Wednesday, January 8, 2014

AudioTech book summary, "Be the Best at What Matters Most: The Only Strategy You Will Ever Need"


by Joe Callowaym

In this summary...

·                     Master the one essential strategy for business leaders, entrepreneurs, and those who aspire to lead.
·                     Understand how to create results, growth, and profit by being so good at the basics that you outperform your competition.
·                     Discover how to constantly improve on just a few things that create the greatest value for your customer.
·                     Leverage every single resource at your disposal by using the force multipliers of simplicity and focus.
·                     Grasp how the Top 10 Most Trusted Brands win by meeting their customers' high expectations and being the best at what matters most.
Be the Best at What Matters Most
What if you, your team, or your entire organization had absolute clarity about what was most important, and that's where all of your energy was focused?  Imagine the force multiplier of that kind of shared sense of direction, purpose, and priorities. 
Be the Best at What Matters Most, by Joe Calloway, reveals the one essential strategy for business leaders, entrepreneurs, and those who aspire to lead. 
Calloway is the author of five books and a leading performance expert who has helped hundreds of companies and entrepreneurs create and sustain success through his unique interactive keynote presentations that challenge people to take action on what matters most in their businesses.
In this summary, you'll learn how to simplify the way you think about your business.  It will show you how to create results, growth, and profit by being so good at the basics that you outperform your competition.  More important, it will help you to discover how to constantly improve on just a few things that create the greatest value for your customer.

The Only Strategy You Will Ever Need
Success isn't about doing everything; it's about doing the most important things.
Too many business leaders and entrepreneurs believe that the way to grow sales and profits is to use social media to create a presence on Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube—and they think they need to do things that amaze and delight their customers. 
Consider an entrepreneur named Bill, who owns a hamburger restaurant.  Looking for ways to build his business, Bill creates a blog, posts videos of babies with hamburgers, and tweets his thoughts about his restaurant.
To create a "wow" factor for his business, he gives every customer a tiny chocolate hamburger.  He also hires a magician to perform magic tricks because none of his competitors offer such entertainment, and he's heard that he needs to differentiate his business.
Will any of these ideas improve Bill's business?  It's possible, but the results will be far less impressive than they would be if he took a different approach that flies in the face of much of what you read and hear today about what it takes to succeed in business.
Instead of distracting himself, his employees, and his customers with tweets, videos, and magic tricks, Bill should find out what matters most to his customers, focus there, and be the best at that.  Maybe it's really all about just making better hamburgers.
The same is true of your business.  If you do the handful of things that matter most, whatever those things may be, and you do them better than your competition, then you will win.  Be the best at what matters most, and you will succeed.
You may be thinking, "But surely there must be more to it than that."  No, that's it.  The very simplicity of the idea is what makes it so powerful.
Most of us make the plan too complex.  We do it because it's much easier to make things complex.  It takes a lot of hard work to, as Steve Jobs once said, "get your thinking clean enough to make things simple." 
But it's worth all the hard work, because if you re able to make things simple, you can move mountains.
Focusing on what matters most helps you maximize your effectiveness.  It helps you avoid the painful truth of the old saying, "You did a great job.  But you did the wrong job."
Sometimes people say, "I'm doing everything I can think of to improve my business, but it's not working."  That's the problem.  The winners in business aren't the ones who do the most things.  The winners are the ones who do the most important things.
Whether they are large or small, in manufacturing, hospitality, or health care, providing cutting-edge technology or the most basic of products or services, all businesses that create and sustain success do so by incorporating what matters most to the customer into their core strategy. 
What keeps many people awake at night is that they know that their business should be doing a lot better than it is, or that their own individual performance should be creating greater results than it is.  Leaders may know that they have great people and a great product or service, but they're not producing the results that they should be producing with the resources they have.
Assuming you have the right people on board and you're good at the basics of your business, you probably have the same problem that many highly competitive individuals and organizations have:  You're spread too thin.  You're trying to do too much.  You need to focus. 
It's frustrating, stressful, and exhausting to try to do the 1,000 things you think you have to do to succeed.  It's also counterproductive.  There are probably no more than three or four things you need to focus on as long as you do them exceptionally well.
If you do an extraordinary job on the three or four things that matter the most, not only will you succeed, you will likely succeed far beyond your expectations.
The reason people get sucked into the tornado of trying to do a thousand things each day is that they aren't focused on those core activities that can actually advance their strategies.  Because you're not focused, you aren't winning on the basics.  That's when people start looking for gimmicks, shortcuts, or "silver bullets" to try to improve their results.
The cold, hard truth is that there are no shortcuts.  There are no silver bullets.  There are no gimmicks that can replace the reality of the marketplace—that, ultimately, quality wins.
Let's get clear on what creates business success today.  Many people foolishly believe that it's not enough to be the best anymore; you have to have a "wow" factor to set yourself apart.
Here's the reality:  If the marketplace decides that you are the best, that's the biggest "wow" factor there is.  Only those who are far from being the best would ever say that it's not enough.
If you truly are the best, you don't need gimmicks.  But if you are not able to compete on the basics, then you quite naturally look for gimmicks as wow factors, instead of letting quality and consistency be your "wow" factors.
If you truly are the best at what you do, are competitively priced (which may mean that you are the highest priced, as long as the value justifies it), and you are easy to do business with, you win.  Every shred of evidence in the marketplace is telling us that now, more than ever, quality performance is the one sure factor that drives success.
Look at who leads markets over a period of years and is able to sustain that lead through changing markets and economic conditions; then study how they do it.  They don't do it with contrived wow factors. 
They do it by dominating with quality and value.  They do it with constant, relentless improvement and innovation.  They do it by winning at the basics.  That's how they wow, as in, "Wow, these guys are so good, and they're good every single time."
You goal should be to be so good at the basics that you are cutting edge.
Note that we're not talking about just being good.  We're talking about being so good at the basics that you are extraordinary.  We're talking about not just being competitive, but actually winning on the basics.  Here's the reality:  If you win on the basics, you win it all.
Before we move on, think about the Bill's Hamburgers story and consider these questions with your team:

