Home :: Books :: Professional & Technical  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical

Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
The Profit Zone : How Strategic Business Design Will Lead You to Tomorrow's Profits

The Profit Zone : How Strategic Business Design Will Lead You to Tomorrow's Profits

List Price: $15.00
Your Price: $10.20
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 2 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Moving from product efficiency to customer solutions
Review: A company paradigm shift must occur before profits can happen. Management must move away from product-centric thinking and migrate to customer-centric solutions. Re-Inventors know that customer-centric solutions help identify the business design modification and enhancements to invest resource, talent, and raw materials to build. Customer expectations, beliefs, and problems are constantly changing. Companies, who listen to their customers' needs and priorities are more likely to change processes to meet those customer needs.

Traditionally, companies have focused on selling more to anyone willing to buy products and services. The driving belief was growth was a function of capturing larger amounts of market share. This belief is not factually true. Many companies gained significant market share only to discover, they were not growing in profits.

As with more of the same philosophy so was the advocacy. Companies continued focusing on what they did well and continue tryingtoo sell more of the same without understanding the needs and priorities of the customers; sustaining a false premise that more of an unwanted or unresponsive product will generate high profits. When companies were small, they listen to their customers; when they became a mid size companay, they struck a balance in between the company and the customer; and as a large company they mostly ignored the customer needs and a priorities and focused on company productivity. So the company eventually focused only on increasing efficiency and delivering products with the goal of gaining market share believing revenue would be generated from each unit sold. The internet and high speed communication has changed everthing. Business are becoming more digital and companies are expected to respond to the customers needs and priorities.

The most important question to ask is "How do I get paid?" Without a clear understanding of how profit is generated and how a business must be designed, there will be no profit. Next ask: "Who are my customers? Which customers do I not want?" Next ask: who are my innermost competitors? How are they meeting the needs and priorities of customers and thus taking away business. Who are my external competitors? Competitors that are emerging with disruptive technology that will meet the silent needs of my customers." Last, "What do I need to do to gain dominance in the market space?"

Start by identifying the profit model or models that explain, "How do we make money?"

22 Profit Models

1. Customer Solutions (Invest to know the customer, create a solution, develop the relationship.
2. Product Pyramid (At the base are products and services that are low price and high volume; at the top products and services that are high price and low volume)
3. Multi-Component (Several of the components represent a disproportionate share of the profits)
4. Switchboard (Multiple sellers communicating with multiple buyers. The more buyers and sellers join the great the organization builds on itself.)
5. Time Profit (Takes advantage of uniqueness, profit margins erode as competition seeks to imitate. Time profit companies must take the lead and maintain a "two year" lead over their competitors.) Example: Intel and Microsoft
6. Block Buster profits (Revenue realized is so powerful and fast that in a quick swoop the model pays for development and marketing costs)
7. Multiplier (Strong customer brand.) Example: Disney
8. Entrepreneur Profit (Hierarchical design with multiple subsidiaries to maintain closeness with the customer)
9. Specialization (Specialist are several times more profitable than the generalist. Characterized by lower cost, higher quality, stronger reputation, shorter selling cycles, and better price realization) Example: Home Depot
10. Install Base (Initial product sales or profits are slim and profit is realized on the follow-up products and services) Examples: HP printers and Gillette Razors
11. Defacto Standard (The more players who buy that enter in the system, the more valuable the network) Example: Microsoft, Oracle, SAP, and American Airlines
12. Brand (The Company expends significant marketing investment in order to build awareness and is reinforced by customer experience. You know Brand is working when a consumer says, "I won't change because I trust AT&T".
13. Specialty (Specialty companies enjoy a higher premium for their products and services until competitors start to imitate. Examples: Merck and 3M
14. Local Leadership (Many businesses and their company economies are totally local. Risk occurs when these companies fail to recognize they are a local business model) Example: Walmart - "Carpet bombing", county by county.
15. Transactional Scale (Transactions go up but the cost to provide the transaction does not go up as quickly.) Example: Morgan Stanley
16. Value Chain (Specific activities pass through a chain of specialist offering value)
17. Cycle Profit (Industries characterized by distinct and powerful cycle. The company can not control the cycle, but it works to maximize its position within the cycles grip. As capacity tightens the companies lead price increases, as capacity loosens, its lag price declines)
18. After-Sales Profit (The company's profit does not direct come from the sale of hte product, but the after sale financing or services of the product) Example is GE capital financing of credit cards, auto loans, and insurance.
19. New Product Profit (As new products are introduced profit margins are high and growth rapid. As the product mature the profit margins fall.)
20. Relative Market Share Profit (Companies with high market share tend to be more profitable. Large companies have price advantages due to manufacturing experiences and volume economies, such as purchasing capability and economies of scale)
21. Experience Curve Profit (Experience drives down the transactional cost)
22. Low Cost Business Design (The company trives on reducing the cost per unit through cumulative experience)

