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    5 Compelling Reasons to Choose a Wellness Opportunity
    I actually have two separate online businesses -1. Selling wellness products and2. Selling digital information products (eBooks)Because I can look at things from both perspectives, I often tend to compare the two businesses from the point of view of the "better" opportunity.But if I were asked to recommend a single business as the best way to make a living online, the Wellness Business would win hands down.And no, I didn't choose it because its easy. On the contrary, selling health supplements, vitamins and related products online is NOT easy.Not only is there tremendous competition, but it simply can't be done by working two hours a day, as is the common perception.If you sell wellness products, you have to deal with REAL people. People with human needs and problems.You must be available in person, or by phone, or at least by email, to clarify doubts, answer queries, be prompt and sensitive to your customers' needs and generally make your customer feel good about doing business with you.You must also provide constant support, training and leadership to a growing organisation of distributors, and help them grow their business.This can be extremely time-consuming because few of these tasks lend themselves to complete automation.A seller of digital products has it somewhat easier. (S)He need not even interact with customers, because everything from product delivery to answering customer queries can run on autopilot.Digital product sellers can (and often are) literally sitting on a beach while their websites churn out profits.Given these disadvantages, why would anyone still choose the Wellness industry?The reason I believe is because ANYONE, regardless of their talent or creativity, can actually make a steady LIVING for a lifetime in the Wellness industry.And of course, there are a few who even go o
    practice in the first place.

  • Reviewing

    Once a best practice has been plugged in, it should be reviewed from time to time. All processes—even the best ones—grow stale over time, and what is “best” now may not remain “best” for long. As one study noted, “‘best’ is a moving target in today’s world.” [11]

  • Routinizing

    Making a best practice into a standard practice is what the transfer process is all about. Successful adoption means that a best practice has become incorporated into the culture of what it means to do business with your company. What was once above the ceiling now becomes the floor upon which we stand to reach even higher.

    Beyond best practices

    Identifying, evaluating, adopting or adapting, implementing, reviewing, and routinizing best practices can lead to marked improvements in the way you do business. This strategy can help you to be more efficient, improve your profitability, eliminate mistakes, and most importantly, raise the level of your service to the external customer even higher.

    There is a proviso, however. Peter Skarzynski and Peter Williamson of Strategos warn that all of this adopting of best practices can lead to what they call “strategic convergence,” a phenomenon in which each competitor within an industry moves its practices and procedures closer and closer to those of its rivals. Their survey of more than 500 CEOs indicates that such convergence is actually taking place in many industries. Its eventual result would be the elimination of virtually eve

    Starting A Business From Ground Zero
    A business can often be referred to a tree. You plant the seed first, and then water it everyday for months or a year till it grows into a nice big tree with flowers blossoming in spring. Starting a business is quite similar, except that it needs a lot of planning initially. The favorite dream is starting a business and being successful. The dream that most college kids and young executives harbor is of becoming as big as or maybe even bigger than Bill Gates or Steve Jobs.But this is where the dream ends because there is a lot of difference in dreaming about a business and actually building one from scratch. Moreover, there is also a difference between starting a business and making it successful in a highly competitive, technologically advanced global and American market. Numerous businesses have failed because people who started them, lacked vision and strong planning.Before you start your business you need to get a clear understanding of why some businesses succeed while others fail. You have to understand what you will derive out of the business in tangible forms, like money to pay bills and to afford luxury, greater recognition and market share, financial security etc. Try to understand the profit and loss ratio, while also taking a close look at the probable hindrances which can affect your business. Also work towards identifying your worse case scenarios before you start, this shall work well in your favor, and half your battle is won.Ideate on a business plan, something original but not too whacky. Planning is important. It provides you with an insight of the required capital, how much capital you have, what are the markets, what would be your sales plan, your USP, your niche, your strengths etc. The plan should also incorporate details on implementation, with a future perspective on the ever changing market. Make an investment breakup according to the space rent, salary
    Good news spreads quickly

    News of the invention of the wheel must have traveled in every direction as quickly as horse or camel could run. Those who learned of its advantages over the litter and the sledge adopted it right away. And no sooner was it adopted than it began to be adapted: made lighter, stronger, faster. Wheels were soon attached to axles, then to axles with pivots.