·                     What's your equivalent of hamburgers?  What's your core value offering?
·                     What's the main thing that draws customers to you?
·                     What if you were 20 percent better at that main thing?
·                     What if you had a different main thing?
·                     What if Bill made hamburgers so amazingly good that people practically knocked down his door to buy them? 
·                     What's your version of that?
So Good at the Basics that You’re Cutting Edge
Cutting edge, as used here, means being at the very front edge of creating value through innovation.  It doesn't mean trendy or "all the rage," unless that rage is able to produce and sustain a profit. 
A cutting-edge company is one that people talk about and study because it is able to win customers and keep them.  Its success is based on substance, not flash. 
One of the most talked-about companies in the past few years has been Zappos.com.  Zappos started out selling shoes on the Internet, but it now sells a lot more than shoes.  Not only do people talk about Zappos, but business leaders go to Las Vegas (where the company is located) to study it for ideas they can take back home and use.  It's a profitable company with a following of devoted customers and fans. 
If you ask customers, "What do you think Zappos does particularly well?" you'll hear these four responses most often:

1.                  Selection:  Customers say that Zappos has a wonderful selection of shoes and any of the other products that they shop for.
2.                  Delivery:  The company's delivery is very, very fast.
3.                  Customer service:  The Zappos customer service call center employees are legendary.  They do whatever it takes to make the customer happy.
4.                  Return policy:  Zappos has a 365-day 100 percent satisfaction return policy.  You have up to one year to return any product for any reason whatsoever.  And Zappos pays for the shipping.
Here's the lesson.  Zappos is considered one of the most progressive, most forward-thinking, and innovative companies in the world.  It is a case study for excellence, especially in creating amazing customer experiences.  So how does Zappos do it?  What rocket science does its leaders tap into to be so extraordinary?  What's the outside-the-box thinking that makes them so effective?
Selection, delivery, customer service, and return policy.  That's it.  Zappos is a poster company for being the best at what matters most.  It brings innovative, outside-the-box thinking to inside-the-box issues.  It has mastered those basics so well that it has created incredibly loyal, raving fans by winning in the place where all business is won or lost:  inside the box.
Zappos is so good at the basics that it is cutting edge.  Now, consider your business:

·                     Are you cutting edge?
·                     If so, how will you stay at that cutting edge?
·                     If not, what do you need to work on right now to start to get there?
Deciding What Matters Most
How do you know what matters most?  It's important to know that there simply is no one template or formula to figure out what is most important in your business and your work.
Here are seven approaches to what matters most.  Think about which of these are a good fit with you and your business.

