| In the age-old quality-versus-cost
race, quality—slow and sure—sets the pace. Cost
bursts ahead regularly with discounts, exclusive offers
and promises to save time. Sometimes it’s difficult
to tell who will win.
Take a quality contender, the library, for example. At
the library, people can use highly effective public databases
and other resources not found on the Internet to gather
information. But people want everything NOW and forget about
these substantial offerings. They regularly turn to cheaper
or less time-consuming alternatives with no quality in sight.
Even if quality happens to beat cost across the finish
line, people often do not invest the time needed for the
best results from a complex product or solution.
SWOT Team, we seek your valuable advice for this issue’s
dilemma. How do you pitch quality over products that smell
like a rush job and look and act cheap? How
do you promote the best use of quality when a cost-driven
solution takes less time?
Thanks, also, for your valuable advice on working together
in a decentralized world. Read below to see your peers’
best advice about how to improve communication between offices
in different locations.
If you don’t want to race, or are communicating fine
“as is,” write to us and ask our SWOT Team about
your own dilemma. Tapping into our collective experience,
strength and hope really works. You could win a copy of
our book, A Marketer’s Guide to e-Newsletter Publishing.
SWOT Team Unite! Here’s How You Can Make a Difference:
• Give advice about this issue’s dilemma.
• Read your peers’ responses to the previous
dilemma (below).
• Submit your own dilemma.
This Issue’s Dilemma
SWOT Category: External Opportunity/Internal Strength
How do you promote high-quality products
that require time and dollar investments?
Our culture seems geared to using whatever is easiest,
taking the path of least resistance. Our higher-quality
library databases require a small investment of time in
order to learn how to maximize their use. It is very hard
to convince people this time spent is a worthy investment.
For example, how do I get my students and faculty to use
my library’s high-quality resources instead of the
junk they find on the Internet using Google and other search
engines? How do you compete with a product that sells ease
of use, convenience, and requires little thought or effort—and
gives immediate gratification—even if what you are
getting is poor quality?
Could you please ask the for-profit businesses out there
how they promote high-quality products, when their competition
offers low-cost solutions?
—Steven Bell, Director, Paul J. Gutman Library, Philadelphia
University
Previous Dilemma
SWOT Category: Internal Weakness
How can separate locations work more closely
together?
I work for a global consulting company that has marketing
departments that are decentralized. Financially, we’re
successful. However, in terms of structured and formal business
and marketing practices, we are significantly weak.
The biggest challenges we face are team linkages and communication.
We have several offices around the world that operate as
individual profit centers, which in effect creates a mentality
of “I’m going to do what’s best for me
and my office.”
I am looking for advice and recommendations on how the
marketing team can work through internal struggles and politics
to help our people work more closely together even though
we are different locations. Any suggestions?
—Anonymous Marketing Manager
Summary of Advice Received
Greetings to the one who presented this dilemma. (You know
who you are .) The interesting thing about the responses
we received is that they directly reflect the essence of
your dilemma: communication. It was not much of a surprise
to us, therefore, that we received a wide variety of answers
reflecting people’s various communication styles.
The advice we received fall into the following categories:
1. Identify communication gaps.
2. Build a case to establish partnerships with peers in
different locations.
3. Use more effective communication tools/techniques.
4. Review the rewards structure.
1. Identify communication gaps
The first step in making a change is admitting that you
have a problem. Once you do that, devise a plan for determining
where communication gaps lie. As you begin to understand
how these gaps affect working relationships between locations,
you can begin to formulate a solution.
Nancy Chou, Principal for Nancy Chou Marketing Consultants,
recommends doing an organizational development audit to
discover your organization’s functional weaknesses:
By way of sharing my advice… One of my current client
engagements is with a 17-year old hi-tech service-based
company that is experiencing similar problems. The way our
consulting team is helping that client may help you as well.
We are taking three main steps to improve their situation:
• First, get a strong internal acknowledgement that
there’s a problem and it needs to be solved. If you
are the only one/only few who perceives that the emperor
has no clothes, your efforts won’t work.
• Do an organizational development (OD) audit to
identify where people/communications/skills gaps are.
• Complete a marketing and sales effectiveness audit,
which not only points out functional weaknesses as manifested
in sales/revenue performance, but more importantly, shows
the critical connection between people, processes and business
results.
2. Build a case to establish partnerships
with peers in different locations
After you’ve identified your communication gaps,
remember that communication takes a minimum of two parties.
Therefore, it makes sense to foster the relationships between
communicators, and find ways to enrich these relationships.
Establishing connections between individuals in different
offices can bring about a larger “team” connection
between locations.
Claire-Juliette Beale, International Business Development
Consultant for BDI, recommends building a business case
for better global communication, then establishing partnerships
with peers in key offices:First, I would recommend you assess
the strategic interest and demonstrate the value of structured
and formal business and marketing practices of global scope
for your company. In other words, what is to be gained by
the company? Why change?
I would look at specific examples where interoffice marketing
cooperation has already benefited the company, both at global
and local levels (if you can’t show benefits at the
local level, you will never get local support). I would
also look at competitors and the ways in which they may
be developing an advantage (increasing awareness, winning
clients and projects, etc.) by taking a more global marketing
approach.
Once you have built the case (and you may find that it
is not as strong as you thought), I suggest you look for
internal sponsors willing to back you up in what is likely
to be a fairly tedious task to manage the change and the
mentalities. If you have a very strong case and top management
support, the best way to break the barriers might be through
the launch of a new global marketing project. However, this
is likely to be difficult in the environment you describe
(consulting and financially successful). So your best bet
might be to build momentum for a more global practice by
establishing partnerships with likeminded peers in key offices
and showing with quantifiable results how the company (globally
and locally) wins.
Peter Byrne, Principal Consultant for P&B Partners,
builds on this strategize-then-partner technique and suggests
partnering with local offices to help them reach both local
and global goals:Your issues seem to break into two separate
sections:
1. Is there a common global brand and brand strategy for
your business and should there be a common communication
of this? First you need to determine if this is a strategy
that will help overall ROI for your global consulting company.
If you have local success with local marketing and branding,
then it might be better to have those local offices do what
is best for them and the office. If you can convince leadership
that global communication would be more appropriate for
the organization, they will need to empower someone to lead
this initiative. Local offices will need to be made aware
of this strategy and a full effort made to implement the
structured practices that you desire.2. How can the marketing
team work to help people work more closely together? This
is a separate issue that requires your efforts in ensuring
that your marketing team can add value to a local office’s
efforts. Take the consulting approach, determine their needs,
send a proposal and gain agreement on how you will deliver
this project. Work with them to help them succeed at the
local level, while bringing the added value from your office.
3. Use more effective communication techniques/tools
After you agree there is a problem, build a business case
and begin partnering with peers in different locations,
using one or more of the following communication techniques
and tools may improve your situation. This kind of advice
provided by the SWOT Team includes common-sense communication
techniques as well as new software tools and global conferencing,
which can change your worldwide locations into virtual offices.
An anonymous team member advises the following three techniques
for improving communication between locations:
An internal weekly e-update
Monthly brainstorming meetings
Encouragement of open dialogue Paula Gaull, Marketing Communications
Manager for Groove Networks, Inc., enlightens us about a
software tool that can bring decentralized offices together:
There are actually tools out there made to help with just
this sort of business challenge. The real, practical advice
I am trying to give is based on a groundbreaking software
tool. This software is designed to make people who are working
on distributed teams feel as though they are working in
the same office. It gives you a place to meet and share
documents, discussion and information in context. What’s
important is that it becomes your virtual office. By creating
a common place to meet and share ideas, you become one community
or team, rather than lots of disjointed ones.In a similar
vein, Gary Rosensteel, COO of Vevolution, recommends developing
a global team:
The first thing to do is actually create a global team,
as it appears there now are a number of mostly autonomous
teams. I would propose to the local marketing people that
it would be a great idea to share success stories via an
informal global marketing group. This would allow everyone
to enter the process on a positive note and with the expectation
they might be able to pick up some good ideas. This could
be done via a Web or phone conference and would start establishing
a feeling of “we’re part of a bigger world”
feeling.
Assuming that this session is successful, the next step
should be consideration of what marketing efforts would
be best handled on a group (corporate) basis and which should
be addressed locally—the stated objective being to
maximize the effectiveness of everyone’s marketing.
Approaching marketing coordination in this manner presents
in a very non-threatening and individually beneficial manner.
It should be easy for all participants to realize that this
will help them and the company.
4. Review the Rewards Structure
As you change your current communication structure keep
in mind how people are being rewarded for their behavior.
It may be in your company’s best interest to find
a way to reward people for working together, rather than
competing against each other for most profit earned per
location. Putting a rewards system in place will ensure
your global communication efforts continue to improve.
Brian Ward, Principal for Affinity Consulting, offers this:
The behavior—“I’m going to do what’s
best for my office”—that has developed over
the years came about because certain conditions caused this
behavior to become habitual. Those same conditions will,
if left in place, cause those habits to be reinforced and
maintained. So the key question is, “What are those
conditions?”
One such type of condition is consequences. The consequences
that follow from “ding what’s best for my office”
obviously support that behavior, because if they didn’,
the behavior would be extinguished quickly. So examine the
consequences that follow the behaviors, not just the behaviors.
For example, how are people rewarded? If each location is
its own profit center and is rewarded solely or predominantly
on financial outcomes, you will get behaviors to match,
which will typically support the development of a silo mentality.
Seek ways to change the reward structure. You may not be
able to do a lot in this regard, but at least raising this
issue will cause some awareness to surface, and maybe someone
in a position to take action on the consequences will sit
up and take notice!
Way to Come Together Swot Team!
We did our best to provide a thorough overview of your
thoughtful responses, which can have a major impact on those
affected by this situation. Thanks for your participation.
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