How do you Deploy Your Strategy
Last week we explored your vision for the New Year and produced an idea for a vision. Now let’s review your business model and see how your end-to-end process design stacks up to deliver your vision.
End-to-End Process Design
Your end-to-end process is comprised of four major areas: New Product Introduction, Inquiry to Order, Order to Remittance, and Customer Improvement. These four areas represent your company; how it satisfies your customers and makes money.

For each area we need begin to understand the flow:
- How many advertising impressions does it take to obtain an inquiry?
- How many inquiries need to be qualified to become leads?
- How many leads are needed before we can quote some business?
- How many quotes does it take to get an order?
- How many orders will reorder?
This is the basic description of your end-to-end process. In sales we call this the sales pipeline. However, this is more than a set of sales pipeline metrics; it is a description of your business model itself. Now, if we also track the defects that occur at each stage of the process, we can calculate the capability of our business model, or how good we are at getting and pleasing customers. Let’s examine each one to see how this information supports our strategy.
New Product Introduction
How do people become aware of your products? Typically this is done through marketing. But how good is your marketing? We only know how good it is if we examine the whole system. Does your marketing produce good leads for sales? Do your sales people provide feedback that allows you to improve your marketing?
Once you have begun to understand your marketing system, its effectiveness, and how it interacts with the other parts of the system, you are starting to understand how your strategy will work or not work. Areas of concern should be noted on an action items list, which we will discuss next week.
Inquiry to Order
How do you handle leads? Are leads qualified and developed into clear opportunities? Are you producing cash fast enough? What is your conversion rate from inquiry to lead to quote to order? Have you compared this to other companies, competitors or industries? If not, then how do you know if your strategy is any good?
Order to Remittance
What is your process for fulfillment? Have you measured your on-time delivery, % compete orders, quality and looked at your inventory? High inventory turns implies a good strategy to align all of the processes within your company. A good leadership strategy incorporates all of your critical processes.
Many companies focus 99% of their effort on the order to remittance process. You will probably find most of your lean and six sigma improvement efforts here too. Why? Because it is the most obvious place to find waste, see waste, and the easiest to remove waste.
The only problem is that this is not where you find 99% of the waste. For most companies there is more waste in the other three processes, but many managers do not know what to look for. As a result, it is not considered for improvement or incorporated into strategy efforts.
Customer Improvement
How do you keep your customers happy enough to re-order? This is about more than just a customer satisfaction survey; we are talking about working with your customer to improve their business. At General Electric they call this “At the Customer for the Customer.� GE provides training and assistance, often at no charge, in order to improve a customers business, save them money, and build a stronger relationship.
Current six sigma thinking introduces this external customer focus as a way to contract the entire supply chain from the supplier to the customer. If you want to really improve your organization then at some point you will have to move outside your own company and incorporate your suppliers and customers in a much closer (read trusting) supply chain relationship than you can imagine.
Once you have done this, then you are able to truly create a strategy with a competitive advantage. After all, isn’t this what strategy is all about ?
Next week we will look the action steps your organization needs to take to build your business model and achieve your vision.
To learn more about using process improvement programs for your organization, attend the next How to Align a System of People and Processes for Results class. If you are eager to learn more about creating order out of the chaos you feel at work, then the How to Create Well-Defined Processes class is right for you.
ISO 9000 Quality Auditor classes are forming now for Internal Auditor or Lead Auditor. Call for information on having private in-house training classes today.
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February 6th, 2007 at 1:57 am
This was an interesting article. Let me know how I can get some of your business models by post.
February 10th, 2007 at 10:35 am
Hi Jacqueline, you can find all of our articles at www.bizmanualz.com/information. At this time we distribute our artilces electronically only. If you are looking for Procedures Manuals, you may find them at www.bizmnaualz.com/products.
February 12th, 2007 at 5:16 am
I just want to thank you for very intresting articles (like this one on strategy implementation). It is often a different perspective to what I know and I like the fact that they often challenge my thinking.
Regards
Matthew Newey
March 7th, 2007 at 8:55 pm
The articles i have received from you have helped me a lot in my handling of the subject strategic management and business policy. Indeed, you are a big help!Â
Thank you,
Eduardo Sayson
March 14th, 2007 at 5:33 pm
your articles are of great help in my assignments and now i have a broader knowledge in strategic planning and customer csre and quality.
kind regards
Tongai Dodo
October 16th, 2007 at 10:35 am
I would love to have more of your topics please, they are very infleuntial in my career and my future studies.
October 30th, 2007 at 9:11 am
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