1.                  Maximize Profit:  For some, profit can be the focus that drives the machine.  For others, profit can simply be the by-product if they are successful at doing what matters most to them.
2.                  Make a Positive Difference in the World:  There are many people, in every kind of business imaginable, whose primary motivation is to make the world a better place.  To them, the profit is necessary and welcome, but it’s not the point.  Profit is secondary in terms of their own motivation to make a positive difference in the lives of their customers or the community.
3.                  Satisfy the Customer:  For many, this is it.  The idea is that if we take care of our customers, they will take care of us.  For some companies, making customer satisfaction what matters most is the most effective driver of strategy.
4.                  Quality:  The greatest way to create loyalty with customers is to do a great job every single time.  Quality creates that most powerful of all marketing forces:  word of mouth.  In the age of the Internet, word of mouth, especially through social media, has become the great marketing ally of any business that brings true value to the market.
5.                  Growth:  Many successful start-ups have chosen growth-focused strategies, and others believe that growth through acquisitions is of primary importance at a particular point in their company's existence.  Growth is good. 
6.                  Consistency of Performance:  For many businesses, the greatest performance and profit booster of all is to concentrate on consistency.  Consistency of performance is the great brand builder.  Inconsistency is the great brand killer.  Consider coming up with a list of four things that will ensure your success if you get them right every single time. 
7.                  Continuous Improvement:  If you are constantly improving, you will, by definition, always be innovating and you'll be anticipating and responding to customers' needs in an effective way. 
For some people, what matters most isn't a thinking thing; it’s a matter of the heart.  You may want to go with what brings you joy and bliss. Do what you love, and maybe the money will follow.  Just know that if your competition is better at it than you are, or if there aren't enough customers willing to pay you to do what brings you joy, then you don't have a business.
For some, the whole love thing is irrelevant to their business.  To them, business is business.  It's not a love or a passion thing; it's an income thing, and they're in it to make a living.  They'll do fun stuff after work and on the weekends.  That's fine, too.
Your motivation is whatever it is.  Your approach to business may be getting eyebrow deep in data or focusing on nothing but heart and soul.  You may be a joy person or a nose-to-the-grindstone person. 
The important thing is to think about it, talk about it, stake a claim on what's the most important thing, and get to work on it.  Or, as has been said by countless business consultants:  The main thing is to make sure the main thing is the main thing.  Until you figure out what matters most, it's going to be difficult to know how to organize your time, develop a strategy, and execute tactically.
Let's simplify some versions of what matters most for some companies.
For a local plumbing firm, what matters most are three things:

1.                  Be on time.
2.                  Clean everything up.
3.                  Do great work.
Those three things are important to their customers, and to the success of the business.  For an advertising agency, the most important things are:

1.                  Do great work.
2.                  Have fun.
3.                  Make money.
4.                  Don't work with people you can't stand.
For Southwest Airlines, the most important things are:

1.                  Great value.
2.                  Excellent service.
3.                  Love and fun.
Southwest Airlines has absolutely nailed the concept of being the best at what matters the most.  First and foremost, the people at Southwest want to provide great value.  They want to keep fares low.  Bags fly free.  And they want to give great service, including getting the basics right,  such as being on time and having your bags go to the same place you're going.
They also have fun because they hire fun people and it's part of their culture.  Having fun is in their DNA, and they don't know any other way to do it.  But don't let the fun aspect of Southwest Airlines take away from the fact that these people are laser-focused on creating value and executing with quality and consistency.  They know what matters most.
Your list of what matters most has to strike an emotional chord with you, not with anyone else.  You might have a pocket protector full of pens and markers, and what turns you on would be something like "We solve the toughest physics problems in the world."
For someone else, what matters most could be "We absolutely rock at making doughnuts."  Say it the way you think it.  The way you say it should matter to you.  You're not doing this for a grade.  You're doing it to make the right things happen.  This is about effectiveness, not etiquette.
So there you have it—some food for thought.  Now the hard work is to determine for yourself what matters most to you.  Don't get hung up on getting it exactly right or avoid starting because you can't pick from the 30 or 40 things that you think could all qualify for the list.  Pick three or four.  Better yet, pick one, such as "satisfy the customer" or "maximize profit."
Before we move on, think about what is most important in your business:

·                     Consider the preceding examples and how each company approaches what matters most.  What do you like and not like about each?  There is no right or wrong here.  But use the examples to start a discussion about what three or four things matter most to you and your team.
·                     As a starting point for discussion, look at the seven approaches to what matters most that we discussed earlier.  Think about and discuss each one and how it relates to you and your business. 
·                     Of course, it could be that none of the examples resonates with you, which is also fine.  If they don't, why don't they?  What would resonate more?
Relevance, Innovation, and Constant Improvement
Being the best is a moving target.  If you think being the best means getting really great at something and stopping, then you will have been the best yesterday, but today you'll be out of business.
There is no need to waste a lot of time discussing why we all have to constantly change, innovate, and improve.  Everyone agrees that they have to improve every single day if they are to survive, much less grow their businesses.
No idea gets more lip service than the idea of constant improvement.  But if you buy into this idea of being the best at what matters most, it's not an option.  You cannot be considered the best at anything and you can't say that you are doing your best unless you are relevant.  And to be relevant, you have to continually improve, not as occasional improvement projects, but as an integral part of how you do what you do every single day.
To actually win, you have to get better at the things that create the greatest value for the customer.  You should constantly innovate and improve on those three or four things that matter the most.  If you do that, your product or service will be continually evolving and you'll be leaving your competitors in your dust.
Now consider these questions:

