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Atricle Dump - Productivity Through the Eyes of the Consumer
Incentives to Help Your Business Save Money on your Energy Bills develop an understanding of what the organisation does to cause the level of cost to be expended by consumers, techniques which are of use include value chain analysis and process mapping.You’ve probably seen the adverts about businesses and energy efficiency. They usually concentrate on the environmental benefits – namely, if we use less energy, we pump less harmful gases into the environment. Obviously this is a worthy reason in itself. But, there are other motivations for businesses to monitor their energy usage and stop wastage – for instance, saving on bills.Paying less on energy bills brings immediate savings to the bottom line. According to the Carbon Trust, a 20% saving in energy usage – realistically achievable by most businesses – can have the same positive effect as a 5% increase in sales. And, the Value chain analysis maps the flow of the development of the service or products from its creation from raw materials until final consumption. For example in the case of a product, the value chain will follow from production through warehousing, transport, distributors, secondary transport and retailing. At each stage of the chain an analysis is performed to understand what cost and benefit is delivered in the consumer's terms. Process mapping involves mapping of activities to produce a business outcome. Process mapping includes u Creating a Vision for Your Business To fully appreciate productivity and improve it, organisations must concentrate on more than just labour. They must also concentrate on more than internal values of productivity, such as units per man hour.Where is your business going? You must begin a business with the end in mind. In order to get from point A to point B, must know where both of those points are. If you don’t define the end goal, you have very little hope of ever getting there. Strategy is about planning and defining the straight line between those two points. Rather than taking the scenic route, a good strategy gets you from where you are to where you want to go in the most efficient way possible. You can’t draw that straight line if you haven’t figured out where and what point B is. I find a lot of entrepreneurs try to skip ahead and do marketing for their b I have previously discussed the need to understand the constraints that organisations have before developing units of measure. Lest they make errors, as I have, which make productivity worse by choosing a measure which did not reflect the nature of the constraint. Now I want to look at productivity from a consumer's point of view. Consumer's view productivity as the benefits they receive compared with the costs they endure or the benefits they receive compared with expectations that they have. For consumers purchasing a product or service the cost or “effort” will include items such as time, price, difficulty of use, financing costs, purchasing ease and unwanted functions. Consumers receiving a service as an internal customer or as a customer of a government service funded by taxes will have similar components to what they regard as their cost. Both types of consumers will have expectations of what quality of service or products they will receive. The matching or otherwise of these expectations belongs also in the cost column or perhaps in the “emotional cost” column. The benefits column for a consumer purchasing a product or service will include wanted functions, geographical availability, range, brand image and timeliness. For consumers receiving a service as an internal customer or as a customer of a government service funded by taxes the benefits column will include clarity, consistency, timeliness, expectation management and being fit for purpose. Simplistically, improving productivity from a consumer's point of view is easy. Either increase the benefits or decrease their cost, or both. As consumers we have all experienced improvements in productivity defined this way many times over the last twenty years. DVD players which sold for over $1000 now sell for less than $200 with more features. We were unable to call anyone on the telephone unless we were near one. Now we can move about freely and stay in contact, albeit for a higher cost. My phone electricity bill now lets me compare my usage month by month and season to season to enable me to manage my usage. As leaders of an organisation we need to understand productivity from a consumer's point of view. To understand what they perceive as benefits and what they perceive as cost. To understand consumer's view of cost and benefits, organisations can conduct focus groups and undertake quantitative analysis of the output. Many people think that these techniques are restricted in use to branding and marketing, however they are useful in understanding what people think, and how many people think it, about any topic in any environment, including internal customers. To develop an understanding of what the organisation does to cause the level of cost to be expended by consumers, techniques which are of use include value chain analysis and process mapping. Value chain analysis maps the flow of the development of the service or products from its creation from raw materials until final consumption. For example in the case of a product, the value chain will follow from production through warehousing, transport, distributors, secondary transport and retailing. At each stage of the chain an analysis is performed to understand what cost and benefit is delivered in the consumer's terms. Process mapping