves as existing to make a?profit. Profit is an outcome, not a catalyst, and to be competitive, you want everyone’s focus on what produces that competitiveness and the profit that will flow from it.
Meeting a customer’s needs better than anyone else is what?underpins competitiveness. So how you express that activity becomes vital. For example, if you say ‘we manufacture pens’, the focus is on what you do, not who do it for or why they would buy your product. But if you were to say, ‘we are in the business of enabling people to communicate their feelings and thoughts’, you have captured need and can more clearly understand why someone would buy your product.
Businesses?compete around the value?they are able to deliver against a customer’s need. And any language used in the business should remind and refocus everyone on that need, the value you deliver and how you have chosen to outcompete all others.?
The strategy that you develop, investment in and opportunities for growth and simply the ability to compete all become a function of how the question of ‘what does our business do’? is answered.
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Needs Define Your Future
Your entire business exists?to meet customer needs today, tomorrow and into the future. Your customers are today and tomorrow’s lifeblood and the compass for future direction.
And understanding?who your customers are?and what their needs are commences with the way you identify purpose.?
Purpose is the cornerstone and reference point for the existence of your business.?Real competitive strength lies in that purpose, and everything else builds upon it.?Purpose?reveals opportunities, ensures alignment and a compounding of effort. If correctly crafted, purpose is also the window through which endless opportunities for growth may be discovered.
Purpose is born in the creation of a business, the seeding of the original idea that launched that business. Yet it is often forgotten as the founder’s influence wanes or discounted as new leadership is appointed. And as everyone’s attention shifts to see profit as a purpose for existence.
Purpose is founded in meeting customer needs, and the question ‘what does our business do’?, should be answered through the lens of purpose.
Such clarity brings a competitive strength as everyone’s attention is to the customer need that the business is competing to fulfil, and how that need is and may evolve in the future, providing a roadmap to growth and opportunity.?
A Relentless Focus
In a business where a?relentless customer focus?has been developed and is being sustained, you will likely see:?
A relentless focus on the customer provides?the cornerstone for the enduring success?of a business. It ensures the business never loses sight of its customers’ needs and what the business must do to remain competitive. It also delivers a continual path for growth, with new opportunities always emerging.?
As well it ensures the business is not distracted and chases various possibilities for growth and profit but rather keeps it anchored and compounding on its strengths.?
A relentless customer focus is the making of great businesses.?
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The simple question of 'What business are we in?", provides a clear measure of focus, direction and alignment, which are the indicators of likely performance.
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An entirely new level of performance.
Want to become a part of the?Entrepreneurs+ Community?and learn how to make your business?competitively fit??Join now.
All the best in the success of your business,
Richard Shrapnel