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Management characteristics that enabled 2009 to be the best year
by Treff LaPlante
I'm pleased to report that several of our customers have told me
that 2009 was their best year ever. In fact, as a percentage of our
customer base, the number of customers reporting a strong 2009 is
probably very far ahead of the market in general. Here's the contrarian
statement, though: Despite the apparent causality, I don't attribute
that success to WorkXpress platform as a service (PaaS).
Rather,
I think there are some common characteristics that managers who
purchased WorkXpress tend to embody. I believe those characteristics
lead them to make hundreds of decisions each week which, taken
collectively, have led their businesses to record years in the worst of
times.
I believe an analysis of the typical WorkXpress customer
is illuminating in that it sheds light on characteristics we all should
strive to possess: the characteristics of a successful modern manager.
First, some background:
- Customer A is a light-manufacturer who builds each new project to specification. Much of its work involves complex bills of materials, lengthy sales cycles, multinational sourcing and much more. At the time it came on board with us, more than four years ago, it was complaining of general disorganization in various aspects of its sales and project-management processes. Since that time, it has completely automated most of its internal processes.
- Customer B produces textiles. Because this customer's products are well-defined, its automation focus was strictly on sales. A couple of years ago, it developed tools that integrated telephony, e-mail, custom quoting and productivity reporting to make the job of its sales person as fast and efficient as possible. It uses automated workflow to ensure that the sales discipline desired by management is adhered to by even the newest employees. The next step is to extend its customer-relationship management tool to encompass manufacturing, purchasing and delivery.
- Customer C manages personnel at hundreds of events each week throughout North America. The operational processes that lead to sourcing people throughout North America have been very labor intensive and riddled with human error and inefficiency. In the past year, this customer has implemented tools to automate much of these human processes, and is continuing to automate new aspects of business each month.
Now, back to those characteristics of the successful modern manager:
- They aren't afraid of technology. This doesn't mean they are in any way technology wizards - quite the opposite, in some cases. What it does mean is they are constantly scanning the technology landscape for new things that could help them.
- They are willing to be early adopters. This is different than No. 1 - it's more difficult. It's also where many of the real opportunities lie. If a manager is willing to adopt technologies still considered "on the fringe" by the mainstream, then they are taking a chance to gain a true competitive advantage that few others will have.
- They value automating everything - and increasing their payroll at the same time. These customers all have stated in some fashion that their goal to software automate every process, every piece of data and every nook or cranny of their business. And despite automating everything they possibly can, not a single one of them has reduced their payroll. In fact, in almost all cases, payroll has gone up.
- They embrace change. For these managers, change, whether internal or external, is an opportunity, not a setback. They seem to be constantly looking for opportunities to change or improve because these are the places where they will gain strides against their competition.
- They view change as a journey, not a destination.
A
comfort with technology, I believe, is a key characteristic that ties
together these highly successful modern managers. When they aren't
personally very good with technology, they have at least one staff
member who is. But they do strive to understand its benefits at a
conceptual level, and believe in its ability to further their business
to the point of investing resources into it. They don't view technology
implementation as an end-goal, but rather as a constantly evolving
journey. They set goals to make their company more technological then
their competitors, and sell that advantage to their customers.
And apparently, their customers are responding in spades. Who would have thought 2009 would be the best year ever?
This was originally posted on the Central Penn Business Journal Gadget Cube.
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