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Partnership Power!
A smart new way to improve your business, and your life!
The Four Steps to Success
In the beginning, great products were enough to guarantee business
success. Product sophistication, six sigma manufacturing and zero
defects clearly beat the competition.
But benchmarking, product imitation and reverse engineering soon
appeared…and now everyone seems to make great products.
Next rapid
delivery arrived. Those who made, shipped, installed and served
their customers faster were rewarded with growing market share and
higher profits. Digital delivery, cycle time reduction and 24-7-365
access (by phone and Internet) accelerated the speed of commerce,
and competition. Now everyone's got a Website and courier services
cross the planet overnight.
To stay ahead of the competition, even excellent service mindset has
come back into vogue. Suddenly, being polite, competent and
concerned has become as important today as it was in your
grandmother's age. And while not every company has mastered this
field, competition at the high end is quite intense. Whether you
stay at the Sheraton Towers or the Shangri-La, dine at the Rainbow
Room or the Hard Rock Café, fly British Airways or Singapore
Airlines, the service you receive today will often be quite good.
With competition so intense, winning companies are growing in
another vital dimension. In addition to great products, rapid
delivery and excellent service mindset, market leaders are now
building stronger partnerships with their most valuable clients,
suppliers and employees.
The Four Styles of Interaction
What does it mean to "build strong partnerships"? Why do you need to
master this vital skill? What practical steps can you take to
achieve it, right now?
First, let's put "partnership" in perspective. There are four
different styles of interaction in business (and in life) and three
of them are not partnerships at all!

The One Shot Deal
The first style of interaction is characterized by a short term
focus between the parties. Beyond completing the exchange of the
moment, no lasting commitment is intended nor implied. Asking
someone for directions, buying goods at a close-out sale, or picking
up a newspaper from the corner newsstand are all clear examples of
the "One Shot Deal". Many familiar phrases are associated with this
kind of brief and immediate interaction: "Take it or leave it",
"What you see is what you get", and "Here today, gone tomorrow".
With no promise of future involvement between the parties, one more
phrase certainly applies: "Caveat emptor" in Latin. In English: "Let
the buyer beware".
Transaction Satisfaction
The second style of interaction takes more time than a "One Shot
Deal". More "moments of truth" are involved in these transactions,
and additional effort is required to meet or exceed customer
expectations.
Taking a flight from one city to another is a good example,
including telephone reservations, airport check-in, on-time
departure, quality food, entertainment and service on-board, timely
arrival and speedy delivery of checked-in baggage.
If all of these "perception points" are well managed, customers are
satisfied; a state of affairs called "Transaction Satisfaction" then
exists.
Although no future involvement is promised or required in these
transactions, customers do tend to return to those vendors and
suppliers who consistently meet their needs.
Reliable Relationship
The third style of interaction extends "Transaction Satisfaction"
into the future. Consistency and dependability are essential, as
customers and suppliers count on each other for more frequent
business. When done well, this can evolve into a "Reliable
Relationship" where both parties consistently benefit over time.
Examples of "Reliable Relationship" include daily newspaper delivery
to your doorstep, occasional purchase of office supplies on a store
credit account, ongoing maintenance contracts for essential
equipment, and annual check-ups with your family doctor.
Powerful Partnership
The fourth style of interaction also extends into the future, but
the value and importance of the interaction actually grows
significantly over time. In a "Powerful Partnership" both parties
learn that working well together brings new possibilities, unique
opportunities and otherwise unachievable growth.
A "powerful partnership" does not grow unattended. Substantial
effort and ongoing investments of time, creativity and resources are
required to keep a "Powerful Partnership" going and growing.
Examples of "Powerful Partnership" may include research joint
ventures, marketing, manufacturing and distribution alliances,
excellent boss and secretary combinations and indeed, just about
every healthy marriage.