involves mapping of activities to produce a business outcome. Process mapping includes un Moment of Truth or Moment of Impact purchasing a product or service the cost or “effort” will include items such as time, price, difficulty of use, financing costs, purchasing ease and unwanted functions. Consumers receiving a service as an internal customer or as a customer of a government service funded by taxes will have similar components to what they regard as their cost.Moments of truth are all those times when customers experience and evaluate your service. Work hard, do a good job, and customers will come back for more.Moments of impact are those rare moments when someone goes way above the call of duty, stretches the envelope far beyond the stamp, innovates and takes action in unexpected ways that are valued, appreciated…and remembered.A client at a seminar handed me this note: ‘Last night, 10 minutes before departure at the airport, I found my car and house keys still with me, which means my wife would have been locked out of the house. I passed them to the Singapore Airlines in-f Both types of consumers will have expectations of what quality of service or products they will receive. The matching or otherwise of these expectations belongs also in the cost column or perhaps in the “emotional cost” column. The benefits column for a consumer purchasing a product or service will include wanted functions, geographical availability, range, brand image and timeliness. For consumers receiving a service as an internal customer or as a customer of a government service funded by taxes the benefits column will include clarity, consistency, timeliness, expectation management and being fit for purpose. Simplistically, improving productivity from a consumer's point of view is easy. Either increase the benefits or decrease their cost, or both. As consumers we have all experienced improvements in productivity defined this way many times over the last twenty years. DVD players which sold for over $1000 now sell for less than $200 with more features. We were unable to call anyone on the telephone unless we were near one. Now we can move about freely and stay in contact, albeit for a higher cost. My phone electricity bill now lets me compare my usage month by month and season to season to enable me to manage my usage. As leaders of an organisation we need to understand productivity from a consumer's point of view. To understand what they perceive as benefits and what they perceive as cost. To understand consumer's view of cost and benefits, organisations can conduct focus groups and undertake quantitative analysis of the output. Many people think that these techniques are restricted in use to branding and marketing, however they are useful in understanding what people think, and how many people think it, about any topic in any environment, including internal customers. To develop an understanding of what the organisation does to cause the level of cost to be expended by consumers, techniques which are of use include value chain analysis and process mapping. Value chain analysis maps the flow of the development of the service or products from its creation from raw materials until final consumption. For example in the case of a product, the value chain will follow from production through warehousing, transport, distributors, secondary transport and retailing. At each stage of the chain an analysis is performed to understand what cost and benefit is delivered in the consumer's terms. Process mapping involves mapping of activities to produce a business outcome. Process mapping includes u The Right Accounting Software for You brand image and timeliness. For consumers receiving a service as an internal customer or as a customer of a government service funded by taxes the benefits column will include clarity, consistency, timeliness, expectation management and being fit for purpose.Accounting software has been gaining momentum over the past years. Companies which use these software vouch for their efficiency to handle loads of accounting functions but do not add up to the costs unlike hiring a pool of trained and licensed accountants. Basically, an accounting software functions like a true accountant who handles accounts payable, accounts receivable, payroll and trial balance. Furthermore, the software can accommodate other functions which are usually handled by a staff. It too serves as an accounting information system. Accounting software is varied because their appropriateness depends on the revenue or spec Simplistically, improving productivity from a consumer's point of view is easy. Either increase the benefits or decrease their cost, or both. As consumers we have all experienced improvements in productivity defined this way many times over the last twenty years. DVD players which sold for over $1000 now sell for less than $200 with more features. We were unable to call anyone on the telephone unless we were near one. Now we can move about freely and stay in contact, albeit for a higher cost. My phone electricity bill now lets me compare my usage month by month and season to season to enable me to manage my usage. As leaders of an organisation we need to understand productivity from a consumer's point of view. To understand what they perceive as benefits and what they perceive as cost. To understand consumer's view of cost and benefits, organisations can conduct focus groups and undertake quantitative analysis of the output. Many people think that these techniques are restricted in use to branding and marketing, however they are useful in understanding what people think, and how many people think it, about any topic in any