    The idea catches on

    Then transportation lost its monopoly on the new technology, and wheels helped to make pottery, lift buckets out of wells, steer ships, grind grain, keep time. Even now, the process of adopting and adapting the wheel continues as new uses are modified, improved, and applied in ingenious ways. The observation is certainly true: “Without the wheel, today’s civilization would be impossible.” [1]

    No wheel, little progress

    Meanwhile for hundreds and perhaps thousands of years, in islands of the South Pacific, the Americas, and other isolated places, cultures existed without any knowledge of the wheel. Their technology lagged behind because they still faced that first, high hurdle. Human beings have always been better modifiers than inventors. Why reinvent the wheel when someone has already done the hard work?

    Best practices needed

    Like civilization, your company is on a journey; yours is one of continuous quality improvement. It is “a journey with a definite a beginning but no end, and every one of your employees is a co-traveler. The extent of your progress depends on how well you live your core values values: like company family, commitment to quality, customer focus, embracing technology, integrity and respect, and teamwork. These values overlap, merge, and blend into one another when it comes to the sharing, evaluating, and implementing of best practices.

    Definition is important

    What are best practices? Unless we have a clear idea of what they look like, we won’t recognize them when we see them. According to the American Productivity and Quality Centre, best practices are “those practices that have been shown to produce superior results; selected by a systematic process; and judged as exemplary, good, or successfully demonstrated.” [2]

    Of course, this definition still leaves quite a bit of room for differences of opinion about what is “best” and what is not. According to C. Ashton in Managing Best Practices, “best” is always contextual, or situation-specific.” [3] A more sophisticated, multilevel approach to defining best practices comes from Chevron: [4]

    • Good idea – unproven but makes sense intuitively; could have a positive impact on business performance; worth investigating further.

    • Good practice – technique, methodology, procedure, or process already implemented that has improved business results for an organization in a measurable way.

    • “Proven” best practice – a good practice determined to be the best approach, based on analysis of process performance data.

    For more than the past decade, businesses across the country and around the world have been developing, identifying, implementing, and adapting best practices as one means of achieving the excellence of efficiency and superior customer service that would set them apart from their competitors. No doubt your company is engaged in the same quest.

    Process of best practices transfer

    A recent study identified six steps involved in the transfer of best practices:” [5]

    1. Searching

      This step involves finding best-in-class solutions from a variety of sources, both internal and external to your company. Your company's SOPs constitute a tremendous resource (hopefully available on your intranet) available to and from employees in all of your sites and regions. Success stories contained in newsletters and award presentations are another internal source. Good sources for external searches can involve newsletters and journals, business contacts, trade shows and workshops, new hires, “boomerang” employees.” [6] and outsourcing contacts.” [7] If you start looking for best practices, your search will certainly pay off.” [8]

    2. Evaluating

      This is a critical but essential step, though it is heavily dependent on the specific situation and people involved. On the one hand is the tendency to assume “the way we’ve always done it is the best.” On the other hand is the equally questionable assumption, “it must be better because it’s new.” [9]

    3. Validating

      Measurements help to eliminate this kind of subjectivity. Does the department already engaged in the practice have higher productivity, less downtime, more rapid customer response, or fewer reworks than the same department at another site that has not adopted it? The evidence should be compelling that the payback of the change will be much greater than its costs. And once a practice is validated as “best” it needs to be publicized. This will encourage others not only to adopt it, but to come forward with best practices of their own.

    4. Implementing

      The practice has to be documented (usually in an SOP), and usually someone already engaged in the practice should be involved in training others. During the implementation step, team members should be looking to adapt the practice to local needs and varying circumstances, as well as analyzing opportunities for improvements.