Key Question to Consider:
Which of these "four styles of interaction" describe the current
situation with your customers? suppliers? colleagues, managers and
employees? Amongst the four, where are you right now? Where do you
want to be?
The Four Stages of Improvement
Leaving the
"One Shot Deal" aside, let's focus on how to make your transactions
more satisfying, your relationships more reliable, and your
partnerships increasingly powerful.
In each of these styles of interaction, four stages can be
identified for self-assessment, competitive evaluation and focused
action towards improvement.
Stage One: Explore
The first stage is the domain of exploration, discovery, and
open-minded speculation. Both parties must engage with a commitment
to mutual disclosure and the invention of new possibilities.
In business and in personal life, robust exploration uncovers needs,
wants, concerns, good and bad past experiences, present constraints,
future interests and a wide range of competitive and collaborative
considerations.
Traditionally this is the domain of marketing, research, and
strategic visionaries. But the "explore" quadrant actually plays an
essential role in launching most successful interactions. This is
the time and place to build rapport, develop an open dialogue and
listen sincerely for spoken and unspoken concerns.
Even contingency planning begins here with a willingness to discuss
the upside and the downside of future plans, looking into what can
go right together, and what might unavoidably go wrong.
How well do you explore? Do you regularly meet with your prospects
and customers "just to share ideas"? Or do you only contact them
after they call you, or after something has broken down? Do you
survey your market, conduct interviews, customer focus groups and
on-site visits? Do you have a methodology for doing this
consistently, or is it an ad-hoc process "as and when required"?
And how easy is it for your customers to explore more about you? Is
your history and philosophy conveniently presented in print or on
the World Wide Web? Can prospects learn quickly and thoroughly about
your products, competencies, capacity and directions for future
growth? Do you share stories of how you helped other clients,
including testimonials and references upon request?
If you do not explore well, you develop a reputation as a mere
"order taker" - responding when required, but only fulfilling direct
and straightforward requests.
When you do explore well, you build a very different identity as a
person or organization who listens, who is interested in the future,
and who cares about your customers' true possibilities and concerns.
This identity opens vast horizons for collaboration, commitment and
extended business agreements.
Stage Two: Agree
Robust exploration leads to new opportunities for creating a future
together. Initial requests, proposals and offers are often the first
step towards mutually satisfactory agreements.
In business, excellent agreements are clearly documented, with a
detailed listing of specifications and expectations, including
quantities, schedules, prices, service levels and warranties (among
others).
In a simple Transaction, negotiations towards agreement may be
conducted in an atmosphere that is competitive and highly charged.
But if you are working towards a longer term Relationship or
Partnership, negotiations should be infused with a shared commitment
to win-win agreements and mutual, long-term satisfaction.
Contingency planning is essential at this stage. By carefully
thinking through "what might go wrong", strong and detailed "back-up
plans" can be agreed to long before they are needed.
Finally, in world-class organizations, the very process of coming to
agreement is itself world-class, with easy-to-understand
documentation, user-friendly procedures, around-the-clock access and
flexible terms and conditions.
How smoothly and thoroughly do you forge your agreements? Do
customers praise how easy it is to do business with you, or do they
complain about your bureaucratic systems? Do they thank you for your
flexibility and understanding, or are they left cold by your rigid
"one-size-fits-all" products, pricing and conditions.
Clear agreements enable effective delivery. Lack of clarity breeds
suspicion, uncertainty and misunderstanding. Vague promises may get
you started, but if things don't turn out as expected,
misunderstanding can quickly lead to disagreement and escalate to
legal disputes.
In a world that prizes ease-of-use, saving time and maximum
convenience, improving the way you make agreements can give your
organization a powerful step-up on the competition.
Stage Three: Deliver
With agreements complete, your deliver stage begins. Here you take
necessary action to fulfill your promises and thoroughly execute
your agreements. You serve, develop, customize, manufacture, test,
ship, install, train, modify, upgrade and provide promised training
and support.
