
If you run an organisation of any sort – business, public sector, not-profit, or anything else – you want your organisation to be efficient, right?
You might think this is an odd thing for a CFO to say, but no. You don’t.
What you want is the best return from your organisation’s efforts, whether you think of that in terms of revenue growth, profit margins, or return on assets employed in a business setting, or people helped or missions delivered in the public sector and non-profits.
It’s tempting to think that “more efficiency” will necessarily result in improved outcomes, but that’s not true.
Someone can be very efficient at trying to sell snow to Eskimos, but Eskimos already have plenty of the stuff and don’t need any more of it. Becoming even more efficient in their sales processes isn’t going to help.
Someone else might spend a lot of time, effort, and money trying to sell new cars to people who can’t afford the payments. No matter how efficient they become, they won’t sell many cars.
Yet another person might devote their business to selling premium wagyu beef steaks to a list of members of the Vegetarian Society. No amount of efficiency is going to shift their warehouse full of steaks.
So, if efficiency on its own isn’t enough, what should we aim for?
Outputs beat inputs
I’m glad you asked – you should always aim for effectiveness, not efficiency.
While efficiency, in and of itself, is not a bad thing, it’s a second order question once you’ve developed an effective way of reaching a goal or solving a problem. It’s not where you start.
Both are important for well-run organisations, but they serve entirely different purposes. Getting the two confused, as many people do, is the cause of a large proportion of today’s business and societal ills.
One of the key differences is that effectiveness is an output measure, while efficiency is an input measure.
To take one of the examples above, what I mean by that is the effectiveness of a car sales organisation can only be determined by how many cars they sell to paying customers.
If you work out a way to do that, then by all means see how you can make your sales operation more efficient. Maybe there’s a role for a new CRM system once sales reach a certain level.
But, at the outset, the bottom-line benefits of a CRM will be marginal. The problem here is that the business model is broken. No amount of efficiency will help someone trying to sell products to people who can’t afford to buy them.
Don’t be tricked
Recently I’ve seen people describing, for example, the number of sales calls a salesperson makes in a day, as “an output measure”…which, on the face of it, sounds like a measure of effectiveness by the definition above.
It might be a measure of a salesperson’s personal productivity, but that’s an efficiency measure, not an effectiveness measure.
The key point here for business leaders is that a large number of your people can, with some justification perhaps, claim to be highly efficient. Your job as a business leader is to look beyond that and ask yourself whether, irrespective of the number of calls a salesperson makes in a day, trying to sell new cars to people who can’t afford them is a good idea.
While you’re thinking about that, keep in mind one of my favourite business quotes from Peter Drucker “There is nothing quite so useless as doing with great efficiency something that should not be done at all.”
When you put the focus on your outcomes (effectiveness measure) before you think about inputs (efficiency/productivity measure) you’ll make much better business decisions.
But, to be fair to most people in your organisation, you can only take a view on outcomes at, or close to, board level because that’s the only level where you can see the full end-to-end process which leads to a successful outcome – eg selling a car.
If you employ a room full of telephone salespeople whose job it is to make calls all day long, don’t be surprised if they make a lot of calls, and spend a lot of time trying to convince you that they’re all doing a great job, even if they aren’t making any sales.
“I’ve been working so hard, boss, but people just don’t want to buy a new car at the moment. But hey, I made 400 phone calls this week, so I’m working like crazy to bring those sales in!”
Don’t blame the telesales team for that. The responsibility lies much higher up the organisation. When people there are mixing up the concepts of effectiveness and efficiency, the organisation is sunk, no matter how many calls a day each salesperson makes.
Start with the customer
To run an effective organisation, you have to start with your customer. Their needs, wants, and desires.
Try to do anything which is not addressing at least one of those agendas, and you’re pushing water uphill. That always means your organisation is working much harder, and spending much more money, to get to the same objective than a competitor organisation who thinks about the problem more creatively.
Effectively, organisations who try to power through regardless are using money to compensate for short-changing themselves in the thinking process. That’s always a losing proposition for your bottom line.
It’s like judo – in that sport, you use your opponent’s momentum against them. That’s why a quiet, skinny person with little in the way of visible musculature can defeat someone built like a heavyweight boxer.
In business, creativity performs a similar function.
You can spend a little bit more to generate a brilliant idea or you can spend 10x more in advertising media costs to get some level of recognition across your target audience for an insipid, me-too idea.
All things being equal, I know which one I’d be doing.
But away from the obviously creative areas of your business, the same applies to much more mundane business processes.
