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Welcome to Clear Thoughts from Uncommon Clarity
| Strategic Thoughts - Quality is NOT a
Strategy |
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Quality is not a strategy. Books, strategic planning
websites, and executives may all provide numerous examples to
the contrary, but quality is simply not a strategy. Nor is
process improvement. Nor productivity gains. Nor employee
development. Nor improved marketing. Even growth is rarely a
strategy.
If these are typical outcomes of your strategy formulation
process, your operational focus is overpowering your strategic
thinking. You can't expect significant gains by mostly doing
the same old things a little better.
Protect your strategy and strengthen your ability to
execute by avoiding confusion between strategic decisions -
the stakes in the sand - and the on-going operational
decisions that will continuously evolve your ability to
deliver well and satisfy your customers.
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For help in developing a strong strategy with great
possibilities for growth and profitability, call us at 413-
527-3737.
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| Customer Thoughts - Is Top Service a Top
Priority? |
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Maybe you have no competition and never will. In that case,
skip this article.
But if there is any other place your customers can turn to
satisfy their wants and needs, you had best focus on their
experience. The more average your products, the more important
the customer experience.
Just what is that experience?
- How easy are you to find?
- What happens when they call you? Do they get an
answering machine or a knowledgeable individual?
If they get an answering machine, how many hoops
do you make them jump through? How many times would
you like to listen to your message and menu options?
- How quickly do they get good answers to questions about
your products?
- How quickly do they get responses to calls and email
messages?
- Are those responses complete or do they have to go
around and around?
- Do you help them determine whether your product will
really solve their problem?
- Do you help them anticipate problems or provide that
perfect little bit of expertise that will make things go
smoothly for them?
- Are they clear about what they can expect at each step
of the way when doing business with you?
- If your product doesn't measure up in some way, how are
things resolved, by whom, and how quickly?
- Do you make it easy for them to buy from you again,
whether through easy reorders or reminders or occasional
contact?
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| Book Thoughts - Made to Stick |
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Remember the story that changed Halloween? The one about
the razor blades in apples dished out to trick or treaters? In
Made to Stick - Why Some Ideas Survive and Others
Die, brothers Chip and Dan Heath reveal the
characteristics that etch such stories indelibly in our
memories. Never mind that this story never happened.
This fascinating, fun and easy to read book models its
message about memorable messages as it traces and demonstrates
those essential characteristics using the acronym
SUCCES:
- Simple - it takes 1 nanosecond to comprehend the
evil of the razor blades
- Unexpected - razor blades belong nowhere near
apples
- Concrete - evokes an instant, visceral reaction
as we imagine costumed children biting into those big, juicy
apples
- Credible - spread from neighbor to neighbor, we
all believe someone we know read it in the newspaper
- Emotional - pain, especially pain inflicted on
small, helpless, adorable children, takes the cake for
generating emotion
- Stories - this one's been told and retold, like
any good story
Whether you are interested in marketing, advertising,
compelling strategies, writing, teaching, public speaking,
communicating, changing the world, or simply telling stories,
the explanations, examples and exercises in this book will
help you clarify critical concepts and pulverize prosaic
prose.
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| Parting Thoughts - Upcoming Events |
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Leave the Competition in the Dust! and Better,
Faster, Cheaper are courses open to all that I will be
teaching at Westfield State College this fall. Contact me or
check the WSC catalogue or website for more information.
I will present Decisions! Simple Fork or Source of
Torque? to the Women's Partnership of the ACCGS on
September 19th. We will examine the three components of any
decision and see that we usually skip two of them. In
addition, we will learn specific techniques to improve
decisions, conquer indecision, and squash those decisions that
demand you make them over and over again.
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Ann Latham
If you enjoyed this edition of Clear Thoughts,
please forward it to others who may be interested.
We encourage sharing of Clear Thoughts in whole or
in part with attribution, copyright and website address,
www.uncommonclarity.com, included.
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Reflective Thoughts - Boundary Waters
Lesson |
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With no Internet, cell phones, or email, I expected some
kind of tectonic shift. It didn't happen. Eight days of
paddling and portaging in the wilderness on the
Minnesota-Canadian border with my family felt as natural as it
did when I was a pre-Internet teen. Just peaceful, beautiful
and normal.
Wait! There was a revelation! To keep our packs manageable,
we planned the food down to the ounce. We paced ourselves
carefully and finished the last morsel at the last meal. Every
one of us could have eaten double, but we still felt strong,
energetic and happy.
So why is it that we eat so much when relatively idle at
home?
Habit. Our routines pave the way to habits good and bad.
The wilderness provided a new routine without pavement.
Uncommon Clarity helps organizations improve the strategies
and systems that make people productive, processes reliable,
and customers happy.
Please contact us for help in achieving your business
objectives.
- Ann Latham
413-527-3737 |
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