To me, these are two more pillars of success. Five little vignettes follow.
I recently visited the office of one of our construction industry customers. During our visit he commented "We don't give envelopes" filled w ith cash. "We do give some dinners and pizzas, but we do not want to build our business by giving envelopes, even though it is very common in this area." He had previously told me that once a month his wife, a key member of their company, delivered pizza to one of the many Ready Mix plants in their large metropolitan area. I later emailed him "That is the kind of integrity I like in the people I do business with."
In our very early days, we employed a woman who had previously worked for another small manufacturer in our area. One day we received a double shipment of some parts from a supplier. Brenda asked me what she should do. I told her to call the supplier and ask them to invoice us for the second shipment, as it was something we would use over the course of the next few months, or if they preferred, we could return it. She was pleased at myresponse and went on to tell me that she had been fired by her previous employer for calling a "double shipment vendor" instead of just keeping the parts and saying nothing. Her boss told her "his loss should have been our gain."
I have always told our salespeople that "we always use the same discount sheet for everybody and everybody gets the same deal" so that we don't have to "remember who got what and we don't have to walk the other way when we see the person who did not get the special deal."
I know a dentist who brought his wife and two daughters into his office at 10:30 the Saturday night before Memorial Day to treat a previously unknown patient with an abscessed tooth.
Talk about customer service!!!
But over the next ten years that probably garnered him at least 20, perhaps even 30, new patients who were family members, friends, and co-workers of that one person.
It helped, of course, that he is a good dentist who believes in saving teeth through conservative treatment, while inflicting as little pain as possible during procedures.
P.S. The patient was my wife, who was in a lot of pain and had been unsuccessful in finding anyone, including her own dentist, to help her. Needless to say, we were immediately "converted."
One of the best compliments we ever got was from the Vice President at our (then) largest customer when he told me "You really ramrodded that one through. We appreciate it!"
This was in response to our frantic one week re-design of some equipment we were building for them, after they discovered that their initial testing of the first design had been flawed.
We bust ours to keep you on schedule.
You will find this happy dog on some of our literature and websites.
The drawing was inspired by two of the many dogs that have been part of our family.
We hope it helps convey some of our customer service orientation.
Richway Industries Snapshot
Richway Industries makes a variety of products, ranging from cellular concrete equipment to foam markers for agricultural and turf spraying. Learn more at the Richway website: http://www.richway.com
Normally published every Friday
Normally published every Friday
Thursday, November 29, 2012
Wednesday, November 21, 2012
Thanks Harold
The Harold S. Story
I have written of the tough times we went through in the early to mid-1980's. At one point we had a negative corporate net worth, a negative personal net worth, and no place left to borrow. We had borrowed all that we could against our house. The situation was bleak, but the prospects were actually fairly bright. (At least in my mind, that of an [almost] eternally optimistic entrepreneur.)
One morning, Harold (a part time employee who had retired from farming) came in and said "I going to loan you $5000, I know you need it." It certainly got us out of a hole and enabled us to stay afloat.
We were able to repay him within several months, with interest.
My wife and I recently had the chance to do it for someone else
----- which we did, unsolicited.
Thanks again Harold!!
This is Thanksgiving week. This little memory of Harold and the help he gave us at a critical time is just one of the many thanks I owe people for their help, advice, sharing of knowledge, listening, and support during a 40 year run that began in December of 1972. A few of the stories have appeared in these Notes From Rich and more will continue to appear. But there are lots of other people, including many key (and dedicated) Richway staff members over the years, as well as vendors, customers, service providers, friends, relatives, and especially family members who deserve THANKS too. ..... Rich
I have written of the tough times we went through in the early to mid-1980's. At one point we had a negative corporate net worth, a negative personal net worth, and no place left to borrow. We had borrowed all that we could against our house. The situation was bleak, but the prospects were actually fairly bright. (At least in my mind, that of an [almost] eternally optimistic entrepreneur.)
One morning, Harold (a part time employee who had retired from farming) came in and said "I going to loan you $5000, I know you need it." It certainly got us out of a hole and enabled us to stay afloat.
We were able to repay him within several months, with interest.
My wife and I recently had the chance to do it for someone else
----- which we did, unsolicited.
Thanks again Harold!!
This is Thanksgiving week. This little memory of Harold and the help he gave us at a critical time is just one of the many thanks I owe people for their help, advice, sharing of knowledge, listening, and support during a 40 year run that began in December of 1972. A few of the stories have appeared in these Notes From Rich and more will continue to appear. But there are lots of other people, including many key (and dedicated) Richway staff members over the years, as well as vendors, customers, service providers, friends, relatives, and especially family members who deserve THANKS too. ..... Rich
Friday, November 16, 2012
The Best Advice I Ever Got .... Thanks Mom
Many years ago my mother gave me an important key for success which has always stuck in my mind. In fact, it may be the single most important factor in success.
To succeed, Mom said: "You have to do what needs to done, when it needs to be done, regardless of whether you want to do it or not."