You can either solve your customer’s problems with creativity or you can spend vastly more money to get them to do things the way someone in a conference room somewhere decided ought to be done, having never spoken to a customer or used the product themselves.
The classic example
A good example of this in the real world is how difficult many organisations make it for customers to give them money.
There are rare exceptions where there is a legal or regulatory requirement to conduct some checks on your customers before dealing with them, such as the legal and financial services industries’ KYC (Know Your Customer) rules. But most businesses aren’t operating in that arena.
Not so long ago I was dealing with a business (or trying to deal with them, more accurately) which never responded to enquiries via the contact form on their website or to telephone calls made to the number on their website.
Take a quick guess how many sales they made to me?
Admittedly that’s an extreme example, but there are plenty of other examples closer to that end of the spectrum than the “making it easy for your customers” end of it.
A while back, in order to buy a relatively humdrum item for my house, I had to complete a form requiring all manner of demographic information before I could set up an account and…only then…be allowed to buy from this business.
On this occasion I persisted – partly out of morbid curiosity, partly because I was under very strict instructions to buy exactly that item from exactly that store.
Of course, I knew exactly what they were doing. I was essentially pre-seeding their automated marketing campaigns for them, so they could spam me forever more with personalised emails.
I don’t know what their drop-out rate was, but any process requiring a customer to input all manner of personal information is going to have a higher drop-out rate than a process which doesn’t. So straight away they are giving up sales they might otherwise have had, which, off-hand, doesn’t seem like the smartest strategy to boost a business’s bottom line.
The process brought to mind a question old-school direct marketer Dan Kennedy used to ask – are you finding a customer to make a sale or are you making a sale to find a customer?
To horribly paraphrase Dan’s very worthwhile teaching, his recommendation was generally to make it easy for someone to buy at least some sort of entry-level product which you could use to establish a base to grow from, rather than to spend a huge amount of time, energy, and money to find a perfect customer and then try to sell them something.
In other words, make it easy for customers to give you their money.
Once you had a customer, you could build the relationship out further, but at least you had established a relationship, built up a degree of trust, and demonstrated some added value along the way before you tried to sell them more products. All the subsequent sales were easier because of the positive experience you had established in the process of making the first sale.
While that approach might not be appropriate in every sales scenario – if you sell nuclear power plants, you probably can’t sell an entry-level product first and then try to persuade your customers to buy a nuclear power plant on the back of that – it works well in a remarkable number of settings.
It’s not just about sales
This article isn’t just about making sales, though. It’s about enhancing your bottom line. The same principle applies in every other area of your operations too.
You can, for example, buy cheaper raw materials or sub-assemblies for your products than whatever you buy now. However it’s likely that strategy will lead to more quality complaints, more returned products, and higher costs in your customer service department while they apologise for the substandard products which were delivered to your customers.
Generally, the best return for your bottom line comes from buying good quality raw materials and sub-assemblies which don’t result in quality complaints, refunds, and inbound customer service calls.
And don’t be fooled into putting all your customer service online and think you’re saving money. That does nothing to persuade customers your products aren’t shoddy. All you’re doing is making it less and less likely they will ever buy from you again – if there’s one thing worse than buying a shoddy product, it’s buying a shoddy product from a company where nobody cares enough to put their customers’ problems right.
Equally, you can track 1,000 data points and still run a business that its customers have very little time for, or you can track the only three things your customers get obsessive about and make sure you deliver those 100% of the time.
Whatever the cost of all that data management and tracking might be, you can save most or all of it if you just focus on what your customers care about.
Don’t mistake your notion of what makes you more efficient trump the things that make you effective in your customers’ eyes. While efficiency delivered in the context of doing things which make you effective is no bad thing, just wildly pursuing efficiency on its own terms more often takes away from your bottom line than adds to it.
I know that sounds like it shouldn’t be true, but it is – no matter how much third-rate accountants might try to convince you otherwise.
Being effective is about building value in your customers’ eves.
Being efficient is about impressing whoever sits above you in the organisational hierarchy, irrespective of – and often in spite of – the impact it has on your customers.
Whenever you have a choice about delivering on an internal agenda – efficiency, for example, or any one of a raft of internal policies and procedures – or becoming more effective in your customers’ eyes, always go with the latter.
Not a single customer gives a fig for your internal policies and procedures. All they care about is how well you serve them.
And, in the end, the valuation of your business and the state of your bottom line depends entirely on how positively your customers feel about the service they receive.
If in doubt, prioritise that. It’s almost always the best way to boost your bottom line.








