Search

 

 

New Page 1 New Page 1

Informative Articles

Exceptional Leadership Inspires the Best Effort in Others
There is a steady stream being written and taught about leadership these days. There are tips about leadership, courses about leadership, books, retreats, and continuing education – all focused on leadership. While all of this material is...

How To Offer Individual Praise Without Undermining Team Efforts
by Carole Nicolaides © 2002 http://www.progressiveleadership.com A lot of discussions lately are centered around teamwork and leadership. This is especially an issue after all the leadership scandals that have been brought to light in corporate...

It’s Your Ship - A Book Summary
This article is based on the following book: It’s Your Ship "Management Techniques from the Best Damn Ship in the Navy" By Captain D. Michael Abrashoff Published by Warner Books, 2002 ISBN 0-446-52911-7 224 pages A challenge for every organization...

Managing Creativity and Innovation part 1 of 2
Leaders, consultants and managers must be competent in at least thirteen domains to even begin effectively managing creativity and innovation. Part 1 of Managing Creativity and Innovation covers the first seven of these domains. a) The difference...

Small business grants innovation at its best!
The small business grants innovation research is from the USDA. This is just one of many federal business grants that could serve your need for your small business. This free grant is a project grant and the federal government has set aside 2...

 
Profitable Growth Is Everyone's Business - A Book Summary

This article is based on the following book:
Profitable Growth Is Everyone's Business
"10 Tools You Can Use Monday Morning"
By Ram Charan
Published by Crown Publishing Group, 2004
ISBN 1-4000-5152-5
198 pages

The days of ruthless downsizing and drastic cost cutting are long gone. Nowadays, companies have realized that the best way to earn profit is only through growth – profitable growth. In this book, author Ram Charan provides 10 tools anyone can use to hurdle obstacles and achieve profitable growth.

These tools are:

1. Revenue growth is everyone’s business, so make it part of everyone’s daily work routine.

2. Hit many singles and doubles, not just home runs.

3. Seek good growth and avoid bad growth.

4. Dispel the myths that inhibit both people and organizations from growing.

5. Turn the idea of productivity on its head by increasing revenue productivity.

6. Develop and implement a growth budget.

7. Beef up upstream marketing.

8. Understand how to do effective cross-selling (or value/solutions selling).

9. Create a social engine to accelerate revenue growth.

10. Operationalize innovation by converting ideas into revenue growth. One of the most critical points discussed is the need for re-orientation of thinking. Most
businessmen and executives think about growth as “home-runs” and more often than not disregard the “singles
and doubles”. Managers often look forward to the big breakthrough or the grand new product without realizing
that home runs don’t happen everywhere – sometimes, they
don’t even happen in a decade.

Instead of aiming for that one grand home run, aim for singles and doubles. This is a surer and more consistent
path. Of course, it is important to note that while aiming for singles and doubles, one should not exclude
home runs. These singles and doubles come from an in-depth analysis of ALL the fundamentals of a business.

Another factor to be considered is the difference between good growth and bad growth. Managers should dispel the
myth that growth in whatever form is a victory. Although growth (both good and bad) builds revenue, only good
growth increases not only revenues but also improves profits and is sustainable over time.

Bad growth, on the other hand, lowers shareholder value. Unwise mergers and acquisitions are examples of bad
growth. Price cutting to gain market share without cutting costs can also be detrimental to your company’s health.

Here are some questions that can help you diagnose whether or not you are part of a growth business:

1. What percentage of time and emotional energy does the management team routinely

Associated Websites

Associated Websites

 

Our Blogs are on UK small business and being a UK freelancer or contractor as well as website marketing and web design. If you are a biker we can help with your motor bike insurance.

 

We have a site for contractors  and sites for HomeloansUK and PR-Help. We provide Branding help and offer Free-Marketing-Help and help for IT contractors. For E-commerce information, visit Small-Business-Web. We offer Page Rank Web Links and Cheap Home Loans Direct plus 0-BadDebtLoans and more Cheap Home Loans Direct. Our sites also help with Negotiation of any Personal-Secured-Loans. Our site called Management-Today can help you Innovate-Today, but for more loans go to 1st4HomeLoans.

 

Our HomeLoansUK site is affiliated with Branding and TrafficBuilding sites and Sales technique site. Also on offer is Beauty-Online and FreeNetDesign. If you are a  contractor and need help with a Small-Business-Web then our E-Commerce site is great. If you want Easy-Mortgages or even 1st-4-Tenant-Loans go to 5-Star-Mortgages. We help find Cheap Kitchen Appliances and Low Rate Home Loans. For the IT contractor, EstuaryFinance can refer you to our Online IR35 Compliance site for help with IR35.


devote to revenue growth?

2. Are there just exhortations and talk about growth or is there actually follow through?

3. Do managers talk about growth only in terms of home runs? Do they understand the importance of singles and doubles for long-term, sustained organic growth?

4. How much of each management team member’s time is devoted to making effective visits with customers? Do
they do more than listen and probe for information and then try to “connect the dots”?

5. Does the management team come into contact with the final user of your product?

6. Are people in the business clear about what the specific future sources of revenue growth will be? Do they know who is accountable?

7. Would you characterize your company or business unit’s culture as cost cutting or growth oriented? If the answer is one or another you need to start doing both. Do people in leadership positions have the skill, orientation, and determination to grow revenues?

8. Does the company practice revenue productivity? Does it think through whether there are ways to more effectively use current resources to generate higher revenues?

9. How well does your sales force extract intelligence from customers and other players in the marketplace? How well is this information communicated and acted on by other parts of your organization, such as product development?

10. How good are the upstream marketing skills- that is, the ability to segment markets and identify consumer attributes- in your business?

About the Author:

Ram Charan is coauthor of the landmark Fortune article "Why CEOs Fail" and an adviser on corporate governance,
CEO succession, and strategy implementation. He was named as Best Teacher by Northwestern's Kellogg School and as a top-rated executive educator by Business Week. He is
author of Boards at Work, coauthor of Every Business Is a Growth Business, and a frequent contributor to Harvard
Business Review. (6/2000)

By: Regine P. Azurin

Regine Azurin is the President of BusinessSummaries.com, a company that provides business book summaries of the latest bestsellers for busy executives and entrepreneurs.

http://www.bizsum.com
"A Lot Of Great Books....Too Little Time To Read"
Free Book Summaries Of Latest Bestsellers for Busy Executives and Entrepreneurs

Mailto: mailto:freearticle@bizsum.com
BusinessSummaries is a BusinessSummaries.com service.
(c) Copyright 2001- 2005 ,BusinessSummaries.com -
Wisdom In A Nutshell

About the Author

Regine Azurin is the President of BusinessSummaries.com, a company that provides business book summaries of the latest bestsellers for busy executives and entrepreneurs.