Category Archives: Distribution Industry Sales

94. Amazon’s $7 Per Line-Item, Wake-Up Call

AMAZON’S SMALL-DOLLAR-ITEMS: Math and Solutions

Amazon knows warehouse activity costs to the penny. Their 9th generation warehouses may have the lowest, cost-per-pick on the planet. Some stats:

  1. The “click to ship” elapsed time is 15 minutes and dropping.
  2. The average human time input for each order is one minute which includes 15 seconds to pack.
  3. The cost per pick – in the narrowest sense – is 44 cents for a human and 20 cents for a robot.

Continue reading 94. Amazon’s $7 Per Line-Item, Wake-Up Call

93. Amazon (AMZ) Backcasting Strategies

Does your company plan to sell – physical or digital – goods to AMZ Prime members in 2020 and beyond? Then, backcast about the ideal customer shopping journey that AMZ will be dictating. And, start changing now.

WHAT’S BACKCASTING?

It’s visionary planning:

  1. Start with an ideal vision of what customers might want in 2020+.
  2. With that end in mind move backwards from the vision to the present.
  3. Then ask: “What do we do today – step by step – to move towards the vision”.
  4. “Back” contrasts with “fore”- casting which takes our past and extends it into the future. Backcasting will move you towards the future you will need.
  5. Talk in the future perfect tense. “By 2020, AMZ will have achieved this next-level shopping experience. And, we will have accomplished…” (What: to stay vital?)
  6. For backcasting slides search the term at Google Images.

Continue reading 93. Amazon (AMZ) Backcasting Strategies

90. Pink Kit Kats v. Niche Domination

On January 18, 2018, after 10 years of development, Nestlé rolled out Ruby chocolate KitKats in Korea and Japan, just in time for Valentine’s day. The pink KitKat, made from the Ruby cocoa bean, will make premium a line that has hundreds of flavors, including green tea and strawberry.

Asian distributors will race to be the first to market with the pink KitKat, but will greater consumption of the KitKat line result? What sustainable edge and profits will distributors get from Nestlé’s promotional bribes and intensive distribution policy?

In 2018, how many U.S. distributors, across channels, will be also racing to market with new micro-niche products within non-exclusive lines? And, for what sustainable gains? Continue reading 90. Pink Kit Kats v. Niche Domination

67. Distributors, Retune Your Brand and Find Your Partners

Your brand statement encompasses your company’s beliefs about your competitive edge. It’s your company mantra. Many distributors proclaim something like, “Our good people deliver good service”. But, most companies don’t have measurable, customer-centric service excellence that could help them earn a dominant share of accounts, have the firmest prices, or become first-choice for supply chain partnerships. Why not retune your brand?

What’s your path to powering your brand with service excellence? So, if you have a big warehouse in a warehouse district and an outside sales force, your future has been here in other channels for some time.

Your Future in a New Service Promise

A promise should be an IF, THEN statement. Most of all, IF your customer buys all they can from you, THEN you will: Continue reading 67. Distributors, Retune Your Brand and Find Your Partners

32. Steal Selling Ideas From Leading Edge Distribution Channels

To reinvent your selling value, look for ideas in the most advanced distribution channels. What are reps in those micro-worlds doing that you can borrow and adapt to yours?

A Technical Product Rep With 4 Customers

Channel reps tout their product expertise. But, my friend, Alex, is the real deal. He sells artificial joint-parts to orthopedic surgeons. His “territory” is four doctors. He assists them in ordering the right, best-fit parts for each patient’s joint and conditions. Then, he often dons surgical scrubs to advise the docs during surgeries. He is the expert when patients have odd joint issues (upon open inspection) or need newer-model or rarely-used parts. Continue reading 32. Steal Selling Ideas From Leading Edge Distribution Channels

30. Dynamic, Service-Triage-Program: Case Study

Do you want to hire the best employees and keep them stoked? Here’s a successful distributor’s thinking and how to put a service-triage-program in place:

  1. Best employees (like thoroughbreds) cost more upfront. And, they want a career growth path.
  2. But, raises and profits to reinvest into growth must both come from growing Gross Margin Dollars (GM$s) per Full-Time Equivalent Employee (FTEEs).
  3. So, freeze headcount and trade low, unprofitable, GM$/service-hour, accounts for high GM$/hour accounts.
  4. How? Give your 5 most profitable and 5 most potentially profitable accounts much better service.

THE PROGRAM:

  1. Every employee memorizes ten biggest (potential) profit accounts.
  2. Ideas are listed and play-acted for diplomatically giving “the Big 10” line-cutting service at the inconvenience to unprofitable “minnow accounts”.
  3. Service goals for the Big 10: they will never be handed off to another employee with any delay or fumbles. They will get: faster, perfect and more-creatively, thorough service.
  4. Give everyone customer profitability information and trend reports for both GM$s/FTEE and Profit$s/FTEE. If Profit$s/FTEE clears a target, then gainsharing bonuses accrue for all.

TRIAGE EXAMPLE:

All inside sales people were busy. #2 Target Account calls. The “overflow person” enthusiastically tells #2 to: “Wait just one second”. Then yells: “Can anyone Triage for #2?”

Tony is talking to “Micro-Plankton Man” (MPM). In mid-speech, he hits the blinking button to work with #2 for more than an hour. #2 needs some product specs, pricing and a shipping date – for a potential factory direct order. Tony walks the call over to purchasing. The team (using the speaker phone) calls the factory to get all needed information in record time.

#2 then quotes their customer and wins by being the first-back bid. Tony and associates then collaborate with #2’s folks to create a “Speed Quoting Wins” process.

#2 then wins more business with faster quoting. Their purchases grow from $30K to $500K with profits rising from 3 to 6% of sales. MPM’s sales, meanwhile, go from small at a loss to zero. He switched to a competitor when assigned to a new service model and terms that would have made him profitable.

The team needed MPM’s service activity and more to reinvest into #2’s booming activity without adding people. GM$/FTEE doubled; Profit$s/FTEE quintupled; and gainsharing bonuses and reinvested profits/FTEE happened.

Will you lose key accounts and gain more minnows? Or, get Waypoint Analytics  first to hit competitors both high and low?