Title: Wherefore Art Thou, Business Value
1Wherefore Art Thou, Business Value?
- Leadership Summit
- November 14, 2008
2First, A Contest
- How much was wasted on a project you led?
- Also, I have revised these slides.
3The Big Ideas
- Aligning around purpose is a smart, simple way to
improve decision-making. - Designing our work around purpose helps us
quickly identify how to optimize business value. - Cascade the purpose decision filters through the
organization to achieve focused alignment.
4Purpose Alignment (the SLM)
High
Differentiating
Partnering
Market Differentiating
Who Cares?
Parity
Low
High
Low
Mission Critical
5In Practice
High
Differentiate, Create, Unique Might be Good
Do We Take This On?
Market Differentiating
Achieve and Maintain Parity, Mimic, Unique is
Likely Bad
Who Cares?
Low
High
Low
Mission Critical
6OK, What Is the Big Deal?
7This Really Happened
- Software for financial document management
- Initial project plan included development of over
3000 function / story points. - Filtering functionality through the model yielded
about 350 Differentiating function / story
points. - Company revised the plan to make these 350 even
better and simplify the rest. - Result Better product in half the time and 60
of the original cost.
8Graphically - Before
Project Tracking Document Mgmt Document
Edit Document Library Search EDGAR Integration
High
Market Differentiating
Low
High
Low
Mission Critical
9Graphically - After
High
Document Edit
Portal
Market Differentiating
Project Tracking Document Mgmt Document Library
Search EDGAR Integration
Low
High
Low
Mission Critical
10I Am Interested But How Do I Start?
11Case Study Specialty Retailer
- Seven years of losses. Decided to replace legacy
systems with a system that provided information. - Started the traditional way (gather requirements,
create RFP, select software, customize software,
spend three years and lots of money). - I introduced the SLM
12Start With Strategy
- Use the SLM to identify strategy.
- Strategy sustainable competitive advantage.
- Strategy decision filters we use to identify
the Differentiating activities.
13Not Sure About Strategy? Use the Billboard Test
You Think My Products Are Good? You Should See
My Chart of Accounts!
14Or . . .
We invest more in our WMS than we do in product
development
15Returning to Our Case Study
- Differentiating activities were
- Product Selection
- Customer Service
16Next, Filter the Processes
- Two differentiating activities. The rest are
something else. - Will this help us select winning products? Will
this help us improve customer service? - If not, we accept standard practices, functions,
features.
17Now, Assess the Differentiating Gap
- Poor product performance
- Launched project to segment customers.
- Identified four segments with different needs.
- Aligned marketing and product selection to these
segments. - Designed analytics in parallel with software
project. - Lousy customer service.
- Defined new metrics and standards.
18Then, The Parity Gaps
- Would unique accounting, purchasing, inventory,
point of sale, SCM analytics, et cetera help us
select better products or improve customer
service? - Since parity, resolved the gaps by selecting
market leading software (since it embodied the
standardized, simplified practices we should
mimic).
19Remember the Before
High
Accounting, WMS, SCM, eCommerce, POS,
Inventory, Financial Close, Infrastructure, CCP
Market Differentiating
Analytics, Product Mgmt, Customer Service
Low
High
Low
Mission Critical
20Finally, Prioritize and Fill the Gaps
High
Segmentation Analytics Customer Service
Market Differentiating
ERP POS CRM Infrastructure
Low
High
Low
Mission Critical
21Example Split Payments
- eCommerce and catalog order management system
supported split payments? - Split what? Pay with a combination of credit
cards (as many as you want). - Required a significant customization. Are split
payments differentiating or parity?
22Split Payments
- Differentiating includes product selection and
customer service. Therefore differentiating. - Not so fast, if differentiating, split payments
pass the billboard test.
23How About . . .
Give Me Your Tired, Your Poor, Your Maxed Out
Credit Cards
Fist Full of Credit Cards
Treat exceptions like exceptions. Inelegantly
handled with standard functionality.
24Example Community
- Four segments, four purchase triggers.
- One segment was influenced by thought leaders.
- How to expose this segment to thought leaders?
Unique Social Network laden with quality content
from thought leaders to influenced the influenced.
25Results
- Within 12 months, profitable business.
- Within 36 months, acquired primary competitor.
- System project was complete in 11 months (not
36). - System project was done at 50 of original
budget. - (In other words, BIG VALUE!)
26Returning to the Big Ideas
- Better Decisions?
- More smart stuff, less stupid stuff.
- Optimized Business Value?
- Invest in what needs to be better. Dont
over-invest what can be good enough. - Focused Alignment?
- Two simple, easy to remember questions.
27A Related Topic Value Model
Did the Inputs Change?
Purpose
Decision Chunk
Assess Results
Considerations
Costs
Benefits
28Caveats
- This approach is common sense but not common
practice it changes thinking and behavior. - Emphasize the mission critical nature of the
parity activities. - What is differentiating changes over time so
innovate!
29Questions?
30Shameless Plug
Stand Back And Deliver New book by Pixton,
Nickolaisen, Little, and McDonald Published by
Addison Wesley in early 2009