Six Things Every Distributor Should Ponder
around here both personally and professionally with River Heights Consulting. Here are the cliff notes:
Personally:
My first major (25-30 mile) bike ride of the summer
season during the Memorial Day Weekend resulted in a broken shoulder and a
severely banged-up body. I could barely
type for three weeks but got to spend a lot of time talking on the phone. The good news is the Doc says I am “good as
new,” whatever that means.
Professionally:
When you can’t type, talking on the phone is about the
only possible business activity. We
interviewed over 50 distributors in the automation, electrical, fluid power,
and related spaces. Distributors love to
share. We have a very strong
understanding of current market conditions, what is working, what is not, and
the state of what seems like a global supply chain interruption.
NOW – The Six Things
Recently I was asked to write on the post-pandemic ‘New Normal” for IMARK Now Magazine. Specifically, I addressed how distributors could find new customers and nurture their current customers. I began the article with these half dozen thoughts I believe distributors everywhere should use to better focus their businesses:
Thought One: Over the years, distributors have done a poor job of selecting their customers. In many instances, it is the customer who selects the distributor for reasons often unknown to the distributor.
Thought Two: The cost of bringing on a new
customer, whether good or bad, is high.
Doing business with the wrong customer subtracts from rather than adds
to the bottom line of the distributor organization.
Thought Three: Experts tell us half of the
customers’ distributors we serve to provide negative profit contribution. Our research reports similar findings.
Thought Four: Current sales teams either lack the skills or
abilities to properly prospect for new customers.
Thought Five: Research indicates our customers are online
and 89 percent of B2B customers use the internet to find products early in
their buying decisions.
Thought Six: Industry pontiffs have said for years that it
is five times easier to sell more to an existing customer than to identify and
develop a new customer. The internet may
change this, but research is lacking.
So, what is the simple advice tied to these
thoughts?
Figure out which customers really contribute to the
bottom line
generating customers are, keeping in mind that most are do not fall in this category. Profit generation cannot be measured in Gross Margin dollars or percentages. Instead, some real analysis is needed. The equation involves the number and size of orders/invoices, types of products purchased, service demands of the customer, and payment history.
Customers who do not generate a profit are an issue. Back in the old days, I heard a Distributor
announce he was “terminating” all the unprofitable customers. He even held a meeting to let the
unprofitable folks know they were being fired. I cannot recall if he served them snacks and
beer at the meeting. Either way, I am
not recommending that action.
For the unprofitable, some tools allow the distributor to
take costs out of the system. Serving
these customers electronically – via a webstore – makes sense. Similarly, increasing prices for these
customers can offset some of the profitability drains. One distributor reported they are now
charging some of these negative profit customers for things like expedites,
handling, and assigning a fee if the customer requires a special order from a
vendor who is not one of their key partners.
I like that idea.
For customers who require more service than their gross
margin covers, why not migrate them to services tied to a fee? If they choose to go elsewhere for their
service, you will be able to better serve the customers who do contribute to
your bottom line.
Finally, when it comes to customers, salespeople rarely
know who the “good ones” are. This is a
management-driven task. Data is your
friend.
Do everything in your power to retain the best
profit generators
Not only should you strive to outperform your competitors
today, but you also need to understand these customers’ future direction. We call this distributor R&D. Typically, this is done with a management-to-management
meeting.
Why do we stress upper-level conversations? First, the lower-level contacts your salespeople know the best are usually not privy to the longer-range plans. For instance, would the head of the customer’s panel shop know the company was interested in outsourcing the panel business? Secondly, salespeople often suffer from not knowing when to listen and when to sell. When you start selling to a company president, VP, or plant manager, the conversation ends quickly, and great information does not flow. Finally, the top management of your customers knows where the company is heading in the future.
Distributors need time to prepare for the future,
especially when the information from one of your best customers indicates a
plan to invest heavily in a new technology that is outside of your current
expertise. Further, the existing and
potentially long-running worker shortage drives customer needs tied to the outsourcing
process and bits of their manufacturing needs.
If the customer needs a service, it may take you time and effort to
evaluate and respond.
These new process/service things are not the kind of
commitments a salesperson can easily make.
They often require investments of both financial and human capital well
before revenue begins. While no reasonable person would expect an
instant decision or commitment, managers are in a better position to ask the
kind of questions needed for a decision.
A final thought - Data is important in distribution
For eons distributors measured customers on two points:
sales volume and gross margin. While any
metric is better than no metric, these two points do not tell the full story. Years ago, my company decided to do an activity-based
costing model for our customers. The
results changed the way our team thought about customers.
For example, our highest profitability customer had a low
gross margin percentage, their sales dollars were only moderately high, and
they only placed orders with us four times a year. The deal was, they required almost no
service, inventory, or inside sales time.
Plus, they always paid early.
On the other side of the equation was a similarly sized
customer with a higher gross margin percentage and slightly higher volume. They loved us and the service we
provided. In fact, we were their de facto
supplier for everything. The problem was
they issued thousands of small orders every day and required constant attention
from our technical specialists. The fact
they were a profit drainer went against everything we believed – until that
report.
Since this was done in the early 90s, our activity-based
costing exercise took several hundred manhours.
Much of the data had to be gathered manually. Today data is far more easily gathered and
put into a useful format.
The point of this is data helps us make better
decisions. How do you gather and use
your data?
Frank Hurtte is the Founding Partner of River Heights Consulting. He combines the battle scars of 28 years of front-line "in the trenches" experience with over 13 years of service to knowledge-based distributors and their manufacturer partners.
Email or call today to make these virus-driven times work for you.
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