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Richard's and Laura's Blog

2 Posts tagged with the profits tag

A Defense of Bad Profits

Posted by RichardOwen Jan 9, 2012

I’m bad to the bone
George Thorogood

 

 

Investing your entire 401k in Enron stock.


Marketing Las Vegas as a “family friendly” destination.


Microsoft Bob.


Amongst the worst business ideas ever, customer experience zealots add “dependence on bad profits”. For the Net Promoterati, the label of “bad profits” is wielded like a medieval mob scene accusing an unpopular villager of witchcraft. It’s time to break out the pitchforks and torches.

 

I’m here to tell you it’s all wrong. Leave bad profits alone. What did they ever do to you? (Except reduce your NPS, of course.)

 

The latest assault on bad profits is from the UK government. Say what you want about murderers or perpetrators of mayhem, the British media hath no fury like a consumer wronged. It is thus that the BBC gleefully informed me that the government is working to stamp out the practice of charging fees that are “in excess”. Consumer groups welcomed the news. “Drip pricing” is going to be regulated. No, we are not charging for drips, it’s the unconscionable practice of revealing more and more incremental pricing as you go through the purchasing transaction. (for a humorous, but rude take on this, see the following Fascinating Aida video).

 

What’s next? Regulating the shipping and handling when you get “free” additional Shamwow products?   Overdraft fees. Interest rates that you might think come with a broken kneecap clause. Exorbitant roaming fees if you use your mobile phone while overseas. The government needs to step in and put an end to it now! Any government, please. 

 

My fists turn white with rage. Well, at least I’m mildly upset. I welcome bad profits. We need them to create opportunity and differential performance: your bad profits are someone else’s large, untapped customer base. 

 

Of course, I’m not in favor of deceptive practices. Forcing transparency is a legitimate role for regulators and nobody would condone dishonesty. But think for a second where “bad profit regulation” leads us.  

 

Take airline fees for bag check-in. Ban them. It might cost the airline $10 to fly your bags from San Francisco to New York. That might even turn out to be the flight you are on (no extra fee, yet). If they choose to charge you $50 it’s time to call in the Feds. Or MI6 perhaps. Surely airlines should only make profits from selling seats on the plane! Overpriced drinks and airplane internet services look pretty profitable also, why are they not free with the flight? Time to force airlines to adopt single-dimension pricing strategies. Then we can get after the banks, no way we should have to pay overdraft fees. Or at least, they should be something more reasonable – after all, providing an overdraft is not really a business good is it? Not like, say, buying virtual livestock on Farmville. Which should also be free, or at virtual cost, while we are at it. 

 

I hope the problem is obvious. What constitutes fees, bundled versus unbundled products and services, “unfair pricing” – what’s fair margin on a Gucci handbag? – all these aspects of good and bad profits need to be resolved by the market, not by regulation. Sure, force disclosure. Ensure costs are not hidden from the customer. But then let customers decide. 

 

Bad profits are a massive source of innovation and entrepreneurial activity. Netflix built a business due to Blockbuster’s overdependence on late fees. Southwest Airlines relies on “bags fly free” as a differential pricing strategy. Skype persuaded us that almost any profits on phone calls would prove to be bad. 

 

If you don’t like the particular flavor of profits you generate for a business, take your business somewhere else. It’s quite possible that others don’t share your priorities and feel that it’s a reasonable way to make money for shareholders and deliver value to customers. The market will decide and, if those profits really are “bad”, you can bet the next Scott Hastings will be building a company to capitalize on them.

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"All the women are strong, all the men are good looking, and all the children are above average."

Garrison Keillor, Lake Wobegone Days

 

Most performance measure in business are relative. Market share, growth rates, earnings. We benchmark against others all the time. But with NPS, many companies don't really know where they stand, and where they stand could be the ultimate measure of performance.

 

Several years ago, Bain and Company did some great research to understand how profit pools got divided up by industry, and how NPS played a role in that. They found that every industry had a “bright line”, an NPS score which separated winners from the pack, and that those who entered the winners circle (so to speak) enjoyed a disproportionate share of the profits in their industry. This shouldn't surprise anyone; in most industries profits are not linearly correlated to size or even market share. It's not a fair game - it turns out it's rigged in favor of NPS leaders.

 

What's really interesting to me, however, was that the bright line that separated the leaders was not uniform across all industries or geographies. Rather, it varied significantly by industry. This should come as no surprise: we usually see that Business to Business NPS results are often significantly lower and less variable than Business to Consumer. We also know that customers compare and formulate perspectives based on their expectations, which can vary according to prior experience and price. We teach customers what to expect in our industry, then we give them relative pricing to help set their expectations around our role as discounters or premium players.

 

Companies spend precious little time thinking about issues of comparable performance, which seems odd given its importance. After all, knowing what your score is only matters if you have some sense as to what it should be. This disconnect ripples through the corporation in multiple ways. Companies without a clear sense of NPS “situational awareness” will struggle to set appropriate goals, compensation metrics or process. I'd even go as far as to say that measuring NPS without a clear sense of target is worse than not measuring at all.

 

Part of the problem is the challenge around getting good benchmarks. We do publish benchmark data, so for those industries we cover, you can get an accurate sense of where you should be (and an independent view of where you are trending). But that data will never be detailed enough for some, so they often find themselves doing specific benchmarking studies. Others tell me that they make a benchmark of the data that is published in the book. While I agree it's aspirational to try and reach USAA's lofty NPS goals, it's probably neither feasible nor even desirable, assuming you are not a major insurance provider. Nor is it practical to simply target the top quartile and straight line trend your own NPS towards it as a goal setting technique. You are pretty much assured of falling short initially as NPS just doesn't improve in a straight line.

 

If you are determined to avoid detailed target setting and outside benchmarks, there is still hope. Stack ranked employee, or region or segment performance provides you with the opportunity to challenge the lower performing segments to raise their game to the average. That alone improves your score and starts moving you in the right direction; although it doesn't help you understand if your entire organization is on track for financial success.

 

One other thought. Absolute NPS does matter in one important way. Industries with low "threshold NPS" - a low target that gets you in the winner's circle - have fewer absolute promoters than those where only a high score wins. The absolute number of promoters can be thought of as word of mouth capacity, so their absence reduces the overall positive effect for industry participants and the industry in general. By all means, out-run the other guy for success, but to get real organic growth you still need an army of promoters.

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