1. Who are my customers?
2. How are their priorities changing?
3. Who should be my customer?
4. How can I add value to the customer?
5. How can I become the customers first choice?
6. What is my profit model?
7. What is my current business design?
8. Who are my real competitors?
9. What is my competitors business design?
10 What is my next business design?
11. What is my strategic control point?
12. What is my company worth?
a. Return on Sales= EBIT/Sales
b. Profit Growth=Projected Earnings growth (value line)
c. Asset Efficiency=(Asset-Cash and Equivalents-Account Payable)/Salesd
d. Market Value=(Shares Outstanding X Share Price)/Sales
e. Strategic Control Index=
(10) Own standard
(9) Manage value chain
(8) String of superpositions
(7) Own customer relationship
(6) Brand copyright
(5) Two year product development lead
(4) One year product development lead
(3) Commodity with 10 to 20 percent cost advantage
(2) Commodity with cost parity
(1) Commodity with cost disadvantage

In the book, the author discussed, Schwabs "OneSource" switchboard model for selling mutual funds: no transaction cost and no front load. The brokerage model eliminated direct customer costs by providing zero transaction cost mutual fund and allowed the customer a cheap introduction to the market. Schwab continued to make available financial advise by agent or 3rd party financial planner and Schwab as a discount broker leveraged the single source for customers to purchase mutual funds, thus reducing confusion cause from massive variety. On the flipside, the mutual fund companies paid Schwab a small commission to list their mutual fund. Schwab provides the customer a single financial report and gains the brand recognition and prestige of the mutual fund company. Furthemore since OneSource is not asset intensive, Schwab does not face excessive risk and smaller profit margins. Schwab is able to defend its position from competition by providing a high volume and low priced commodity and gain more premium fees by offerring financial advise to higher paying customers.




Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Top
Review: Be sure that if you don't like this book, it's not because of the bad contents. Remarkable book, must read.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A MUST HAVE!!
Review: EXCELLENT BOOK! One of thee best business books. The book is well structured. All the strategic business models are well detailed with real world applications. Clearly illustrates how the most formidable business gurus have used various strategy models to migrate to profitability and isolate competitors. You will go into the realm of overpowering companies such as Microsoft, Intel, Coca Cola, to name a few.
When you have a book that is highlighted and filled with scribbled notes in almost every page than you know you have a winner. Can hardly wait for the next book by these two great authors.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A step further in Business Strategy
Review: I read this book in one day...it went over my expectations! You don't stop to find new ideas and concepts about how to run and design a business to keep it in the "Profit Zone", that according to the authors, is the zone where sustainable profit happens. The author introduces the "strategic control" index, as a way to measure of the hability of the company to keep profits coming. Several novelty business designs are also presented, as a way to explain strategic controls and their link to profit.

The book is very well structured. The first part (to my judge the most interesting part) develops and introduces the concepts, theory and models and the second part explains the success of real life companies such as Microsoft, Coca Cola, Charles Schwab, among others, under the light of theses concepts (which explain them great). The last part presents a strategic planning methodology, that threatens classical Balance Scorecard Approach. (I really don't know if any company has already applied this methodology).

You won't regreat to buy it. It's a great purchase! Best business strategy book I have read this year. As Richard D'Aveni says in the praises... you will pray that competitors don't read it!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A step further in Business Strategy
Review: I read this book in one day...it went over my expectations! You don't stop to find new ideas and concepts about how to run and design a business to keep it in the "Profit Zone", that according to the authors, is the zone where sustainable profit happens. The author introduces the "strategic control" index, as a way to measure of the hability of the company to keep profits coming. Several novelty business designs are also presented, as a way to explain strategic controls and their link to profit.

The book is very well structured. The first part (to my judge the most interesting part) develops and introduces the concepts, theory and models and the second part explains the success of real life companies such as Microsoft, Coca Cola, Charles Schwab, among others, under the light of theses concepts (which explain them great). The last part presents a strategic planning methodology, that threatens classical Balance Scorecard Approach. (I really don't know if any company has already applied this methodology).

You won't regreat to buy it. It's a great purchase! Best business strategy book I have read this year. As Richard D'Aveni says in the praises... you will pray that competitors don't read it!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Place to Be
Review: In Part One, the authors argue that "market share is dead" as an overall strategy goal. Instead, to achieve sustained growth in profits and shareholder value, companies need a "customer-centric business design" which anticipates and addresses constantly shifting customer priorities. There is no single design which fits all circumstances. but the most effective designs will start with customer priorities.