      A note of caution: Although “Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery,” copying someone else’s success does not always work. As David Bracken, director of Mercer Delta Consulting, put it, “I have always been skeptical about taking tools designed in one setting and using them in another organization ... more often than not attempts at ‘copying’ are doomed to failure.” [10]

      Not only might the copied practice suffer from “copy-of-a-copy” degradation, but the people on whom the practice is imposed might very well lack the motivation of the group that developed and implemented the practice in the first place.

    5. Reviewing

      Once a best practice has been plugged in, it should be reviewed from time to time. All processes—even the best ones—grow stale over time, and what is “best” now may not remain “best” for long. As one study noted, “‘best’ is a moving target in today’s world.” [11]

    6. Routinizing

      Making a best practice into a standard practice is what the transfer process is all about. Successful adoption means that a best practice has become incorporated into the culture of what it means to do business with your company. What was once above the ceiling now becomes the floor upon which we stand to reach even higher.

    Beyond best practices

    Identifying, evaluating, adopting or adapting, implementing, reviewing, and routinizing best practices can lead to marked improvements in the way you do business. This strategy can help you to be more efficient, improve your profitability, eliminate mistakes, and most importantly, raise the level of your service to the external customer even higher.

    There is a proviso, however. Peter Skarzynski and Peter Williamson of Strategos warn that all of this adopting of best practices can lead to what they call “strategic convergence,” a phenomenon in which each competitor within an industry moves its practices and procedures closer and closer to those of its rivals. Their survey of more than 500 CEOs indicates that such convergence is actually taking place in many industries. Its eventual result would be the elimination of virtually ever

    Follow Up Tips for Computer Services Part 1
    Follow up is an incredibly important aspect of your marketing and contact management systems. You need to be diligent but not aggressive with your follow-up, though. Your follow up should be creative and customized for each lead or prospect but never so overwhelming that you are perceived as a pest. You want your follow up to appeal to people; not drive them away.Here are some tips for delivering excellent propsect follow up:Send a follow up letter announcing that you're speaking at an event and invite them to attend.Advise that you are exhibiting at a trade show. Use your follow up to give them a free pass for the show.Send a follow up survey asking if anything has changed since the last time you spoke or met.Ask for a referral in the form of a follow call, email, letter, etc...After a natural disaster, send a follow up letter offering your assistance.If you hear about a promotion they've had, some kind of award that they've won, some kind of new business that they obtained, or some positive media coverage, follow up with a congratulatory call.If appropriate, discuss a joint venture opportunity like a joint trade show, seminar, etc...Use major holidays as a natural follow up point by sending a card and best wishes.Bottom Line on Follow UpFollow up provides a legitimate reason to stay in touch with your prospects. You want to vary the type of follow up you provide. This keeps your name in your prospects' minds but does not become so overwhelming that you turn them off. Use the tips above to start creating some interesting follow up calls and letters. Stay tuned for more follow up tips next time...Copyright MMI-MMVI, Small Biz Tech Talk. All Worldwide Rights Reserved. {Attention Publishers: Live hyperlink in author resource box required for copyright compliance}
    values values: like company family, commitment to quality, customer focus, embracing technology, integrity and respect, and teamwork. These values overlap, merge, and blend into one another when it comes to the sharing, evaluating, and implementing of best practices.

    Definition is important

    What are best practices? Unless we have a clear idea of what they look like, we won’t recognize them when we see them. According to the American Productivity and Quality Centre, best practices are “those practices that have been shown to produce superior results; selected by a systematic process; and judged as exemplary, good, or successfully demonstrated.” [2]

    Of course, this definition still leaves quite a bit of room for differences of opinion about what is “best” and what is not. According to C. Ashton in Managing Best Practices, “best” is always contextual, or situation-specific.” [3] A more sophisticated, multilevel approach to defining best practices comes from Chevron: [4]

    • Good idea – unproven but makes sense intuitively; could have a positive impact on business performance; worth investigating further.

