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| Featured Article by
Mark Sanborn |
The Marks of
Distinction
How do you grow your business?
There are only two ways. In my work with over 1500 clients spread over nearly
20 years, the only two ways I've ever seen used to grow any business in any
industry are these:
Grow yourself and grow your people.
All increases in productivity, innovation, profitability,
strategic direction, superior service and operational excellence
flow from the ability of leaders and their teammates.
The big question then becomes: towards what end are you growing yourself, your
people and, ultimately, your business? A common response from many managers is
usually something about "being excellent" or "pursuing excellence." In these
competitive times, is that an effective strategy?
No. Excellence isn't enough.
To prosper in business today you've got to go beyond the pursuit of
excellence. Excellence in business is a good thing, but it isn't the best
thing. Here's why:
1. Excellence is relatively easy to accomplish. A good
copycat watches what the industry leader is doing and then does the same
things. If you're only excellent, you're vulnerable.
2. Excellence is a moving target. Today's "excellent" can
be next month's "mediocre." In a competitive market, the trend is always
towards better, so excellence can never be something you attain with finality.
3. The more excellent you become, the more demanding your customers become. A
customer's expectations increase over time based on previous experience.
Getting better drives customer expectations up.
The biggest problem with excellence: it isn't distinctive. The killer
marketplace strategy is to be distinctive: to go beyond excellent to offer
something distinct and unique to your company. That way if customers ever go
someplace different, they'll miss the distinction you represent and return.
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