·                     What are you doing in your business today that will be irrelevant two years from now?
·                     What are the three things that you have to do now to stay relevant to your customers? 
·                     What are the three things that you have to do now to become relevant to the customers that you wish you were doing business with?
Winning and Losing Inside the Box
For years, we've all talked about the need to think "outside the box"—to be open to new ideas, new ways of doing things, innovation, and creative thinking. 
The trap that many have fallen into, however, is being so enamored of the idea of thinking outside the box.  They've started spending so much time "outside the box" that they're losing the battle where it's being fought, which is squarely "inside the box."
What does this mean?  You want to constantly innovate and improve for one purpose:  to win "inside the box," which means those things that matter most to the marketplace.  These are the basic expectations of your customers.  These are the things that your customers value most.  If you can clearly win on those basics, you win it all.  It's how every market leader succeeds.
It's time to challenge the idea that the more out there the idea is, the better it is.  It's not about how outside the box your idea is; it's about how useful and effective your idea is.  Sometimes that can be something you come up with that's radically different and edgy.  Great.  Go for it.  The test, however, is how your idea affects the bottom line.
In many ways, this idea is radically contrarian.  The conventional wisdom in business today is that you must be unique, and that to compete and win you should focus your efforts on being different and doing things that absolutely none of your competitors is doing.
However, based on the facts of who is winning and who is losing in the marketplace, you win not by being the most unique but by being the best.  So beware of anyone who says that the key to winning in this market is to focus on being different through over-the-top acts of uniqueness.  It will throw you off course. 
The best way to be different is to be demonstrably better than your competition at the basics, at what matters the most to customers.  The evidence today is overwhelmingly on the side of quality performance as the only sustainable success strategy.
What this means is that you should take another look at the basics of your business, and be sure that you are hitting 10 on a scale of 1 to 10 inside the box before you start thinking about how you can surprise your customers.
Before we move on, here are some questions to consider:

·                     What are your customers' three or four most basic expectations?
·                     What do your customers value most from you?
·                     Are you better on the basics than your competition?
·                     What would you have to do to improve your performance on those basics by 10 percent?
·                     Thinking outside the box is essential, but what is your purpose for doing so? 
·                     On a scale of 1 to 10, how useful are you to your customers?
Simplicity and the Blue-Tip Flame
Simple is more powerful and more effective than complicated.  As mentioned earlier, Steve Jobs said his philosophy was that you have to work hard to get your thinking clean enough to make things simple but that it's worth the effort, because if you can make things simple, you can move mountains.
The more complicated you've made your business, the less effective you will be.  Complication freezes you into uncertainty and inaction.  Simplicity enables you to get everyone focused on a shared vision, goal, or priorities and move forward.  It's extremely hard for anyone, much less an entire organization, to focus on anything that's complicated.  There is incredible power in simplicity.
You don't have all the time in the world, nor do you have unlimited money or people.  To win with finite resources requires that you leverage every single resource at your disposal.  What you need is a force multiplier.
Force multiplier is a military term that means the effect produced by a capability that, when added to and employed by a combat force, significantly increases the combat potential of that force and thus enhances the probability of the mission being successfully accomplished.
Colin Powell said, "Perpetual optimism is a force multiplier."  Optimism comes from success, and success comes from simplicity and focus.
Simplicity and focus are your force multipliers.
The great challenge is, as Steve Jobs said, to "get your thinking clean enough to make things simple."  It's so much easier to come up with 20 priorities than it is to come up with 3 priorities.  The obvious problem with 20 priorities is that you can't focus on everything.  Having 20 priorities means having no priorities.
A perfect analogy is the difference between a flamethrower versus the blue-tip flame from an acetylene torch.  If you blast a steel wall with the relatively large flame of a flamethrower, you'll create a lot of heat but you won't get through the wall.  If, however, you use the blue-tip flame from an acetylene torch, you can cut through the steel like it is butter.
Some people immediately reject the blue-tip flame philosophy.  They will refuse to believe that the success of extraordinary companies and top performers is driven by a mindset and strategy of clarity and focus.
Remember, top performers aren't the people who do the most things.  Top performers are the people who do the most important things.
Think about these questions:

·                     Where have you made your business too complicated?
·                     What is something you can do immediately, right now, to simplify things?
·                     What do you need to stop doing? 
·                     Where do you need to apply a blue-tip flame?
The Trap
How can you make your business better?  Maybe the best answer to that question is to not look for something else to do, but to do a better job on what you're already doing. 
We get so caught up in the idea that more is better that we lose sight of the absolute truth that better is better.  Looking for more extras to add and cherries to put on top can actually be counterproductive.
For example, a hospital had achieved phenomenal success in improving its patient satisfaction.  Over a period of three years, it had improved its patient satisfaction scores from the low 40 percent mark to the middle 90 percent range, placing it not only in the top quartile but in the top 10 percent of high scores in the country.
So the hospital's leaders set a goal to achieve the top patient satisfaction scores in the country.  More specifically, they wanted to score above 97 percent in all areas of patient satisfaction.
Once they focused on the goal of being the best, a strange thing happened.  Their scores started dropping.  All of a sudden their scores dropped to the low 70s, and nothing they seemed to do could help them reverse the trend.
What had happened?  The organization had lost sight of "what matters most."
The goal of achieving the highest patient satisfaction scores caused its focus to shift.  The focus shifted to reducing the negative rather than growing the positive.
Any negative comment or less-than-perfect patient experience required an immediate and "calibrated" response.  And before long, the development and implementation of these calibrated responses replaced all the basic activities of creating positive patient experiences.
As soon as the hospital returned its focus to concentrating on the basics of its tried-and-true approach to creating positive patient satisfaction experiences, its scores returned to the low to middle 90 percent range. 
It never has achieved the best overall patient satisfaction scores in the country, but its consistent continuing focus on growing the positive has resulted in consistently high patient satisfaction scores ever since.  In other words, it figured how to do the best in regard to what mattered most.
This story raises a vitally important point.  The core idea here isn't to be the best.  It's to be the best at what matters most.  Sometimes there's a critically important difference between those two ideas.  One thing's for sure:  You will never achieve the position of being the best unless you take care of what matters most.
Don't be distracted by being best at what's ultimately unimportant.  Consider these questions:

·                     What are three ways that you can immediately improve your performance on the basics?
·                     What do you do well that you take for granted?
·                     What do your customers care about that you don't give enough thought or attention to?
·                     How will you find out what those things are?
What Matters Most to Your Team
To be the best at what matters most, it's essential to get buy-in from your team.  It's therefore essential to know what matters most to the people on your team. 
It's one thing for you to want your team to have the same goals and objectives that you have.  It's quite another to assume that they're motivated to reach those goals the same way you are.
Just like you have to understand your customers and what matters most to them, you have to understand your employees and coworkers and what matters most to them, too.  In these days of multiple generations working together under one company roof, it's easy to fall into the trap of thinking that "they" are wrong in what they want, how they want it, and why they want it.
They're usually not wrong about those things any more than you are; they’re just different.  Most of us have business relationships with people who live completely different lifestyles than we do.  What's it worth to you, and to the strength and effectiveness of your relationships, if those other people feel that you "get them"?  It's worth quite a bit. 
Think about the answers to the following questions:

·                     How well do you know your employees, colleagues, and customers in terms of what matters in their lives?
·                     How can you learn more about them?
·                     Do you expect everyone around you to be motivated by the same things and in the same ways as you are? 
·                     If so, how's that working out for you?
How Brands Win
Let's look at some of the Top 10 Most Trusted Brands, as determined in a survey by Entrepreneur magazine and the Values Institute.  Did these brands win with exotic marketing and "wow" factor?  Or did they win by being the best at what matters most? 
Is their advantage that they are distinctly unique through being different?  Or are they different because they are consistently better at the basics?