Then she went on to illustrate it with a story about my grandmother. My grandfather owned a hardware store in a town in Iowa. When the Great Depression struck, starting in 1930, my grandfather sold many small hardware items to people in town on credit if they had little or no cash with which to pay. Eventually, this began to catch up with him, because he ran short of cash to buy more inventory and even to the point of beginning to crimp cash with which to run their home.
It was a fairly small town, in which my grandfather, his brother, and father had interests in the hardware store, a feed mill, and the bank. In other words, they were a relatively prominent family in town. This is where my grandmother fits into the story. (She, by the way, had a bachelors degree from the University of Iowa.)
Grandma determined that they had to start collecting some of the money from people who owed for hardware items, that my grandfather, out of generosity, had sold on credit. Thus, every week Grandma spent one day out walking from door to door of those who owed money. She asked for whatever they could spare, be it even so little as a nickle or a dime. She did this every week, regardless of the weather, rain or shine, snow, cold; no matter what, it had to be done.
I would add "recognizing, determining or knowing what needs to be done" because this is a logical first step.
Now the whole lesson becomes:
"Determine what needs to be done and then do what needs to be done, when it needs to be done, regardless of whether you want to do it or not."
To do this sometimes requires sacrifice or hard work or doing the hard job instead of the easy job. It requires action now, not at some point in the future, when it may be more convenient.
Mom had a couple of other illustrations too, which I am choosing not to share here.
This is for success in anything, not just business.
Monday, November 12, 2012
Dangers of being highly goal oriented
Recently I was in Cocoa Beach, where I was focused on getting a project (series of smaller projects) completed by a specific time. One morning I got a call from a friend telling me he was in town for a short time, but had no car. He did not ask directly, but he wanted have me pick him up, just to get together for awhile. He also wanted to come see my project. This was a multi-day project, which had to be done by a specific time.
His call interrupted my time line and disrupted my short term planning. I visited with him for 15 or 20 minutes and told him if he was still in town I would meet him for lunch. I knew that I could rearrange short term project steps by then.
Looking back, I should have stopped and gone to pick him up. I could have it worked out. I did have Charlie coming to help me, but could have rearranged what Charlie would do while I was gone.
A strong goal orientation is a necessary component of success, but can also be a detriment in life. It is hard (for me anyway) to turn off and on.
I apologize, Al.
If you have friends, associates, or employees with a strong goal orientation, try not to blame them if they seem to sometimes snub you or seem irritated when interrupted. It is the way they are wired. They may be goal oriented and not appreciative of obstacles. (Please note: There are other reasons for not liking to be interrupted or bring curt with people which are not so noble as being goal oriented)
Monday, November 5, 2012
Alertists are always on the watch. (TM)
Many years ago it be came apparent to me that some people just seem to "see" everything. Later I read of them referred to as "alertists."
In your organization you need alertists. Generally the more you have, the better your organization. I authored the following a number of years ago to help emphasize to our staff members the importance of paying attention. As you may have noted, I have trademarked the title.
_____________________________
Alertists are always on the watch. They almost cannot help themselves. They seem to see things around them whether they want to or not. They are the ones who walk through a room and notice that a clock is 10 minutes fast. Or they see the dime on the edge of the floor and stop to pick it up. (Unless they are at the National Farm Machinery Show where those pranksters from Richway have super-glued another one to the floor, just so they can watch people try to pick it up.) Alertists just seem to see things the rest of us often miss.
In your organization you need alertists. Generally the more you have, the better your organization. I authored the following a number of years ago to help emphasize to our staff members the importance of paying attention. As you may have noted, I have trademarked the title.
_____________________________
Alertists are always on the watch. They almost cannot help themselves. They seem to see things around them whether they want to or not. They are the ones who walk through a room and notice that a clock is 10 minutes fast. Or they see the dime on the edge of the floor and stop to pick it up. (Unless they are at the National Farm Machinery Show where those pranksters from Richway have super-glued another one to the floor, just so they can watch people try to pick it up.) Alertists just seem to see things the rest of us often miss.
Seemingly
without thinking about it, they find the spelling errors in a newspaper. Walking along a trail, the alertist notices
fresh deer tracks in the mud, or the poison ivy at the edge of the path. At the movie, they notice immediately that an
actress’s earrings change in the middle of a scene. It is just like I said. Alertists are always on the watch!
Sherlock Holmes, the
famous fictional detective, once solved a crime because he noted “a curious
thing.” The dog did nothing during a
night-time crime, which led Holmes to conclude that the dog must have known the
criminal well.
On the job,
alertists are the ones who just seem to sense when something is not right. They notice that parts are a slightly
different color. Or the alertist
realizes that a parts order has parts for two different markers and questions
whether there may have been a part number error. When producing parts, they recognize almost
immediately when something in a process is different. Always on the watch! And then, they are the ones who ask the
questions.
Most people
are not true alertists. But with
training and practice, they can improve their skills. With conscious thought and practice, you too
can improve your skills.
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