
If there’s one expression which immediately makes me think “Oh, lordy, what incredibly dumb thing have they just done?”, it’s this:
“Look how much I saved!”
Now, just in case you think I’ve had some sort of seizure, saving money isn’t a bad idea in itself. As a Scottish accountant who has lived in Yorkshire for 30 years, I appreciate saving money every bit as much as you would expect someone with that background to appreciate it.
The problem comes when someone leads with “look how much I saved!” and not with, for example, “look at how much better we can serve our customers – and it’s extremely cost-effective” or “look at how much our quality has improved as a result of this little tweak to our production process – and it doesn’t cost as much as you think, if anything we make a saving overall”.
“Look how much I saved!” (and yes, it always seems to come with an exclamation mark) is an almost guaranteed sign that what I call dumb cost cutting has just taken place.
Dumb cost cutting is a penny-wise, pound-foolish approach to reducing costs which is remarkably common in organisations which should know better. And while it’s especially prevalent in the public sector, because there’s almost nothing in our universe dumber than the average politician, many organisations in the private sector are also deeply wedded to the sort of short-term dumb thinking that ends up doing more harm than good.
Sadly, there are times when an organisation has to slash and burn. When its very survival is at stake, for example.
But, on the assumption that your organisation is being run by intelligent, hard-working people, those occasions should be rare to non-existent. (If they’re not, you might want to question whether those two pre-qualifying conditions have been met before resorting to dumb cost cutting as the solution to your problems.)
Dumb cost cutting
Before we get into what to do instead, what is dumb cost cutting, and why should you move heaven and earth to avoid it?
It’s very simple to spot dumb cost cutting. That involves taking everything you do and trying to do it cheaper.
It’s not that becoming more cost-effective is a bad thing in itself. You should absolutely be trying to do that.
But when your only goal is “take what we do now and do it cheaper”, you make a number of fundamental errors which are likely to come back to haunt you.
These fundamental errors include: imagining that the only reason your business struggles to make money is because your input costs aren’t low enough; that there is no better process to produce whatever you produce than the way you do it now; and that people only buy products and services like the ones you produce because they are cheap.
If those statements were true: you wouldn’t need a sales team or a website because your products would sell themselves; the Japanese car industry would never have worked out how to out-compete Detroit on price, quality, and reliability; and nobody would ever buy a $2,000 handbag.
So, hopefully we can agree that, since none of those initial statements are accurate reflections of reality, cheapness alone should not be the only guiding factor for making decisions in your business.
Of course cost should be a factor in your business decisions. It just probably shouldn’t be the only factor – other factors are at least as important, possibly more so.
It’s still my favourite example of dumb cost cutting, but just to illustrate the point, I used to work somewhere that dramatically slashed their marketing costs one year and couldn’t work out why, the following year, they had no customers.
There are many things they could, and perhaps should, have done with their marketing budget to make it more effective, but given a choice between saving 5-figures in cost and losing 7-figures in annual revenue, I know which decision I’d be taking.
At the moment, a popular dumb cost cutting technique is to replace people with AI, even though AI is generally terrible at any human-facing activities. So unless you only sell to internet bots, you might want to pay especially close attention during the next section.
How to manage your cost base better
There are three simple ways to manage your cost base better that you should be thinking about whenever you feel the need to reduce costs inside your organisation.
1-Task vs outcome
One of the sad truths about dumb cost cutting is that, at least at a superficial level, it sounds like it works. Even though it usually doesn’t.
And one of the primary reasons it sounds like it works is because what I call “an engineering mindset” has taken root in most organisations. You’ll recognise this – it’s when you take a problem and break it down into its component parts to work out what’s gone wrong, then fix the bit that’s broken to miraculously return everything to the way it should be.
Now, if you’re an engineer solving an engineering problem, this is a perfectly reasonable strategy.
In most other areas it’s less helpful. That’s largely because of a subtlety in the engineering mindset which isn’t carried over to non-engineering applications.
Think of it like this. Every single component in a new BMW can be bought more cheaply than whatever BMW pay for it now. Every single one. I absolutely guarantee it.
However, if BMW replaced all the disk pads in their braking systems with an inferior (but cheaper!) option which meant hundreds more BMWs were involved in accidents the following year, I can guarantee BMW would switch back to their original, more expensive, brake pads pretty darned quickly.
