Recently I was talking with a few business partners about the latest business trends we see with clients. One hot topic is transformation! On any given day, another organization is appointing a new transformation leader, plotting a new strategy for organic growth, and talking about increasing profitability. On the surface, it makes sense. Successful businesses should consistently focus on revenue growth and margin improvement...right? But where is the best place to start?
While transformation is a business imperative, my colleagues and I are all frustrated with what we see happening. Transformation seems to be understood at the top, but not well communicated throughout the organization. Transformation initiatives become a mass of disjointed projects that churn a business and consume resources. In the end, only a few, focused projects will make a real impact. So what is everyone else working on to cause so much churn? It’s simple — too much effort is spent on analysis and finding the perfect answer while not enough time is spent on exploring creative and innovative approaches to drive more profit.
Transformation is intended to make radical organizational change, yet rarely addresses change management at the greatest inflection point of profit — how the collective business teams execute on customer relationships. Any transformation initiative that fails to address how businesses interact with their customers will not succeed.
One mainstay project for all transformation initiatives should be pricing improvement. And why not? Many organizations rely on improved pricing to deliver hundreds of millions of dollars a year in additional revenue and profit. What’s the first quick win in every pricing initiative? Simple, a “price up.” We try to put fancy words around it – cost of living increase, tariff impacts, we haven’t had a price change in a while, etc. – but in the end, these words miss the point. Price ups are all about you and making more money versus creating value for your customers and aligning your organization to deliver that value. The essential component you need is a singular focus on defining, defending and communicating value throughout the organization and to your customers. If you think “price up” projects are transformational, they are not. Instead, they are a terrible way to treat your customers and often do more damage than good.
In our experience, you need to start your transformation with an understanding of where you’re making money and where you’re not. A product/customer portfolio analysis is a great first step to assess your true profitability within different customer and product segments. Then, plan to do the following:
Join us for a short, interactive webinar on June 27th at noon ET where we will continue the discussion on Profit Decoded.