Double-Barreled Profitability
The need to grow revenue and profit is ever-present. And as the pace of change accelerates and competitors elevate their game, it’s getting more difficult.
Growth must be built on top of your best work. To grow, you must develop new products and services that make your customers swap out the old offering they just bought from you for the new one you just launched. And you must develop the new product with the team that developed the old one. This is difficult. You need to create the conditions for the team to see their best work as crap and prevent them from seeing themselves as crap.
For customers to replace an existing product with a new one, the new product must help customers make more progress than the old one. In a word, the new one must be better, or customers won’t buy it. And if they don’t buy the new one, there can be no growth. But here’s the difficult part – when the team built the old one, they designed in as much goodness as possible, yet your task is to help the team design a better one. Hey Team, congratulations on the wonderful success of the existing product. You did new work in new ways; you stretched; you hustled; you sprinted. Now, you must outdo yourselves, even though you just did that. This is quite the balancing act for the engineering leader.
Growth comes when the team designs a product that works better than the one they designed last time.
Designing a new product that works better is only half of the profitability recipe. It must also cost less. Yes, it must work better AND cost less. Yes, I said AND. Most teams don’t believe they can design a new product that costs less, and they think you’re crazy when you tell them the new one must work better and cost less. But this type of double-barreled profitability improvement is possible and proven. But only if the engineering leader believes it. And most don’t.
Growth is realized when the team designs a new product that works better AND costs less.
You can radically improve profitability with this double-barreled approach. I’ve used it to more than double the profit per square foot of the assembly area. And that makes the CFO smile and gets you lunch with the CEO. It’s good for profitability and better for your career.
Radical growth comes from obsoleting your best work, but only if you think it’s possible.
Image credit — Don Miller – double rainbow
Mike Shipulski