That’s because BMW know that, by and large, people who buy expensive cars tend to avoid models which are more likely to burst into flames than other comparable models.
So anything your business buys, it can probably buy cheaper if you put in the work.
But you don’t just want “cheaper” if you want a sustainable business. You also want whatever your equivalent is of “make sure our cars don’t skid off the road and burst into flames”.
Everything is a trade-off. And where there’s a trade-off to be made, you should always avoid the “bursting into flames” option even if you could save a couple of quid somehow buying an inferior substitute.
2- Customer experience
Most organisations are cocooned inside their own little world. People think about “how to improve their absence statistics” or “how to hit 7.0 on their NPS score”. People build careers on being able to do those sorts of things.
However, when you’re doing something like that, you’re doing it to satisfy an internal driver – your boss, the board, some industry league tables, or something else.
Now, there’s nothing inherently wrong with any of those objectives. All things being equal, you should absolutely be trying to satisfy those objectives too.
However, all objectives like those assume the role of a customer in the process is irrelevant.
I’ve always found that peculiar.
Last time I checked, only customers give businesses the money they depend on to survive and thrive. So your real objective is to provide a service that’s as close to perfection as possible in your customers’ eyes, whatever anyone inside your organisation thinks.
And I can guarantee you that not a single one of your customers cares about your absence statistics, your NPS score, or how many of your KPIs are green on the KPI dashboard this month.
In most organisations I’ve worked at in the past, vastly more time is given up to managing absence statistics, or hauling people over the coals for not having enough green KPIs on their reporting dashboard, than is devoted to finding out what customers really want and delivering that to them.
That doesn’t mean going overboard and spending $1,000 to sell something a customer pays $500 for. You need to keep it in proportion, but that’s not usually a problem – someone buying a $5 handbag normally has an entirely different set of expectations than someone buying a $2,000 handbag.
Manage your business like you sell $5 handbags, and I can guarantee that soon you won’t sell any $2,000 handbags.
And, indeed, vice versa.
Neither is inherently right or wrong, but those are two entirely different customer experiences, which should be reflected appropriately in your cost structure, because they tap into two entirely different customer mindsets.
By and large, people who buy $5 handbags will be delighted if you start offering $4 handbags.
Whereas the $2,000 handbag brigade will be less inclined to buy another one if you start selling $1,000 handbags. They would much rather you developed a $3,000 handbag so their $2,000 handbag acquires some of the higher social cachet of its more expensive stablemate.
Neither is right or wrong, but you need to be really clear which customer experience you’re setting out to satisfy. Random dumb cost cutting in the wrong place is likely to cause more harm than good.
3- Build value vs cut cost
Most important of all, dumb cost cutting focuses on only one part of the equation. The cost of running your business.
Yet how much your business is worth depends on the value it generates not the cost of running it.
Imagine two businesses in the same sector. They sell an identical number of units every year at an identical gross margin. The only difference is that one business sells their products at half the price of the other one.
Business A has $1m in sales, $500k in costs, for a gross margin of $500k.
Business B has $2m in sales, $1m in costs, and a gross margin of $1m.
All things being equal, if they went up for sale at the same time, Business B will be worth at least twice as much as Business A (possibly more), even though they sell the same number of units of the same product at an identical gross margin.
Given a choice, which of those two businesses would you want to be running?
Many – possibly too many – businesses think they are in the cost minimisation game.
Which is unfortunate, because businesses are actually in the value maximisation game.
And although that sounds like much the same thing, it isn’t.
When you think you’re in the cost minimisation game, one of your underlying assumptions is that nobody will pay more for your product or service than whatever they pay now.
Unless you’re selling Rolls-Royces, Hermes scarves, or Hollywood mansions, that’s unlikely to be true.
The question you really need to ask is what additional service or feature can you add to what you do now which, from a customer perspective, will add value to them, and which you can deliver at a cost lower than the additional value you deliver at present.
You’ll develop a more valuable business in the process – and ironically do so by charging customers more, not by cutting costs.
What’s more, your customers will be happy to pay more in return for you delivering much more value for them, even though it costs more than they were paying before.
It really is a win-win when you switch your mindset from cost minimisation to value maximisation. It’s a win for you, and it’s a win for your customers.
Go on, try it sometime. You might be pleasantly surprised at the results.