·                     Amazon wins with low prices, free shipping on orders over a minimum total, an endless selection of almost any product you can think of, knowledge of customers through their past purchases (that enables Amazon to recommend products that they like), quick-shipping options, one-click purchasing, and ease of doing business.  All of these basics lock people in as loyal customers.
·                     Coca-Cola wins by being everywhere, thus easy to do business with, and through consistency of product.  Coca-Cola is always the same.  There are no surprises.  If you look at the performance of every company on this list, and every company that you love to do business with, one of their attributes is that you can depend on them.  They deliver quality every single time.  Consistency of performance is the great brand builder.
·                     FedEx wins with consistency of performance and personal connections with customers.  Not surprisingly, the company received its strongest ratings for being able to achieve what it promises and for the efficiency of its operations.  The key competitive issue is simple:  Do you deliver the package on time?  If FedEx starts to lose there, then it's game over.  FedEx delivery drivers are always courteous and friendly and are a pleasure to do business with.  Smiling faces wouldn't make up for late deliveries, though.  Get the basics right, or you don't get to play.
·                     Apple is innovative right smack in the middle of what customers value most, from products that are so easy to use that they don't need instruction manuals to retail stores that are easy to do business with.  Apple innovates inside the box on what matters most to its customers.
·                     Target wins with clean stores, competitive pricing, attractive merchandise, trendy clothing at great prices, friendly employees, and enough employees in the store to serve customers well.
·                     Ford wins with a refocus on what matters most, including stability, dependability, and "behaving responsibly."
·                     Starbucks wins with its core product of coffee, incredible selection, and an environment that invites people to stay.
·                     Southwest Airlines wins with an extremely efficient operation that gets people and their luggage from point A to point B in a low-cost, efficient manner, and it does so better than anyone else.
·                     Nordstrom wins with a culture of customer service.  It is famous for going above and beyond for customers.  It has a very liberal return policy, often sends thank-you notes, and through actions like these, has won undying loyalty from legions of customers.
The message from these winners in the Most Trusted Brand survey is unmistakable.  Each of them wins in meeting their customers' high expectations on dependability, customer service, competitive pricing, and being easy to do business with.  Thus they establish and sustain their positions as market leaders.
Focus on what matters the most.  It works.
Apply this lesson to your business by considering these questions:

·                     On a scale of 1 to 10, how easy are you to do business with?
·                     What are the three areas you need to improve to be easier to do business with?
·                     Do your customers have to think too much to do business with you?
·                     Do you make your value proposition so clear that they immediately get it?
·                     Do you have to explain what you do and the value of it more than you should have to?
·                     How can you make doing business with you simpler for your customers? 
·                     Does the value your company offers make you the logical first choice for customers?
How the Internet Is Killing Hype
The Internet is killing hype.
A Cisco Systems advertisement said it perfectly:  "Old Days:  You bought the chutney because you liked the jar.  New Days:  You bought the chutney because everyone likes the chutney."
Some would say that we are in the age of flash and attention getting, and that it's all about the "jar," meaning the shiny package of marketing that we wrap around our business to attract customers. 
In fact, the exact opposite is true.  The days of winning in the market through your ability to glitz up your business through wildly imaginative marketing and promotion are gone.  Forever.
If you buy chutney today because you loved the look of the jar it was in and upon tasting that chutney you really don't like it, your next stop is the Internet.  You go online and tell the world that the chutney stinks.  As more people taste the stinky chutney in the fabulous jar, they also go online and tell the world.
It doesn't take long before the chutney company is out of business.  In the old days, word-of-mouth reviews took quite a while to get around.  You told your neighbor that the movie you saw was terrible, that the hotel your family stayed in during vacation had mold in the room, or that the chutney you bought was stinky.
Now it takes you less than a minute online to tell hundreds of people.  They repost your comments to reach thousands.  Then those thousands spread the word to reach the rest of the world.
Hype is dead.  Long live quality!  If you don't deliver the goods in today's world, you're out of business.
It's not just about retail customers either.  Today's business-to-business customer goes straight to the Internet to get feedback on every business-to-business service and product imaginable.  Beyond online platforms, they also utilize user conferences, product seminars, and other live events to exchange information on satisfaction and dissatisfaction with their business-to-business transactions and relationships.
Your customers are talking about you right now behind your back.  Customer comments like these flood the Internet through Web sites such as Yelp.com, Facebook, TripAdvisor.com, and blogs:

·                     "Your ads are catchy but your service is just average."
·                     "I should have listened to my friends who said, 'don’t shop there!' but I fell for the hype.  Other stores have a better selection and more helpful employees."
·                     "Their Web site promised great consulting services, but all they did was give us a report on what we already knew.  What a colossal waste of money."
The real problem is that all of these businesses that were slammed in customer reviews probably believe that they're doing just fine on the basics.  It's the great illusion that we're all beyond the idea of winning business through consistent quality.  We're looking for the "wow" factor.
So, instead of being so innovative and so amazing at the basics that we are cutting edge, we focus on the extras, and in doing so, we neglect the basics.
So when there's a contradiction between what your business Web site says versus what your customers say, who wins?  It’s not a fair fight.  Today, customers can tear down a company's reputation in the blink of an eye.  This is how the Internet is killing hype. 
If you are not providing good value at what matters most to customers, you will not be long for the marketplace.  You have to keep the promises that you make.  You have to do what you say you'll do.  Your customers talk about you behind your back, and everyone listens.
Consider these questions:

·                     What promise do you make that you need to do a better job of keeping, every time, with every customer?
·                     In your company, who is responsible for your social media engagement with customers?
·                     Who is responsible for monitoring what customers are saying about you on the Internet?
·                     Do you actively seek out negative feedback from customers so that you know what they really think, or do you try to get only positive feedback?
·                     On a scale of 1 to 10, how would you rate your response to a dissatisfied customer? 
·                     What is your process for engaging with unhappy customers?
The Rules You Can Break
Which rules can you break?  All of them.
Keep the rules that work for you, and break the rest.  Make up new ones.  Your goal shouldn't be to run your business the way experts say you have to.  Your goal should be to run your business in the way that works best.
But doesn't every business have to have vision and mission statements?  Lots of them do, and it works well for them.  But if it doesn't work for you, you can replace your vision and mission statements with, for example, a simple list of what matters most to you if that is more effective. 
You can go with one sentence, or one word, or three words.  There are companies that thrive, grow, and make money hand over fist, and have never written the first word of a vision or mission statement.  Vision and mission statements are perfectly good ways to organize your thoughts around what matters most, but you don't have to do it that way.
The point is that one size does not fit all.  There are other approaches to creating focus and purpose that could work better for you.  One of the best examples of a nontraditional approach was mentioned earlier.  It's the advertising agency that focused on the four things that were most important to the owners:

1.                  Do great work.
2.                  Have fun.
3.                  Make money.
4.                  Don't work with people you can't stand.
This might be the worst approach in the world for you, but these owners decided to forego the vision, mission, and values approach and simply make a list of the four things that mattered most to them.
Note something else about the advertising agency's list.  It doesn't include anything that most people would consider particularly inspiring.  There's no higher purpose or lofty goal.  There isn't a word about changing the world or making people's lives better.  Without a really meaningful vision that gives them something bigger than themselves to work for, can they succeed?
Of course they can.  But in the past few years, you'd be really challenged to find a book about business or a motivational speaker who didn't say something about the requirement that you and all of your employees simply must have a higher cause to work for, or your business won't succeed.
That's ridiculous.  Everywhere you see inspiring, creative stories about companies and people in business that sound wonderful and lead us to great thoughts about how world changing our businesses can be.  But back in the real world, there are employees who may not be inspired or motivated by the same things that get the senior leadership team all excited. 
The concept of what matters most has got to be very personal to you and your people.  This statement of focus and purpose should reach people on an emotional level, which could mean "We save the world," or it could mean, "We make great carburetors." 
Don't get hung up on thinking that you have to include "We also want to be healthy, protect the environment, and contribute to the well-being of the world"—unless, of course, it really rings true.
How you determine what matters most, and the way you make that work for you and your business, aren't supposed to be anything except one thing:  effective.  Give yourself permission to let go of any "rules" that you think you have to follow even if you know they aren't a good fit for you.
Of course, this doesn't mean you should ignore the rules of good business practices or ethics or the reality of making the numbers work.  But don't feel tied to visions or missions or anything else that doesn't fit who you are and how you work most effectively. 
Remember, being the best at what matters most means what matters most to you, your team, and your customers.  It's not about what matters most to any other company, and it's certainly not what matters most to any business "expert."
You are the expert.  Do it your way.
Look at whatever statement you presently have of what matters most.  Whether it is a vision statement, a mission statement, values, or so on, look at it and answer these questions: 