    • Good practice – technique, methodology, procedure, or process already implemented that has improved business results for an organization in a measurable way.

    • “Proven” best practice – a good practice determined to be the best approach, based on analysis of process performance data.

    For more than the past decade, businesses across the country and around the world have been developing, identifying, implementing, and adapting best practices as one means of achieving the excellence of efficiency and superior customer service that would set them apart from their competitors. No doubt your company is engaged in the same quest.

    Process of best practices transfer

    A recent study identified six steps involved in the transfer of best practices:” [5]

    1. Searching

      This step involves finding best-in-class solutions from a variety of sources, both internal and external to your company. Your company's SOPs constitute a tremendous resource (hopefully available on your intranet) available to and from employees in all of your sites and regions. Success stories contained in newsletters and award presentations are another internal source. Good sources for external searches can involve newsletters and journals, business contacts, trade shows and workshops, new hires, “boomerang” employees.” [6] and outsourcing contacts.” [7] If you start looking for best practices, your search will certainly pay off.” [8]

    2. Evaluating

      This is a critical but essential step, though it is heavily dependent on the specific situation and people involved. On the one hand is the tendency to assume “the way we’ve always done it is the best.” On the other hand is the equally questionable assumption, “it must be better because it’s new.” [9]

    3. Validating

      Measurements help to eliminate this kind of subjectivity. Does the department already engaged in the practice have higher productivity, less downtime, more rapid customer response, or fewer reworks than the same department at another site that has not adopted it? The evidence should be compelling that the payback of the change will be much greater than its costs. And once a practice is validated as “best” it needs to be publicized. This will encourage others not only to adopt it, but to come forward with best practices of their own.

    4. Implementing

      The practice has to be documented (usually in an SOP), and usually someone already engaged in the practice should be involved in training others. During the implementation step, team members should be looking to adapt the practice to local needs and varying circumstances, as well as analyzing opportunities for improvements.

      A note of caution: Although “Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery,” copying someone else’s success does not always work. As David Bracken, director of Mercer Delta Consulting, put it, “I have always been skeptical about taking tools designed in one setting and using them in another organization ... more often than not attempts at ‘copying’ are doomed to failure.” [10]

      Not only might the copied practice suffer from “copy-of-a-copy” degradation, but the people on whom the practice is imposed might very well lack the motivation of the group that developed and implemented the practice in the first place.

    5. Reviewing

      Once a best practice has been plugged in, it should be reviewed from time to time. All processes—even the best ones—grow stale over time, and what is “best” now may not remain “best” for long. As one study noted, “‘best’ is a moving target in today’s world.” [11]

    6. Routinizing

      Making a best practice into a standard practice is what the transfer process is all about. Successful adoption means that a best practice has become incorporated into the culture of what it means to do business with your company. What was once above the ceiling now becomes the floor upon which we stand to reach even higher.

    Beyond best practices

    Identifying, evaluating, adopting or adapting, implementing, reviewing, and routinizing best practices can lead to marked improvements in the way you do business. This strategy can help you to be more efficient, improve your profitability, eliminate mistakes, and most importantly, raise the level of your service to the external customer even higher.

    There is a proviso, however. Peter Skarzynski and Peter Williamson of Strategos warn that all of this adopting of best practices can lead to what they call “strategic convergence,” a phenomenon in which each competitor within an industry moves its practices and procedures closer and closer to those of its rivals. Their survey of more than 500 CEOs indicates that such convergence is actually taking place in many industries. Its eventual result would be the elimination of virtually eve

    Top 5 Home-based Business Opportunities
    A home-based business is a great business environment to be in. For one, you don't get caught in polluted traffic snarls; second, it gives you a sense of freedom and takes you away from the petty politics of office; third, it brings you closer to your near and dear ones and helps you get a grip on your personal life.But, you cannot start off with any home business that you like just because you possess a particular skill. You have to be alive to the market and know what's in demand before you jump into the fray. Fortunately, we have done the spadework for you and here is list of the top five home business opportunities going around:1. Pet related products Our country's bursting at the seams with cats and dogs whose owners will spare no effort to spoil them silly. So, here's one hot opportunity you can cash in on quickly. Stock pet products and send out flyers in your neighborhood or build a small website announcing your "animal instincts", and watch the profits wagging all over the place.2. Catering Catering is another superb opportunity you can latch on to if you're interested in food. Consider the fact that most couples work for a living and are already fed up with take-away food – They want to see something warm, cooked in a home that's nearby, and delivered to them with care. Plus, a lot of families keep giving business to neighborhood catering outfits whenever they host a social get together.3. Marriage/Wedding planning This business is more of planning and execution rather than anything else. If you can organize things and execute strategies well and enjoy a bit of socializing, then this is a good home business option. All you need to do is pick up knowledge of what elements go into a wedding and then time the events and execute them perfectly. Moreover, weddings are very common in any society, so the business potential is large.4. Diet and nutr
    the past decade, businesses across the country and around the world have been developing, identifying, implementing, and adapting best practices as one means of achieving the excellence of efficiency and superior customer service that would set them apart from their competitors. No doubt your company is engaged in the same quest.

    Process of best practices transfer

    A recent study identified six steps involved in the transfer of best practices:” [5]

    1. Searching

      This step involves finding best-in-class solutions from a variety of sources, both internal and external to your company. Your company's SOPs constitute a tremendous resource (hopefully available on your intranet) available to and from employees in all of your sites and regions. Success stories contained in newsletters and award presentations are another internal source. Good sources for external searches can involve newsletters and journals, business contacts, trade shows and workshops, new hires, “boomerang” employees.” [6] and outsourcing contacts.” [7] If you start looking for best practices, your search will certainly pay off.” [8]

    2. Evaluating

      This is a critical but essential step, though it is heavily dependent on the specific situation and people involved. On the one hand is the tendency to assume “the way we’ve always done it is the best.” On the other hand is the equally questionable assumption, “it must be better because it’s new.” [9]

    3. Validating

      Measurements help to eliminate this kind of subjectivity. Does the department already engaged in the practice have higher productivity, less downtime, more rapid customer response, or fewer reworks than the same department at another site that has not adopted it? The evidence should be compelling that the payback of the change will be much greater than its costs. And once a practice is validated as “best” it needs to be publicized. This will encourage others not only to adopt it, but to come forward with best practices of their own.

    4. Implementing

      The practice has to be documented (usually in an SOP), and usually someone already engaged in the practice should be involved in training others. During the implementation step, team members should be looking to adapt the practice to local needs and varying circumstances, as well as analyzing opportunities for improvements.

      A note of caution: Although “Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery,” copying someone else’s success does not always work. As David Bracken, director of Mercer Delta Consulting, put it, “I have always been skeptical about taking tools designed in one setting and using them in another organization ... more often than not attempts at ‘copying’ are doomed to failure.” [10]

      Not only might the copied practice suffer from “copy-of-a-copy” degradation, but the people on whom the practice is imposed might very well lack the motivation of the group that developed and implemented the practice in the first place.

    5. Reviewing

      Once a best practice has been plugged in, it should be reviewed from time to time. All processes—even the best ones—grow stale over time, and what is “best” now may not remain “best” for long. As one study noted, “‘best’ is a moving target in today’s world.” [11]

    6. Routinizing

      Making a best practice into a standard practice is what the transfer process is all about. Successful adoption means that a best practice has become incorporated into the culture of what it means to do business with your company. What was once above the ceiling now becomes the floor upon which we stand to reach even higher.

    Beyond best practices

    Identifying, evaluating, adopting or adapting, implementing, reviewing, and routinizing best practices can lead to marked improvements in the way you do business. This strategy can help you to be more efficient, improve your profitability, eliminate mistakes, and most importantly, raise the level of your service to the external customer even higher.

    There is a proviso, however. Peter Skarzynski and Peter Williamson of Strategos warn that all of this adopting of best practices can lead to what they call “strategic convergence,” a phenomenon in which each competitor within an industry moves its practices and procedures closer and closer to those of its rivals. Their survey of more than 500 CEOs indicates that such convergence is actually taking place in many industries. Its eventual result would be the elimination of virtually eve

    Entrepreneur Opportunity-Identifying Excess Intrinsic Value
    Opportunity is everywhere and most successful Entrepreneurs are not so much concerned with finding opportunity as they are with finding the most juicy opportunity. Simply because time is precious and compounding the seed capital account is a race against time.By growing the seed capital account exponentially we make a good dent in the million dollar goal pretty quickly, but its excess intrinsic value that takes us there. When I first started compounding money, I found an interest I could specialize in. This instantly gave me a market to study and monitor. Knowing your market is crucial to uncovering excess intrinsic value. Without which you would be traveling blind.By knowing what the likely "quick sale" price is of the existing investment object before you, you can definitely make rapid choices and know quickly which deals to discard and which to pounce on. I am a quick study and I tend to find innovative and original ways to achieve my goals. This is no exception.I have dabbled in the stock market and although I never really took to it because there is simply no capacity to influence direct control over the outcome of any particular share price, I did actually take away a very valuable skill with my experience.Chart reading is a simple way some investors trade the share market, but it has excellent applications in our business. Having a close handle on pricing using the comparative model of price assessment is as we all know, not particularly accurate. But knowing where the price has been and where it is currently going in your respective specialization is guaranteed money in the bank.By using some simple chart reading methods that any stock market book can teach you, you can get a handle on spikes and troughs of your particular market. My local residential real estate market has been mapped for five years now. I have a large visual chart on my office wall and als
    ’s new.” [9]

  • Validating

    Measurements help to eliminate this kind of subjectivity. Does the department already engaged in the practice have higher productivity, less downtime, more rapid customer response, or fewer reworks than the same department at another site that has not adopted it? The evidence should be compelling that the payback of the change will be much greater than its costs. And once a practice is validated as “best” it needs to be publicized. This will encourage others not only to adopt it, but to come forward with best practices of their own.

  • Implementing

    The practice has to be documented (usually in an SOP), and usually someone already engaged in the practice should be involved in training others. During the implementation step, team members should be looking to adapt the practice to local needs and varying circumstances, as well as analyzing opportunities for improvements.

    A note of caution: Although “Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery,” copying someone else’s success does not always work. As David Bracken, director of Mercer Delta Consulting, put it, “I have always been skeptical about taking tools designed in one setting and using them in another organization ... more often than not attempts at ‘copying’ are doomed to failure.” [10]

    Not only might the copied practice suffer from “copy-of-a-copy” degradation, but the people on whom the practice is imposed might very well lack the motivation of the group that developed and implemented the practice in the first place.

  • Reviewing

    Once a best practice has been plugged in, it should be reviewed from time to time. All processes—even the best ones—grow stale over time, and what is “best” now may not remain “best” for long. As one study noted, “‘best’ is a moving target in today’s world.” [11]

  • Routinizing

    Making a best practice into a standard practice is what the transfer process is all about. Successful adoption means that a best practice has become incorporated into the culture of what it means to do business with your company. What was once above the ceiling now becomes the floor upon which we stand to reach even higher.

    Beyond best practices

    Identifying, evaluating, adopting or adapting, implementing, reviewing, and routinizing best practices can lead to marked improvements in the way you do business. This strategy can help you to be more efficient, improve your profitability, eliminate mistakes, and most importantly, raise the level of your service to the external customer even higher.

    There is a proviso, however. Peter Skarzynski and Peter Williamson of Strategos warn that all of this adopting of best practices can lead to what they call “strategic convergence,” a phenomenon in which each competitor within an industry moves its practices and procedures closer and closer to those of its rivals. Their survey of more than 500 CEOs indicates that such convergence is actually taking place in many industries. Its eventual result would be the elimination of virtually eve

    U-Dry Car Wash Model?
    Due to a shortage of labor in the car wash industry perhaps it makes sense to come up with a U-Dry Car Wash Model? Recently a business consultant brought up this point with me since I was in the car wash industry for some 20 plus years. He noted that it sure took a long time to get his car washed. He also laminated the fact that it did not take long to actually wash the car, but rather wait in line and then it took a long time to dry it.Yes drying is an issue and can take 5-minutes often, but really if the car wash did it correctly it does not take long. The better the blowers the more the car wash can save on labor. Towel loss is an issue as well because if the dryers do a lousy job then of course folks pick up a towel to finish their own car and usually take the towel too.The business consultant guru had stated; Anyway, I put on my consulting hat and thought, You know it doesn't take a long time to WASH a car--The time is consumed in DRYING IT! So, what if you devised a new kind of car wash called: WE WASH-- YOU DRY! Make towels available (there will be some losses, yes) and for those in a rush, for the self-helpers, they can get in and out in ten minutes.This is a very good point, in fact Dr. Goodman of CustomerSatisfaction.com makes many very good points, especially considering the labor situation and changes in the car wash industry. Indeed there are several new concepts, they call them Flex-Serve, They wash, one employee collecting money, you can dry or drive away without but have rinsed with spotless water and mostly blown dry anyway. Little Sisters Truck Wash does this, they dry the main stuff and you can grab a towel or two and completely dry it if you want too. You have about 20 minutes until the next Big Rig comes out of the bay. Dr. Goodman also notes that; Labor costs stay down, and the business does what it does bes
    practice in the first place.

  • Reviewing

    Once a best practice has been plugged in, it should be reviewed from time to time. All processes—even the best ones—grow stale over time, and what is “best” now may not remain “best” for long. As one study noted, “‘best’ is a moving target in today’s world.” [11]

  • Routinizing

    Making a best practice into a standard practice is what the transfer process is all about. Successful adoption means that a best practice has become incorporated into the culture of what it means to do business with your company. What was once above the ceiling now becomes the floor upon which we stand to reach even higher.

    Beyond best practices

    Identifying, evaluating, adopting or adapting, implementing, reviewing, and routinizing best practices can lead to marked improvements in the way you do business. This strategy can help you to be more efficient, improve your profitability, eliminate mistakes, and most importantly, raise the level of your service to the external customer even higher.

    There is a proviso, however. Peter Skarzynski and Peter Williamson of Strategos warn that all of this adopting of best practices can lead to what they call “strategic convergence,” a phenomenon in which each competitor within an industry moves its practices and procedures closer and closer to those of its rivals. Their survey of more than 500 CEOs indicates that such convergence is actually taking place in many industries. Its eventual result would be the elimination of virtually everything that distinguishes one competitor from another. [12]

    Their solution? Innovation! The company that devotes itself to innovation will always be able to differentiate itself from its competition. They offer ten rules on how to innovate successfully in their article, “Innovation as Revolution.” [13]

    Another important caveat is that sharing best practices is not the only tool you have to achieve excellence. Of even greater importance are your people. You must continue to hire people with great attitudes and then provide them with the training they need to be experts at their job. Then you need to re-recruit them so that they will stay with the company. This re-recruiting process involves making your company the “employer of choice” by having great managers, a great working environment, and great benefits. [14] The best people—your employees—will drive your best practices, speeding you ahead in your Quality Journey. Your company's search for best practices Your company should be pro-active in its search for best practices. The main points of the program should include:

    • Internal search – Researching best practices should start with what is already being done internally, concentrating on improving perceived weaknesses.