Here you need people who understand what to do, and have the
necessary resources to get the job done. This means your delivery
team must have a crystal clear understanding of the promises made in
your agreement. It also means they have the tools, time and training
to successfully and completely deliver.
Throughout delivery, it is essential to track progress and keep
appropriate parties well-informed. If everything goes according to
plan, then frequent updates reinforce confidence amongst customers
and colleagues. And if the unexpected occurs, the sooner you
communicate this to others, the sooner your contingency plans can be
launched and put into place.
This willingness and ability to quickly "declare breakdowns" is an
important area where world-class companies differentiate themselves
from the rest. While some organizations try to "hide bad news" and
discreetly "put out the fires", others pride themselves on rapidly
alerting all parties so that new actions can be quickly and
effectively taken - even capitalizing on unexpected or unintended
opportunities.
Stage Four: Assure
In many industries, the ability to deliver has been honed to a fine
art with six sigma quality controls and continuous cycle time
reduction. But effective delivery does not complete the cycle - not
if you are interested in continuing or expanding your involvement
over time.
The final stage is called assure and is one of the most fertile
areas for generating new possibilities in business. In the assure
quadrant, you accomplish three vital tasks:
1. Check to see if the promises made on both sides have been
fulfilled. If they have, then acknowledge, recognize and reward. If
they have not, immediately return to deliver and complete the job.
2. Confirm that the needs of your customer have been truly satisfied
by the actions you have taken. You may discover that you have
faithfully completed all the terms of agreement, but the original
concerns of your customer remain unfulfilled. This is not
necessarily the fault of either party, and may instead be the result
of further learning and clarification that has occurred.
When this happens, promptly initiate a new round of exploration.
Work together to uncover a more refined set of needs or
expectations. Create new agreements to satisfy these needs, and move
forward again to deliver and assure.
3. Finally, during the assure process, find ways to work even more
effectively together. How could the cycle you just completed be done
more quickly or with even better results? What changes should you
implement as you move forward once again to explore, agree, deliver
and assure?
A well planned and sincerely executed assurance can be
extraordinarily beneficial for obtaining new business. Detailed
follow-through often leads to new possibilities and agreements.
How well do you and your team members assure? Do you consistently
follow-up with a proven plan of surveys, interviews and on-site
customer visits? Or do you subscribe to the old school of "no news
is good news", and wait for disgruntled customers to contact you…if
they ever do.
Taking A Holistic Approach
In many organizations, the four stages of improvement are handled by
four different departments: explore is the realm of marketing,
agreements are completed by sales, deliver is domain of
manufacturing, operations and logistics, and assure is provided, if
required, by after-sales warranty and customer service.
Unfortunately, this approach often leaves customers with a
schizophrenic experience of your organization. Customers are told
one thing by one department, but hear a different story from
another. They cry out for "one face" to work with rather than an
ever-expanding list of business cards, names and telephone numbers.
Inside the organization, the fragmented, specialized approach can
lead to mistrust and even outright resistance between departments.
Fortunately, the solution to this problem can be built right into
the procedures and the culture of your organization.
First, connect the four distinct stages with frequent and detailed
communication between departments. Second, institutionalize shared
understanding with cross-training, cross-functional teams, and
longer-term attachments. The more your people understand what
colleagues are doing, the better your colleagues, and your
customers, will be served.
Building a Foundation of Trust
Each time you successfully complete a cycle of explore, agree,
deliver and assure, another layer of trust is built between the
parties. In fact, this is perhaps the only way that humans have
learned to build trust together. Want a large order from your
customer? Prove yourself with smaller jobs first. Want more
responsibility from your boss? First demonstrate your skills and
your commitment with a series of well-executed projects.
This makes good sense in business, but it can apply in your personal
and social life, as well. Indeed, building trust with others is the
foundation for all our successful relationships. It is the necessary
glue for strong partnerships we build now and into the future.
Courtesy of Ron Kaufman
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