environment, including internal customers. To develop an understanding of what the organisation does to cause the level of cost to be expended by consumers, techniques which are of use include value chain analysis and process mapping. Value chain analysis maps the flow of the development of the service or products from its creation from raw materials until final consumption. For example in the case of a product, the value chain will follow from production through warehousing, transport, distributors, secondary transport and retailing. At each stage of the chain an analysis is performed to understand what cost and benefit is delivered in the consumer's terms. Process mapping involves mapping of activities to produce a business outcome. Process mapping includes u Brand Building 101: Does Your Business Card Build Your Brand? ntact, albeit for a higher cost. My phone electricity bill now lets me compare my usage month by month and season to season to enable me to manage my usage.When we are at a networking event or meeting a client, it's almost guaranteed that we will exchange business cards. Very often, without realising it, we are assessing our colleague by their business card, and asking ourselves: Is the business card professionally designed Is the business card crumpled at the edges? How does the weight of the business card feel - substantive or flimsy? Does it look like the business card has been made on their PC - or worse still does it have a message at the bottom of the card to say where you too can access free cards?I have collected thousands of busi As leaders of an organisation we need to understand productivity from a consumer's point of view. To understand what they perceive as benefits and what they perceive as cost. To understand consumer's view of cost and benefits, organisations can conduct focus groups and undertake quantitative analysis of the output. Many people think that these techniques are restricted in use to branding and marketing, however they are useful in understanding what people think, and how many people think it, about any topic in any environment, including internal customers. To develop an understanding of what the organisation does to cause the level of cost to be expended by consumers, techniques which are of use include value chain analysis and process mapping. Value chain analysis maps the flow of the development of the service or products from its creation from raw materials until final consumption. For example in the case of a product, the value chain will follow from production through warehousing, transport, distributors, secondary transport and retailing. At each stage of the chain an analysis is performed to understand what cost and benefit is delivered in the consumer's terms. Process mapping involves mapping of activities to produce a business outcome. Process mapping includes u How To Design A Resume That Stands Out develop an understanding of what the organisation does to cause the level of cost to be expended by consumers, techniques which are of use include value chain analysis and process mapping.Lets assume that your resume has been completed and you are ready to submit the resume to your prospective employer. That is good. But what can you do to get past the interviewer’s perusal and at the same time minimize your chances of being rejected or put in a waiting list.If you are able to have in your resumes list of your job achievements, for example the projects which you completed or the jobs which got you some recognition in writing by your ex-company. You might also want to include in detail but in short sentences what your focus is in working for your new employer.Make a list of your competence skills and mak Value chain analysis maps the flow of the development of the service or products from its creation from raw materials until final consumption. For example in the case of a product, the value chain will follow from production through warehousing, transport, distributors, secondary transport and retailing. At each stage of the chain an analysis is performed to understand what cost and benefit is delivered in the consumer's terms. Process mapping involves mapping of activities to produce a business outcome. Process mapping includes understanding the impact of policy, competence of the people undertaking the process and systems on delivering the business outcome. Isolating those segments of the value chain which deliver low benefit for the cost and mapping the processes used will reveal what processes need to be deleted, re-engineered or automated to improve the benefit to cost ratio. An example of such analysis is where a major transport and distribution company employed 50 people to provide a “gold” service to high volume customers to keep them advised on delays to their orders. The benefit to the consumers in this case was small compared with actually getting the product on time. The cost was high with 50 people being employed. The root cause was a credit process that delayed loading and delivery. Re-engineering the credit process to remove the delay in loading and delivery whilst maintaining financial control, eliminated the need for the cost of 50 people and delivered a real benefit to the consumers of reliable, predictable delivery. Productivity is not as simple as units per man hour or other efficiency measures. At the detailed level, it is some times difficult to determine what productivity we need to measure. Analysing productivity from a consumer's point of view through the value chain allows organisations to have an appreciation of productivity which better reflects their reason for existence.
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