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Profitable Growth Is Everyone's Business: 10 Tools You Can Use Monday Morning (Hardcover)

by Ram Charan (Author)
4.1 out of 5 stars See all reviews (17 customer reviews)

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Price For All Three: $33.14

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Editorial Reviews

Product Description
The coauthor of the international bestseller Execution has created the how-to guide for solving today's toughest business challenge: creating profitable growth that is organic, differentiated, and sustainable.

For many, growth is about "home runs" - the big bold idea, the next new thing, the product that will revolutionize the marketplace. While obviously attractive and lucrative, home runs don't happen every day and frequently come in cycles.

Products like Kevlar, Teflon, and the Dell business model for selling personal computers may be once-in-a-decade phenomena. A surer and more consistent path to profitable revenue growth is through "singles and doubles"-small day-to-day wins and adaptation to changes in the marketplace that build the foundation for substantially increasing revenues. The impact of singles and doubles can be huge. They are not only the basis for sustained revenue growth but, in fact, the foundation for home runs. Singles and doubles provide the discipline of execution, an absolute necessity for successfully bringing a breakthrough technology to market or implementing a new business model.

Inherent in this way of thinking is the revolutionary idea that growth is everyone's business-not solely the concern of the sales force or top management. Just as everyone participates in cost reduction, so must everyone be engaged in the growth agenda of the business. Every contact of each employee with a customer is an opportunity for revenue growth. That includes everyone from the people working in a company's call center handling customer inquiries and complaints to the CEO.

In this trailblazing book, Ram Charan provides the building blocks and tools that can put a business on the path to sustained, profitable growth. For more than twenty-five years, Ram Charan has been working day in and day out with companies around the world. The ideas he has developed for solving the profitable revenue growth dilemma facing many businesses are based on personally seeing what works in real time. These are ideas that have been tested across industries and that deliver results, and they can be put to use starting Monday morning.

From the Inside Flap
The coauthor of the international bestseller Execution has created the how-to guide for solving today?s toughest business challenge: creating profitable growth that is organic, differentiated, and sustainable.

For many, growth is about ?home runs??the big bold idea, the next new thing, the product that will revolutionize the marketplace. While obviously attractive and lucrative, home runs don?t happen every day and frequently come in cycles.

Products like Kevlar, Teflon, and the Dell business model for selling personal computers may be once-in-a-decade phenomena. A surer and more consistent path to profitable revenue growth is through ?singles and doubles??small day-to-day wins and adaptation to changes in the marketplace that build the foundation for substantially increasing revenues. The impact of singles and doubles can be huge. They are not only the basis for sustained revenue growth but, in fact, the foundation for home runs. Singles and doubles provide the discipline of execution, an absolute necessity for successfully bringing a breakthrough technology to market or implementing a new business model.

Inherent in this way of thinking is the revolutionary idea that growth is everyone?s business?not solely the concern of the sales force or top management. Just as everyone participates in cost reduction, so must everyone be engaged in the growth agenda of the business. Every contact of each employee with a customer is an opportunity for revenue growth. That includes everyone from the people working in a company?s call center handling customer inquiries and complaints to the CEO.

In this trailblazing book, Ram Charan provides the building blocks and tools that can put a business on the path to sustained, profitable growth. For more than twenty-five years, Ram Charan has been working day in and day out with companies around the world. The ideas he has developed for solving the profitable revenue growth dilemma facing many businesses are based on personally seeing what works in real time. These are ideas that have been tested across industries and that deliver results, and they can be put to use starting Monday morning.

See all Editorial Reviews

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 208 pages
  • Publisher: Crown Business; 1 edition (January 20, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1400051525
  • ISBN-13: 978-1400051526
  • Product Dimensions: 8.5 x 5.7 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars See all reviews (17 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #405,928 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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Ram Charan
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Customer Reviews

17 Reviews
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 (9)
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Average Customer Review
4.1 out of 5 stars (17 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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37 of 40 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Revenue growth must supplement a cost reduction agenda, October 14, 2004
Charan's credentials include co-authoring the bestseller "Execution". His writing is very much down-to-earth, no-nonsense, and straightforward. So when he says 10 tools for Monday morning, believe him! Here they are:

1. MAKE REVENUE GROWTH EVERYONE'S BUSINESS. Just like a cost reduction agenda may be a permanent theme in daily conversations and meetings in all departments, so should revenue growth be. And it's not just for the management, it's for all employees to think in this direction (just like we try with the cost reduction agenda).

2. HIT MANY SINGLES AND DOUBLES, NOT JUST HOME RUNS. While home runs provide the opportunity for a quantum leap, they are unpredictable and don't happen all the time. Singles and doubles, however, can happen every day of the year. This piece of advice may sound somewhat trivial. But for what it's worth, my experience from especially larger firms is that it may turn out to be the most important tool. Many big corporations tend to devote too much thinking into finding the big home run - and may give too little attention to the many small growth areas that short-term perhaps do not make an important contribution, but often keep the organization full of life and energy - and well-prepared for take-off...if the elusive home run should materialise.