·                     On a scale of 1 to 10, how effective is it? 
·                     What do you need to do to make it more effective?
·                     Do you need to completely rethink your approach?
·                     Should you change the wording of it?
·                     Should you simply tweak it?
·                     Should you leave it as is?
·                     Do you need to throw it all out and start over?
·                     Would changing it reenergize your organization or just prove distracting?
·                     Does your statement of what matters most reach people on an emotional level, or is it written according to how you think it is supposed to sound?
Focus 3 Ninety
It's easy to get stuck in the trap of overthinking things.  That trap becomes especially dangerous when we're thinking about "big" questions like what matters most. 
The problem with those three-day strategic planning retreats where everyone uses up dozens of pages of flip chart paper as they attempt to come up with the big answers to the big questions such as "What are our highest, greatest aspirations?" is that most of them produce less-than-optimal results. 
The pressures of time and just wanting to get something down on paper so people can say they succeeded often end up resulting in grand statements that just don't ring true on a gut level.
There's nothing wrong with grand and glorious statements.  There's also nothing wrong with sometimes just saying, "Let's make great carburetors," and getting on with it.  You might be best serviced by whittling things down to size for now so that you can take action and start creating better results. 
Let's shift the question from what matters most in our universe to what matters most right now for our company and our customers.
One of the great benefits of taking an intentional and focused approach to what we need to improve right now is that the process can begin to reveal what matters most in a big-picture way.  Taking action always produces new information and insights, and doing something is usually more productive than just thinking about doing something.
As noted earlier, many companies experience great success using the traditional model of vision, mission, and strategy.  That's great, and if it works for you, then you should continue defining what matters most using that model.  For others, however, a new approach can prove to be more productive.
This technique takes a short-term approach to creating permanent improvements in performance.  The program is called Focus 3 Ninety.  It is powerful in part because it is so simple. 
To use this approach, ask:  What three things do we need to improve in the next 90 days?  It should take you and the right people in your organization no more than half a day to come up with the three things that you should improve, all related to what matters most to your business. 
One great advantage of this short-term approach is that no one feels locked in, or that any permanent decisions are being made.  Just three things to improve in 90 days.
Don't waste time on quick-fix improvements that simply entail a temporary rush of activity.  Think in terms of improvements you can make in processes over the next 90 days. 
For example, don't have the sales force do 90 days of temporarily making more sales calls.  Instead, look at your selling process for places where you can make permanent improvements.  Improve the way you research prospects and prepare for calls so that you permanently improve your conversion rate going forward.
The key to making this work will be to have absolute clarity in terms of:

·                     The specific improvements you want to make
·                     How you will measure your success
·                     Who is accountable for each of the three areas of improvement
·                     The support that each of those people is given
·                     The schedule and checkpoints along the way
It simply does not have to be more complicated than that.  This exercise isn't about painstakingly wordsmithing any statements of any kind.  You just sit down and make a list of three things to improve in 90 days. 
By the way, it doesn't have to be three things.  It can be two or four, or possibly five.  The point is to create focus.
As you go through the process of identifying and implementing the improvements, you may glean valuable insight into what truly does matter most to you and your customers.  At the end of the 90 days, do an assessment of what's been accomplished, then move forward with a new set of three things to improve, or keep the ones in place that you feel need more focus and attention.
Think about the following questions:

·                     What specific improvements do you want to make?
·                     How will you measure your success?
·                     Who is accountable for each of the three areas of improvement?
·                     What support or resources will each of those people need?
·                     What are the schedule and checkpoints along the way?
Ten Ideas that Matter Most
Let's conclude this summary with a quick review of the 10 ideas that matter most:

1.                  Get your thinking clean enough to make things simple.
2.                  Be so good at the basics that you're cutting edge.
3.                  Be the best at what matters most, and you will succeed.
4.                  The winners aren't the ones who do the most things.  The winners are the ones who do the most important things.
5.                  Don’t use a flamethrower when you should be using a blue-tip flame from an acetylene torch.
6.                  Don't worry about "wowing" your customers with gimmicks.  "Wow" them with the basics.  Make a better car or a better hamburger.
7.                  The important thing is to find out what's the most important thing and get to work on it.
8.                  Being the best is a moving target.  You have to constantly improve and innovate.
9.                  Simplicity and focus are your force multipliers. 
10.              More isn't better.  Better is better.
It takes real determination and perseverance to simplify your business, get focused on what matters the most, and be the best.  It's not easy.  The fact is that most people can't do it or won't do it.  It's much easier, albeit much less profitable, to pursue the glitz of gimmicks that will supposedly set you apart.
But the huge payoff for your effort comes when you begin to make being the best at what matters most your natural way of doing things.  Then it does make work and life easier.  You'll reach the point where you look at your business and think, "Why didn't I always do it this way?" 

About the Author
Joe Calloway is a leading performance expert who has helped hundreds of companies and entrepreneurs create and sustain success through his unique interactive keynote presentations that challenge people to take actions on what matters most in their businesses. 
He helps organizations focus on what is truly important, inspires constant improvement, and motivates people to immediate action.  Joe has been a business author, coach, and speaker for 30 years and his client list reads like an international Who's Who in business, ranging from companies like Coca Cola and IBM to Saks Fifth Avenue and American Express.
Joe is the author of four other ground-breaking business books including Becoming A Category of One: How Extraordinary Companies Transcend Commodity And Defy Comparison, which received rave reviews from The New York Times, Retailing Today, Publishers Weeklyand many others.
Learn more about the author's unique approach to sustainable business success at:

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