    • Sharing of information – News about best practices should be disseminated throughout your company by department managers’ meetings and senior managers’ meetings, the publishing of SOPs on your intranet, employee newsletter and e-mail announcements, employee meetings, and as many other methods as you can devise.

    • Corporate and management support – The capture and transfer of best practices should be supported by your board of directors and senior managers by promoting the development of SOPs throughout the company, encouraging alignments, and proactively supporting all quality initiatives. Corporate support must also be strong to make improvements through identifying and implementing best practices.

    An ongoing quest

    Your search for best practices must be continual, as you strive to strengthen what is weak, make what is good even better, and plug in what is best. You should also seek ways to adapt practices regarded as “best-in-class” to new situations and circumstances. The overall direction of your improvement journey is away from isolation toward interconnectedness, away from the static toward the dynamic, and away from top-down management toward the empowerment of all employees. You should make measurable progress in all three of these aspects; enlisting the cooperation of all employees will ensure that such progress accelerates.

    Copyright ©2005 Steve Singleton, All rights reserved.

    Notes
    1. World Book, s.v. “Wheel.” [BACK]

    2. Yasar F. Jarrar and Mohamed Zairi, “Best practice transfer for future competitiveness: a study of best practices,” Total Quality Management 11, 4-6 (July 2000):S734ff. [BACK]

    3. Ashton, Managing Best Practices (London: Business Intelligence, 1998), cited in Jarrar and Zairi. [BACK]

    4. As cited in Jarrar and Zairi. [BACK]

    5. “Identifying and transferring internal best practices,” published by American Productivity and Quality Centre in 1997. This white paper is summarized in Jarrar and Zairi. [BACK]

    6. A “boomerang” employee is one who leaves to work for another company and then returns. The returning employee may prove to be a valuable resource for best practices from their previous company, since they were able to compare the practices they learned at the other company from the perspective of those they knew at your compoany. Karen Lee, “Tales of ‘boomerang’ employees on the rise,” Employee Benefit News 14, 6 (May 2000): 63; Tiffany Kjos, “Boomerang employees on the rise in tight market,” Inside Tuscon Business 9, 52 (March 20, 2000):14. [BACK]

    7. For outsourcing as a source of best practices, see Peter Bendor-Samuel, “Leverage Best Practices,” Executive Excellence 18, 2 (February 2000):17. For a case study of an excellent external search for best practices, see Michelle M. Rodier, “A quest for best practices,” IIE Solutions 32, 2 (February 2000):36. [BACK]

    8. Some organizations formalize this search process by demanding managers provide a timely decision for each proffered best practice: to investigate it; to adopt or adapt it and say when; or to reject it and explain why. They then track which departments are most active in adopting best practices and which are resisting change. Thomas A. Stewart, “Knowledge worth $1.25 billion,” Fortune 142, 13 (November 27, 2000):302. [BACK]

    9. According to Ed Yager, a consultant and trainer on best practices implementation, we should evaluate the validity of so-called best practices according to three categories: 1) The known knowns – what we are aware that we know or think we know; 2) the known unknowns – our awareness of what we don’t know but wish we did; and 3) the unknown unknowns – what we are unaware of, but could really use if we knew it. “Adopting best practices,” Enterprise/Salt Lake City 30, 28 (January 15, 2001):11. Those most resistant to best practices tend to absolutize category 1, thinking their knowledge is broad and deep; minimize category 2, assuming what they don’t know is insignificant or irrelevant; and deny even the possibility of the existence of category 3. [BACK]

    10. David Bracken, “Linkage Inc.’s Best Practices in Leadership Development Handbook [Book Review],” Personnel Psychology 53, 4 (Winter 2000):1026. [BACK]

    11. Jarrar and Zairi. [BACK]

    12. As cited by Daniel Jennings, “Benchmarking best practices may not be the best practice for your company,”

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