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It can be a hard choice to make, but successful companies often have to make strategic decisions to "fix it or exit." In other words, every element of a business must earn its keep, be fixed or let go.

General Electric recently made one of these decisions, announcing that it plans to sell, spin off or find a

   Hone Your Company's Profit Mentality

    Part of the success of your business depends on whether it has profit-driven management and employees who know the road to greater financial performance.
    To assess the profit mentality at your company, answer the following:

Yes or No?

Question

  1. Do you have a company-wide plan for profits? Does your organization periodically evaluate and update it?
  2. Are managers held accountable for tasks that contribute to profitability?
  3. Do you have an inventory of untapped ideas that will add to the bottom line?
  4. Is your company sales motivated or profit driven?
  5. Does your company have a policy about the types of customers it will serve?
  6. Does your business set sales targets?
  7. Does your business consider long-term objectives in its hiring process?
  8. Has your organization determined how demand may change based on the environment, competition or the economy?
   9. Does your business keep tabs on its competition?
  10. Does your organization assess customer product and service satisfaction?
  11. Does your organization methodically and periodically reevaluate its strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats?
  12. Does your business survey key members of management about their business goals and objectives?
  13. Does your firm have formal profit goals and objectives? Do executive management members discuss them regularly?
  14. Have your profit goals and objectives been communicated to appropriate staff?
  15. Is there a written profit plan in place to achieve your organization's profit objectives?
  16. Is there a profit culture in your organization?
  17. Is there a commitment by your management team for improved financial performance?
  18. Does every manager know what additional profits would be used for?
  19. Do your employees realize that profits are their responsibility?
  20. Are employees and managers rewarded for meeting profit objectives?

    If you and your management team answer "No" to any of these questions, the chances are your company's profit mentality is not fully developed. Take steps to change all answers to "Yes."

"Willingness to change is a strength, even if it means plunging part of the company into confusion for awhile."

-- Former GE Chairman and CEO Jack Welch,
who the company credits with having
"little time for bureaucracy and archaic business
 ways ...He ran GE like a small dynamic
business able to change as opportunities arose
or when a business became unprofitable."

partner for its iconic, century-old appliance business. But while that move seemed surprising to some, it fits the company's long-held profitability strategy: shed under-performing or unprofitable business units and add new ones with promise.

In recent months, GE sold divisions with revenues of some $50 billion and put its credit card business on the market. Meanwhile, the company's consumer-finance unit plans to stop providing loans for the purchase of recreational vehicles and most watercraft -- another business that GE considers low-margin.

GE isn't alone in looking to shed assets. Among large companies recently announcing plans to streamline are:
  • French Bank Crédit Agricole, which plans to sell $7.75 billion in assets to help trim losses linked to the subprime crisis.
  • German financial conglomerate Allianz, which is considering the sale or merger of its unprofitable Desdner Bank subsidiary.
  • Citigroup, the large U.S. financial group, which has announced a five-year plan to shed $400 billion in assets.

What these companies have in common is a growth and profitability mentality that prompts them to maintain their winning profit centers and dump the marginal earners and losers. This is a business operating mentality that owners of all-sized businesses can develop and profit from.

Many businesses tend to avoid taking the time to identify their key profit centers and eliminate marginal products or services. During good economic times when sales are booming, problems tend to go unnoticed. But when business turns sour, earnings start to lag, or the economy takes a turn for the worst, weeding out the under-performers can be the key to a company's success and even survival.

The solution doesn't necessarily mean selling off operations. Sometimes simple adjustments can do the trick.

Here's how the owner of a large chain of Italian restaurants developed and put the profit mentality to work.

The restaurant's menu was extensive, the food was delicious and the service excellent. But an analysis of the business showed that the menu prices weren't always profitable. Some dishes were priced at or below the cost of their ingredients, while others were so complicated that their profits were wiped out by the cost of the time-consuming labor it took to execute them.

The fixes were fairly simple:

  • Raise prices on unprofitable dishes.
  • Add mid-range selections that could be priced reasonably and still produce a good profit margin.

In the end, the menu offered a variety of choices and prices that ensured the business received a fair return no matter what the patrons ordered. But the turnaround required taking an objective look at the business, and making some changes after isolating the sources of profits and losses.

In order to ensure that your company's bottom line is enhanced by profitable sales, and not hurt by marginal or non-profitable sales, you must know your organization's focus. This is where the Pareto Principle can help.

Also known as the 80/20 Rule, the Pareto Principle succinctly states that for many events, 80 per cent of the effects come from 20 per cent of the causes. So, for example, 80 per cent of your company's profitable sales come from 20 per cent of your business's customers, products or services.

Once you understand the principle, you can start to determine the areas of your business that are:

  • Running perfectly well.
  • Need to be nurtured and fixed.
  • Need to exit if profitable adjustments can't be made.

As a first step toward identifying profit opportunities, set up a sales and customer profit matrix. Using the 80/20 Rule, sort your products, services and customers into a four quadrant matrix after asking:

  • Which 20 percent of your business's products and services contribute the most and the least margin?
  • Which 20 per cent of your customers are responsible for the most high-margin and low-margin sales?

1.
High Margin Sales
High Volume Customers

 3.
Low Margin Sales
High Volume Customers

 2.
High Margin Sales
Low Volume Customers

 4.
Low Margin Sales
Low Volume Customers

The goal is to then develop a strategy that:

  • Maximizes the activity in quadrant one.
  • Identifies how low volume customers in quadrant two can move up to high volume customers.
  • Determines how low-margin sales in quadrant three can produce higher margins.
  • Creates higher margin sales and higher volume customers from the information in quadrant four.

To a certain degree, this is the easy part. The hard part comes if you are unable to lay out a strategy to move sales and customers up to quadrants two or three from quadrant four. At that point, you must decide whether to continue selling low margin products and services to low volume customers -- who may have been with your company for years. But bear in mind that in the end, fewer sales could mean greater profitability.


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