ANTIDOTE FOR A
DOWNTURN
Cut the
Complexity of Business
©John L. Mariotti 2007
The
business news these days can be downright demoralizing. Housing is in the
tank. The sub-prime mortgage debt crisis
has made credit much tighter and more expensive. Oil costs are driving energy prices up. Fear of recession has shaken consumer
confidence. What if you could capitalize on the current slowdown without
tearing your company apart, and come out stronger than ever? You can.
When this particular kind of toxic event occurs, here is a sure-fire
“antidote.”
There
is a way to reduce costs, improve business, and come out stronger. Drive out wasteful complexity. The
least recognized source of waste is the hidden cost added by complexity. It’s hidden because no accounting systems
identify its causes until too late.
Complexity creeps into a company, created with the best of
intentions—especially in good times—and infects every part of the business,
consuming time, money and resources.
Just as an antidote for a poison counteracts the ill effects, removing
complexity draws out costs, reduces wasteful workload, and refocuses the entire
organization on the important work.
The Search For Growth Leads
To Proliferation
In
the search for high growth in low growth markets, you add new products. Unfortunately, the success rate is never very
high. You enter “new” markets, which are
new to you, but entrenched incumbents will defend their positions. You open new facilities, to service new
customers, and you enter foreign markets.
The weak dollar makes your products more cost competitive—for now—but
foreign sales are complex too. You
search out new, lower cost suppliers.
Asian sources promise lower costs, cheaper tooling and may offer
a competitive edge—or may not.
Here’s the rub. Your accounting
systems are blind to most of the costs added, because they don’t appear in
“standard costs” of products, but reside in ”catchall” accounts. That’s where the costs of proliferation and
complexity are hiding.
An Example: One White Coffee
Mug
Your
product is a white ceramic 11-ounce coffee mug.
Landed cost: $1 each, individually packed. Sell them for $2 each and
your (one) retailer sells them for $4.
Everybody is happy, with 50% gross profit margins. Now you want to grow. Expand the mug
selection to 6 colors; add 4-packs and 8-packs to push higher ticket sales.
Create a merchandiser with a color assortment too. Sell to new customers. Exciting stuff, right? Purchasing, through good negotiations,
proudly shows the mug cost as unchanged, despite the different colors and
packaging.
Do
you think the “cost” of your coffee mug is really unchanged? Now there are colors and packaging variations
to forecast, inventory to manage, and whoops, two of the new colors are not
selling. The retailer wants to return
them. You’ll have to close them out,
along with those in inventory. The
8-pack sales are slow. Repack them into
singles and scrap the old packaging. The
merchandiser has to be reworked to new colors, too. And the customer wants replacement colors
“now” —via airfreight. The unexpected,
unmeasured costs are piling up, but the product gross margin is still 50%. OK? NO!
On Cutting Complexity: The gross profit margin on cost reductions is
100%.
1. Sort Customers Top Down
& Cut Bottom Up
Rank
customers in descending annual sales and gross profit dollars. Show cumulative percentage columns, and
analyze the top and the bottom of these 2 reports. The customers in the top 25% of both lists
are your winners—serve them well and grow them.
The ones in the bottom 25% are your losers. Most of them cause complexity that’s costing
a fortune—expenses hidden in those “catch-all” accounts: variances, obsolescence, deductions, rework,
closeouts, export sales, small order processing, high freight costs, etc.
At
the bottom are mostly customers who cost way more to keep than you make in
profit on them. Sort the few that have great potential, and go after more
business there. The majority of the
bottom-dwellers need to be moved out, or at least managed differently. To
discourage small, unprofitable orders, set higher order minimums and change
shipping policies. Switch small
customers to distributors, who are set up to handle them. Or just tell them you’re sorry, that you
cannot afford to serve them any longer.
A few will surprise you and ask what they need to do (buy more, pay
more, etc.) to stick with you.
2. Do Products This Way Too
Use
the same ranking for products—create 2 reports—annual sales and gross profit
dollars. The top 25% are the winners.
Sell more of those. The bottom 25% are
losers, costing you money to keep. Get rid of them—quickly. A common excuse for
bottom-dwellers is, “we need it to fill out the line.” That means the product can’t
make money on its own. Get rid of them
too (unless a “top” customer demands it.)
Other bottom dwellers are formerly “great ideas” that just didn’t make
it, or “golden oldies” that are past their prime. Retire them. Save time, money
and dramatically reduce your cost of managing complexity. Convert leftovers, losers and slow movers
into cash, even at closeout prices. They
just cost you money sitting in your warehouse (space, interest, insurance,
etc.), and during a downturn, “cash is king.”
3. “Mine” The Middle—Move Them Up—Or Down—And Out
Dig
for gold; there are some great prospects hidden in the middle 50%. Find the ones that share characteristics with
the top 25%, and sell them more. Phase
out the bottom-dwelling 25% except for the few high-potential ones just getting
started. Clean out the losers, so your
organization can devote its time and money to the current and potential
winners.
4. Reduce The Number Of
Suppliers, Too
Sort
suppliers’ annual purchases top down. As
you shopped for lower prices, in more places, you added (new) suppliers. This led to more, smaller orders, less buying
clout, more receiving activity, more invoices to pay, etc. Thus, more complexity—all of which cost time
and money. Second and third sources also cause deterioration in quality due to
variability on the “same” items. Cut
complexity by concentrating on your best, most important and highest potential
suppliers.
5. Have Fewer Faces In Fewer
Places
Next,
analyze facilities, legal entities, locations and staffing, and cut
non-essential ones. Complexity in these
areas leads to more of everything: tax returns, audits, errors, duplication,
phones/computers, and especially people.
Go on a “diet.” Cut unprofitable
and non-strategic locations.
When
you have removed the bottom-dwellers in products, customers, suppliers and
locations/legal entities, remove the extra staff you added to manage them. The cost savings comes from taking out
complexity in all areas, including overhead staff. This allows the remaining people to focus on
the most important customers and products—and new ones.
6. Once Complexity Is Gone,
Keep It Out
Set
new rules too. “To add one, drop one.”
is a good product rule. Set minimum
annual dollar levels for sales by SKU (stock keeping unit), by customer, and
for purchases by supplier. Monitor results—at least quarterly—so that
complexity doesn’t return unnoticed.
Keep it out!
When
you’ve “taken the antidote” and removed wasteful complexity, you’ll find that
the hidden costs drop away and the resulting clarity of focus energizes your entire
organization. Instead of dying from
overwork and complexity, it will be spending its time creating working on
important customers and creating valuable new products for them, instead of
wasting time and money on “losers.” You
will come storming out of the downturn, stronger than ever.
About
the Author:
John
L. Mariotti is President and CEO of The Enterprise Group—a coalition of
Time-shared Executive Advisors. He is formerly President of Huffy Bicycles and of Rubbermaid’s Office Products Group. John serves as a Director on several
corporate boards including World Kitchen, HomeCare Industries, Henkel Consumer
Adhesives and Petmate, Inc. He is the author of eight business books and a
novel, and his newest book, The
Complexity Crisis will be released early in 2008 by Adams
Media’s Platinum Press. For more information on John’s books and consulting,
please contact: www.thecomplexitycrisis.com.
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