3 core elements of
effective retailing; which entails the efficient working of any retail chain
Today's retail environment is tough. Shrinking budgets,
layoffs, consolidation, and demanding construction schedules mean that you
have to do more with less time, less money, and less staff. To get stores
designed, built, renovated and maintained on time and on budget, it is highly
critical to work smarter than your competitors and stay connected with the 3
core elements of effective retailing - People, Process & Technology.
If you have found yourself in a situation where the process
seems to change, accountabilities are uncertain and deadlines are missing, then
perhaps you have a people, process and technology problem. Getting all 3
aligned is absolutely essential in ensuring a process change will work.
And they have to be resolved in that order.
People- what are the key issues: who owns
the process, who is involved, what are their roles, are they committed to improving it and working together and importantly are they prepared to do the work to fix the problem. It is important to stay connected with retail professionals in the industry to maintain
a good talent rate. The industry needs to focus on maturity of their human practices, guide a program of continuous human resource management, focus on improving individual and team capabilities, integrate people process improvement with business process improvement, establish a culture of performance and professional excellence and align
human resource strategies with business goals. Also we have ignored the
knowledge creation or research aspect of our educational system for too long.
Creating a culture of research and innovation requires a significant commitment
and a long-term view from all stakeholders. This is a fantastic example of an
industry-academia linkage necessary to create the next generation of knowledge
workers. This global initiative will certainly provide a path to success for
companies worldwide through new business initiatives related to performance excellence.
Process- a process can be defined as
starting with a trigger event that creates a chain of actions that result in
something being prepared for a customer of that process. Starting at a high
level and identifying the key big steps is important to see the process from end to end. Then moving into more detail to capture the various layers involved and
various exceptions. Focusing on the high frequency transactions (Pareto principle) can have significant benefits to standardizing the process. But also remember that it
can be the non-standard transactions where service is slipping most, or the
potential for significant failure in the process may exist.
Technology- Now that people are aligned, and the
processes developed are clarified, technology can be applied to ensure
consistency in application of the process and to provide the thin guiding rails
to keep the process on track - to make it easier to follow the process than not do so. Of course there is much more to getting a technology project right - but get the above 3 sorted out and you will be a fair way down the path to
achieving business success. Great retail technologies and business solutions
are about much more than clever application. These end-to-end integrated
business applications provide retail businesses around the world with the extra
edge over its competitors. It's about blending the right software with
experienced people that understand retail and can offer a great service before,
during and after implementation. But most of all it's about you, your business
and putting your vision of what you want to achieve into practice.
While we accept that most of today's retail businesses are
talent driven and that people are our biggest assets, historically, (at least
with IT) organizations have focused more on proactively improving their delivery processes and their investments in technology.
In fact, the current global hue-and-cry on talent shortfalls
and high attrition rates in the retail industry are only the tip of the
iceberg. At the business level, there are imperatives like improving productivity, moving-up the value chain, enhancing competitiveness and getting closer to
the customers. At the organization level, issues like managing a multi-cultural
and multi-geographical workforce, managing rapid growth and creating "cool"
work cultures continue to take a large mind-share of business leaders and HR professionals. All this, while today's professional is trying to get multi-skilled and chart a
clear career path for himself / herself.