3. SEEK GOOD GROWTH AND AVOID BAD GROWTH. Good growth not only increases revenues but improves profits, is sustainable over time, and does not use unacceptable levels of capital. It is also primarily organic (internally generated) and based on differentiated products and services that fill new or unmet needs, creating value for customers. Charan constantly challenges leaders that seek acquisitions as primary driver for revenue growth ... instead of organic growth.

4. DISPEL THE MYTHS THAT INHIBIT BOTH PEOPLE AND ORGANIZATIONS FROM GROWING. Confront excuses such as: "We are in a no-growth industry, and no one is growing"; "Customers are buying only on price"; or "The distributors are the ones in direct contact with retailers, and there's not much I can do."

5. TURN THE IDEA OF PRODUCTIVITY ON ITS HEAD BY INCREASING REVENUE PRODUCTIVITY. The old saw says, "We have to do more with less." The problem, though, is that the focus is usually on the "less" and the "more" rarely happens. Revenue productivity is a tool for getting that elusive "more" by actively and creatively searching for ideas for revenue growth without using a disproportionate amount of resources.

6. DEVELOP AND IMPLEMENT A GROWTH BUDGET. All companies have a budget. It is, however, astonishing how little detail about revenue and sources of revenue growth you can find there. Almost all of the lines in the budget are cost-related. Few, if any, identify resources explicitly earmarked for growth. The growth budget provides a foundation that will allow a company to increase revenues instead of just talking about it.

7. BEEF UP STRATEGIC MARKETING. One of the key missing links for generating revenue growth at most firms is strategic marketing. Most people visualize marketing as tactical tools such as advertising, promotion, and brand-building. Strategic marketing, on the other hand, takes place at a much earlier stage by identifying and precisely defining which customer segments to focus on. It analyzes how the end-user uses the product or service and what competitive advantage will be required to win the customer and at what price points. Charan is using the term "upstream marketing". But I find it a weird way of describing strategic marketing. So I changed it.

8. UNDERSTAND HOW TO DO EFFECTIVE CROSS-SELLING (or value/solutions selling). Cross-selling can be a significant source of revenue growth, but most companies approach it from exactly the wrong perspective. They start by saying, "What else can we sell to our existing customer base?" Instead of looking inside-out your organization, you need to look outside-in. Successful cross-selling starts by selecting a segment of customers and then working backward to define precisely the mix of products and services they need and creatively shaping a value proposition unique to them.

9. CREATE A SOCIAL ENGINE TO ACCELERATE REVENUE GROWTH. Every organization is a social system, the center of which is a way of thinking and acting that sets both day-to-day actions and the long-term agenda. When an organization has an explicit growth agenda understood by everyone, growth becomes a central focus--a social engine--during formal meetings as well as informal discussions. This tool is closely linked to tool no. 1.

10. OPERATIONALIZE INNOVATION BY CONVERTING IDEAS INTO REVENUE GROWTH. Innovation is not the private property of lone geniuses working apart from the mainstream of the business. In any company of reasonable size, innovation is a social process that requires collaboration and communication for idea generation, selecting those ideas for revenue growth that are to be funded, and shaping those ideas into product prototypes and launching them into the marketplace.

Those were the 10 tools. I find the conclusion to be that revenue growth must supplement a cost reduction agenda (though you may want to wait 6-9 months after the efficiency programme have been initiated before embarking on the growth theme). Too many firms focus narrowly on cost cuttings, but to survive long-term we need to have the growth engine to be running as well (singles and doubles are just fine!). Charan explains how to make it work in practice.

Peter Leerskov,
MSc in International Business (Marketing & Management) and Graduate Diploma in E-business
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32 of 35 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Passionate, Practical, and Persuasive, February 11, 2004
By Robert Morris (Dallas, Texas) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)      
Charan co-authored Execution: The Discipline of Getting Things Done with Larry Bossidy and has written numerous articles in which he examines various causes and effects of what I view as organizational dysfunction. In this volume, he correctly insists that responsibility for profitable growth must be shared by everyone involved. He offers "Ten Tools" by which to achieve that important objective. First, he identifies three barriers to such growth: "First, the balance has gone too far in the direction of cost-cutting at the expense of revenue growth...Second, when most managers think about growth, it is in terms of home runs -- the disruptive technology, the new revolutionary business model, the mega-merger -- instead of the singles and doubles that, when executed at a steady pace, cumulatively can increase revenue substantially...Third, improving productivity and increasing revenues are seen as two separate issues, when they are, in fact, inseparable for long-term success. If managers concentrate only on raising productivity, they are only doing half their job." To these I presume to add a fourth barrier which Jim O'Toole discusses in Leading Change: "the ideology of comfort and the tyranny of custom." Charan obviously has this barrier in mind when correctly insisting that several mind-sets which endure as received wisdom are, in fact, dead wrong.