In Part Two, the co-authors shift their attention to several "reinventors" who have achieved extraordinary success. Most are familiar: Welch, Hayek, Goizueta, Schwab, Grove, Eisner, Hatsopoulos, Barnevik, and Gates. However, and this is an excellent example of the book's unique and substantial value, Slywotzy & Morrison note that "the principles and techniques of reinveniting a company's business design to get it into the industry's profit zone...apply with equal force to small companies, to divisions of larger companies, and to the middle managers who run them. In fact, the reinventors we will be reading about in the future are already honing their skills at innovative business designs today." The authors then examine several smaller firms such as Madden Communications, Cardboard Box, Inc., and Clozaril Patient Management System.

In Part Three, the authors provide a "handbook" which explains in detail how innovation works.This book is relevant to all organizations (both for-profit and non-profit) which seek to increase their economic value. Non-profits must also make critically important decisions (such as those involving allocation of resources) if they are to achieve their objectives. The appendices provide additional guidance so that the reader can implement whichever of the book's ideas and suggestions are most relevant.

If optimizing your organization's profits is your destination, here's a map to get there.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: 12 Breakthrough Questions for Looking Backward in Time
Review: Some companies succeed where others fail. The difference is that successful companies exhibit an ability to react more quickly and/or anticpate the spoken and unspoken needs of their customers. Companies that migrate from a market share strategy to a customer centric business model increase shareholder value for both themselves and their customers.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Get into the profit zone
Review: The Profit Zone is an intriguing read. This book is the precursor to Value Nets, but is still a great read. The book starts out by getting you focused on your customer, but quickly switches gears to ensuring that you are capturing profit for the value that you are providing. If your industry is changing quickly and margins are falling this book is well worth a read!

One of the most useful sections of this book is the one covering different profit models. The book covers 22 different profit models. For example, Product Pyramid Profit, which is basically having products tailored to customers desires that cover customer income and preferences. An example of this would be GM, which sells cars, but varies features and prices (Chevy to Cadillac) to cover a range of customer incomes.

One of the revelations of this book is that many of these profit models may have a five to seven year life (or shorter). Having a range of profit models allows the reader to see how to apply several profit models or understand transitions from profit model to another.

The Profit Zone is basically broken in three sections:

The first lays out the importance of the customer and the component that make up a business model. See Value Net review for more details, but basically value proposition, scope, profit capture and strategic control.
The second section is extremely useful in that is shows business that have due to changes in their industry or customers have had to recreate their profit model. Companies such as GE, Microsoft, Charles Schwab as well as others are used as case studies in business design reinvention.
The third section is a toolkit for apply "profit zone" thinking to your business.

The Profit Zone does a great job in highlighting that business is always changing and the areas where you can make money and sustain high profits are changing with it. The profit models in this book are further developed in a follow on book called Profit Patterns. Profit Patterns greatly expands the list of profit models and looks at them in greater detail.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: GREAT CHECKLIST TO FIND YOUR P.Z. AND ACCELERATE SUCCESS
Review: There are some wonderful ideas in the profit zone and many reminders of things we have heard about for years and often forget. For example, the real focus on the customer is critical to success and we must always identify which parts of the business generate the profits, or are THE PROFIT ZONE. I remember a study done in the 1970s which found that most of a brand's profit came from the smallest size can that the product could be purchased in. There are lots of other examples here. The author's are correct in that the most successful companies have been innovators in business design. Ten companies are profiled, althugh surprisingly, Dell Computer is not one of them, having innovated a new profitable business model based on their "Customer Initiative". The authors get into a little trouble when they try to get quantitative. The Value Growth Curves have too few points to draw useful long-term conclusions, but the Business Design Tables are interesting because they will make you think about your business structure. The two best parts of the book are the Pilot's Checklists of questions to ask yourself and Chapter 15, the "How To" section to get discussion and hopefully agreement going inside your company to find and grow THE PROFIT ZONE. For more ideas on how to develop new business models that allow you to achieve twenty times the usual benefits or get there twenty times as fast, I also recommend you read THE 2,000 PERCENT SOLUTION. THE PROFIT ZONE may just be one of your solutions.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: You'll get your moneys worth with this one
Review: This book definitely sharpens your thinking on how profit happens - the reason you're in business in the first place. Many managers and "business designers" would do well to read the parts on how a too single-minded focus on things such as market share and revenue growth actually might lead to value being destroyed rather than created. This book shows how value does get created: how innovative thinking and business designing will induce your present and future customers to pay for your profit.


<< 1 2 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates