|
BIZCHINA> Management
![]() |
|
Related
The power of momentum
(chinadaily.com.cn)
Updated: 2008-09-28 13:25 The power of momentum in action Wal-Mart and Toyota are two apparently dissimilar firms. They operate in two different industries and come from different countries and cultures. But they are two of the world's 15 richest companies, and each is number one in its own industry. More importantly, both got there by creating the conditions needed for the momentum effect to emerge. Although one has lost its momentum, the other is still in full swing. Wal-Mart: Sam Walton launched his company with a focus on customers. What is remarkable is the way that this customer focus created exceptional growth and continued to power Wal-Mart for many years after it had become a major industry force. Whatever its current challenges -- and there are many -- for the better part of a generation Wal-Mart was a momentum-powered firm. Sam Walton knew about retail, but his main asset was the fact that he knew about customers. His strength was this: He liked to listen to them and observe them, and he understood their needs. When he started out, he related deeply to a very specific kind of customer -- people like him, people from the United States' rural South. Walton's customer orientation made him aware of the potential of this region's smaller towns. In 1962, when Wal-Mart was launched, the standard wisdom held that large retail operations could not survive in towns with fewer than 100,000 residents. But Walton decided that this was where opportunity lay, and he deliberately opened stores only in small towns where there was no large-scale competition. Walton understood that these customers would value his offering, that they would appreciate being able to shop locally, rather than making long journeys to larger towns. He also realized that these shoppers were worth more than they seemed. Although their wallets weren't as full as those of people in large cities, Wal-Mart was able to command a higher share of their spending because there was no competition. The combination of cheaper premises, lower labor costs [and] no competition ...meant that Walton's customers were extremely profitable to service. This winning combination gave Wal-Mart the traction it needed to start building momentum. As the firm mushroomed, it continued to improve all aspects of its operation, from customer service to supply chain and supplier relationships. Eventually, Wal-Mart was able to glean economies of scale in purchasing to achieve its mantra of "Every Day Low Price" (EDLP) and gain further momentum. EDLP runs counter to traditional retail promotions that lure customers into stores, hoping that they'll also end up buying more expensive products. The famous expression to describe retail strategy in the days before Wal-Mart was "an island of losses in an ocean of profits." It was really an island of bait in an ocean of arrogance and customer abuse. It was akin to duck hunting -- attracting customers the same way hunters attracted wild ducks with decoys. With EDLP, Wal-Mart turned the relationship with customers upside down. It moved from duck hunting to a vibrant partnership. Wal-Mart's competitors, to their discomfort, failed to understand that, although EDLP was jargon on the surface, it expressed a strong, hidden emotional value deeply appreciated by customers: trust. This customer trust powered the company's growth for decades. Unfortunately, momentum doesn't look after itself. There is a perception that Wal-Mart slowly began to pay less attention to many of the key drivers of its success -- respect for employees, local communities, and suppliers -- and began to lose its momentum as a result. Momentum is dynamic: Unless it is constantly nurtured, it will ebb away. However, the reward for that unstinting attention can be immense -- it can make you number one in the world. Toyota: When asked in May 2007 about the prospect of Toyota becoming the world's number-one car manufacturer, company president Katsuaki Watanabe refused to take even a minute to gloat about beating his competitors. "Rather than think about other companies," he said, "I feel that we must do our utmost to satisfy customers around the world. There is plenty left for us to do." This simple statement, reflecting an unswerving customer focus, demonstrates why companies like Toyota are able to develop a detailed and subtly nuanced understanding of customers -- and why they are able to deliver better results. It also shows that there is much more to Toyota's success than Kaizen and lean production. That is just the base: its excellence and efficiency at extracting value from its business. It is Toyota's ability to create new, original, and compelling value in the first place that drives its growth. (For more biz stories, please visit Industries)
|
主站蜘蛛池模板: 报价| 兴和县| 临桂县| 汉沽区| 关岭| 南江县| 永吉县| 交口县| 北辰区| 雅安市| 安丘市| 岫岩| 湘乡市| 丰宁| 武义县| 米林县| 茂名市| 沧源| 平凉市| 仁怀市| 叶城县| 白朗县| 祁阳县| 太湖县| 翁牛特旗| 宜兰市| 神农架林区| 彩票| 武宁县| 塔河县| 丽江市| 怀安县| 靖江市| 宜章县| 德江县| 康马县| 习水县| 蓬安县| 靖边县| 潢川县| 容城县| 澄江县| 丹江口市| 宁晋县| 凤城市| 玉溪市| 宜宾市| 静海县| 奉贤区| 枞阳县| 新余市| 玛沁县| 永兴县| 客服| 重庆市| 汝州市| 探索| 神农架林区| 西平县| 黔西| 镇赉县| 清流县| 香港| 平潭县| 蒙自县| 朔州市| 吉安县| 兴文县| 涟源市| 科技| 抚松县| 岗巴县| 长顺县| 耒阳市| 余江县| 香格里拉县| 沈丘县| 屏东县| 万安县| 东安县| 璧山县| 衡南县|