With regard to the "Ten Tools" which Charan recommends, no surprises there. My concern, frankly, is that some readers will cherry-pick a few, try them, and then "see what happens." That would be serious mistake. Rather, they should see all ten as separate but interdependent core principles to guide and inform the design and implementation of a cohesive, comprehensive, and cost-effective system by which to achieve and then sustain profitable growth. At a time when so many business books are published which offer answers, I especially appreciate Charan's inclusion of several lists of questions which are relevant to or evoked by a specific issue or problem. For example, in the Conclusion (pages 196-198), he poses a series of questions which will help a reader to determine whether or not she or he is now part of a growth business. My own opinion is that these are precisely the same questions which decision-makers in any organization (regardless of size or nature) should frequently ask. Why not dedicate a half-day, select a group of (let's say 10-12 key people), distribute these questions in advance among them, and then meet in executive session to share responses? Then reach consensus on specific action steps to be taken...by whom...with each being assigned a deadline.

Those who share my high regard for this book are urged to check out Jim Collins' Good to Great, Michael Hammer's The Agenda, Paul Niven's Balanced Scorecard Step by Step, and Chris Zook's Beyond the Core.

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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Practical and Timely, February 16, 2004
By Bruce V. Culver (Troy, MI United States) - See all my reviews
Having worked with Ram before, I immediately purchased and read the book in one sitting on flight from S.F. to Detroit. Highlighting the many practical steps that he uses to stimulate your thinking, it was easy to adapt these suggestions into actionable steps to achieve our company's own growth plan.

However, I was cautious to write a summary of the book until I distributed some copies to my team and tested the acceptance of these basic principles to revenue growth. I have seen some people scoff at some of Ram's recommendations because they appear to be too basic...too simple to really make a difference. For example: "Revenue Growth is everyone's business, so make it part of everyone's daily work routine." or "Seek good growth and avoid bad growth." Easy to just read over the titles...hard to really implement with every sales person, account manager...every employee on a equal understanding and commitment.

After discussing with the management team, getting each to focus not just on cost productivity, but also revenue generation and revenue productivity, we determined that getting back to basics would prove a cultural challenge, but one we must tackle. Too many companies have driven "cost focus" into the heads of every sales person, purchasing agent, accountant, middle-manager...and stopped focusing on the business survival requirement-all companies must grow or they die.

This book, along with Ram Charan's other book, "Every Business is a Growth Business" should be must reads for your key employees.

I recommend to all leaders that you personally adopt this book as a personal coaching tool with your key growth engine-your employees.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars Good ideas well presented
This book has a great premise - that improving profitability can be done through two often contradictory approaches - cost cutting and growing (profitable) revenue. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Eric Kassan

5.0 out of 5 stars Easy read with great advice
Bought the book for a planning event for the company and most enjoy reading it. Really easy to read but packed with great insights and valuable lessons.
Published 23 months ago by LKY

4.0 out of 5 stars Thought Provoking
I found the book every interesting. Nothing ground breaking but Ram Charan says it like it is. I would recommend this book to anyone looking for a quick read who wants to learn... Read more
Published on January 23, 2007 by Patrick Talmadge

5.0 out of 5 stars Charan does it again: ten ways to make more money
This excellent, short work is a classic in its genre. Author Ram Charan outlines in no-nonsense, albeit sometimes prolix, style the essentials that all managers need to know to... Read more
Published on July 4, 2006 by Rolf Dobelli

2.0 out of 5 stars A real disappointment based on his past successes
I have really enjoyed Ram Charan's writing in the past. I have really enjoyed Ram Charan's writing in the past. Read more
Published on August 2, 2005 by John-Paul Morgante

3.0 out of 5 stars A few good ideas, but pretty wordy
I purchased this together with Ram's other highly-praised book, "What the CEO Wants You to Know." I'd give the CEO book a D review and this a C review because this at least gave... Read more
Published on June 5, 2005 by Hillbilly Funk

2.0 out of 5 stars Trite
I had heard great things about Ram Charan, so perhaps my expectations were set a bit high. I realy got very little out of this, indeed, I didn't finish it. Read more
Published on January 31, 2005 by Dave Mccomb

5.0 out of 5 stars Profitable Growth
I do not know Ram Charan. Although impressed by his lecture at the GE Mgmt. Dev. Institute in the early 1970's I did not read Execution. Read more
Published on December 13, 2004 by Jack Ring

3.0 out of 5 stars Not as good as I had anticipated
I did get some things out of the book, such as how he explains the "social engine" process as a way to turn a company into a "customer-centric company". Read more
Published on September 23, 2004 by Juniper & Napoleon

3.0 out of 5 stars Didn't live up to expectations
I should have read the reviews a little more closely. Sounds like most of them know Ram personally.

This is a fine books, but not great. Read more
Published on September 16, 2004 by J. R. Witt

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